NRA's Wayne LaPierre, Lindsey Graham play the 'racial scare' card in gun control debate

National Rifle Association executive vice president Wayne LaPierre unleashed an incendiary manifesto on Thursday, describing America — and Brooklyn, New York in particular — as a virtual hellscape of marauding Hispanic gangs, looters and terrorists, all poised to menace anyone who hasn’t gotten themselves a semi-automatic … or two, or three.

“Latin American drug gangs have invaded every city of significant size in the United States,” LaPierre wrote in an op-ed entitled “Stand and Fight,” which was posted to the conservative Daily Caller website. “Phoenix is already one of the kidnapping capitals of the world, and though the states on the U.S./Mexico border may be the first places in the nation to suffer from cartel violence, by no means are they the last.”

He went on to accuse President Barack Obama of failing to protect the U.S. southern border, and claimed that “when the next terrorist attack comes, the Obama administration won’t accept responsibility. Instead, it will do what it does every time: blame a scapegoat and count on Obama’s “mainstream” media enablers to go along.”

“A heinous act of mass murder—either by terrorists or by some psychotic who should have been locked up long ago—will be the pretext to unleash a tsunami of gun control.”

LaPierre launched into a frightening description of what sounds like post-Apocalyptic New York after Hurricane Sandy last month, alleging that in the aftermath of the storm, flooding and subsequent blackout that darkened much of New York City, “we saw the hellish world that the gun prohibitionists see as their utopia. Looters ran wild in south Brooklyn. There was no food, water or electricity. And if you wanted to walk several miles to get supplies, you better get back before dark, or you might not get home at all.”

“Hurricanes. Tornadoes. Riots. Terrorists. Gangs. Lone criminals. These are perils we are sure to face—not just maybe. It’s not paranoia to buy a gun. It’s survival. It’s responsible behavior, and it’s time we encourage law-abiding Americans to do just that.”

MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough, a conservative former Republican congressman from Florida, called LaPierre’s manifesto “racially tinged,” paranoid, and “straight out of The Book of Eli.'”

“Yeah, it’s responsible to own a gun. It’s responsible to protect your family. It’s responsible to have a handgun in your house. It’s responsible to have a shotgun. It’s responsible to have a hunting rifle,” Scarborough said on Morning Joe on Thursday. “But Wayne LaPierre is suggesting if you are against Americans being able to own assault weapons with 30-round high-capacity magazines, that somehow you’re going to — and he said ‘Hispanic drug gangs are coming to America,’ and those terrible people in Brooklyn, don’t go out after dark. I mean, this is so laced with racial overtones that the Republican Party, if they were smart, their leaders today would condemn it, but they’re not smart. They’re scared. And you know if they keep running scared, they’re going to lose more votes. They’re going to get hammered in future elections if they allow this clown to continue to lead them around by their nose. They’re shameful. They need to be leaders.”

Obama campaign strategist David Plouffe responded to the manifesto via Twitter on Wednesday, writing, “Hard to believe this is real. Every GOPer should read and decide if this delusional person will call the shots.”

LaPierre’s ravings are meant to stoke conservatives into a frenzy of gun buying, which of course benefits his clients, the gun manufacturers and retailers, some of which he name-dropped in his “op-ed.” But Scarborough is on to something when he calls out the racial taint of LaPierre’s depictions of marauding Hispanic drug gangs and a version of New York City’s Brooklyn borough that hasn’t been operative since the height of the crack epidemic in the 1980s, and probably not even then.

His goal is clearly to prime the fears of people who live in parts of America that can’t relate to New York City, or to the growing Hispanic enclaves in the American west. Raise their anxieties, and you just might move more guns and ammo. Paint the picture of mass chaos and panic. Describe not just the kinds of individual bad guys who mow down schoolchildren with the American terror weapon of choice — the Bushmaster semi-automatic — but gangs of dark fiends, who you’d better not run into after dark. Best to get a Bushmaster semi-auto for yourself, Mr. and Mrs. Middle America.

Sadly, LaPierre is not the only one playing this game. During a Senate Judiciary Committee on January 30 on the subject of gun violence, South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham, who faces a tough re-election effort in 2014, raised the specter of the 1992 Los Angeles riots following the acquittal in the Rodney King beating trial in explaining his need for an AR-15 rifle:

“In 1992 you had the riots in Los Angeles,” Graham said. “I think it was the King event, but you could find yourself in this country in a lawless environment through a natural disaster or a riot. … And the story was about a place called Koreatown. There were marauding gangs going through the area, burning stores, looting and robbing … and raping.”

Of course, there is no evidence of marauding rape gangs in Koreatown during the 1992 riots, but that’s not the point of Graham’s or LaPierre’s rants. The point is to terrify Americans who don’t fall into the ethnic categories their comments are targeting, into buying more, and deadlier, weapons out of fear.

While LaPierre lashes out against what he calls “gun prohibitionists,” there happens to be a long history of demonizing racial minorities in the interests of policy, including in the days before the United States passed actual Prohibition, against alcohol and narcotic drugs:

In a 1914 speech before the House, Rep. Richmond Hobson of Alabama warned that booze would make the “red man” savage and “promptly put a tribe on the war path.” He added, “Liquor will actually make a brute of a Negro, causing him to commit unnatural crimes.”

Twenty-three years later, while arguing for marijuana prohibition, Harry Anslinger also played on Americans’ fear of crime and foreigners. The Bureau of Narcotics chief spun tales of people driven to insanity or murder after ingesting the drug and spoke of the 2 to 3 tons of grass being produced in Mexico.

“This, the Mexicans make into cigarettes, which they sell at two for 25 cents, mostly to white high school students,” Anslinger told Congress.

Now, it is the opponents of lawmaking, this time on gun control and gun safety, who are playing the “racial scare” card.

Follow Joy Reid on Twitter at @TheReidReport.

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