The Kansas City Chiefs’ victory parade last week turned from a scene of celebration to horror after a mass shooting killed one person and injured 22 others, including 11 children. While Democrats have rightfully taken aim at Missouri’s loose gun laws, there’s more to America’s gun violence epidemic than laws alone. From westward expansion to the US-Israeli bombardment of Gaza today, American gun culture is a product of settler colonialism and genocide. Edge of Sports host Dave Zirin explains in this edition of ‘Choice Words’.
Studio Production: Cameron Granadino
Post-Production: Taylor Hebden
Audio Post-Production: David Hebden
Opening Sequence: Cameron Granadino
Music by: Eze Jackson & Carlos Guillen
Transcript
Dave Zirin: Okay, look, it is an indictment of this country that there are few things more American than a mass shooting at a Super Bowl parade. One person was killed and 21 more injured during the parade in Kansas City, Missouri, celebrating the 2024 Super Bowl champions, the Chiefs.
Eight victims are in critical care as of this moment. Nine of those shot were children. The one confirmed death is Lisa Lopez-Galvan, a DJ for Kansas City Radio Station KKFI, who hosted a show called Taste of Tejano. It’s just horrific.
Now, afterwards, President Joe Biden said that the shooting “cuts deep in the American soul.” But that’s not quite right. This is the American soul. It is true, as Democrats insist, that we aid and abet these shootings legislatively. Since 2017, Missouri has allowed people to carry concealed and loaded firearms in public. No need for background check or permit.
The state’s governor, Mike Parson, who attended the parade and scurried away at the sounds of the gunshots, had recently signed a nullification law proclaiming that no federal gun control legislation would be adhered to in the state.
But this is bigger than the laws on the books. We are caught in this numbing cycle of tragedy because this country reveres the gun and it is impossible to separate our adoration of the gun from the glorification of how this country was founded, namely the westward expansion of the United States and the conquering of Indigenous people.
As sociologist Orlando Patterson wrote, “The quintessential American myth is that of the cowboy. Central to that myth are the role of violence and the reverence for the gun. This violence is embraced and romanticized.”
This is true, but it doesn’t take a sociologist to notice the brutal irony that this mass gun tragedy took place at the celebration of a Kansas City team adorned with a Native American mascot. Indigenous team names and mascots derive from celebrating the “savagery” of Native people as if they were jaguars, lions, or wildcats.
The names tacitly compliment the prowess of Indigenous people, as well as our own prowess in militarily defeating them. Seeing Native people as war-like is more than just racist; it provides an unspoken justification for attempting to wipe them out. Native team names celebrate settler colonialism, and there is no settler colonialism without the gun.
The US, unsurprisingly, is also both the world’s top gun manufacturer and weapons exporter. Billions of dollars of those weapons are central to another settler colonialist project: the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. The Super Bowl, with hundreds of millions watching around the world, acted as a weapon of mass distraction for Israel as it launched an attack on Rafah in the Gaza Strip, now the most densely populated part of the most densely populated area on earth.
Following the Israeli ethnic cleansing of Gaza City, more than 1 million Palestinians are crammed into refugee camps in and around Rafah, and over 100 people were reported dead in Sunday’s military incursion.
While Biden furrows his brow in disapproval of Israel’s “over-the-top actions”, the president nonetheless keeps sending guns and other weapons to the barbaric Netanyahu government. This is not about hostages. It’s about settlements. It’s about land. It’s about extending, as Netanyahu says, openly, Israeli control from the river to the sea.
We in the United States created the template for this kind of political morality. We exported the cowboy myth to the holy land, the cowboy myth of expunging the Indigenous savages through a savagery that the Indigenous people themselves could not replicate or perhaps even imagine. It’s the cowboy myth brought to you by Lockheed Martin instead of Paramount Pictures.
Look, the pain and trauma brought home to Kansas City on Wednesday is heartbreaking and enraging, and we lack the tools to confront it because we have politicians who make clear after every school shooting that dead kids are a price worth paying for freedom.
But it’s not really about freedom. It’s about fear. It’s a fear of not being armed to the hilt. It’s a fear that the violence their political forbearers glorified in building this country will be visited upon them by the others. It makes them gravitate to the gun like Linus to his blanket.
It also makes them gravitate to Trump, to the celebration of Jan. 6th, to venerating a disturbed murderer like Kyle Rittenhouse, and to fever dreams about race war, secession, and the shooting of migrants as they try to cross a border that we drew.
Instead of reparations, today’s cowboys want a reckoning. Instead of restorative justice, they want to restore ethno-nationalist supremacy. Instead of peace, we cannot even celebrate as a community in public without living in fear. That’s as true in Missouri as it is in the Middle East, and it’s intolerable. For Edge of Sports TV and The Real News Network, I’m Dave Zirin.
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