The Campus Carry bill has been assigned to the Georgia Senate's Judiciary Committee, chaired by one Joshua McKoon. McKoon is a fairly reliable friend of the NRA, but he is in the news most recently for taking the floor to condemn a fellow Republican -- a state senator from Jefferson, Georgia -- for making a remark that appeared supportive of the original Ku Klux Klan.
It is a little strange that we'd be having that discussion in 2016, when I thought the Klan's place in Georgia history was well understood. Obviously they were a terrorist organization, as McKoon says, carrying on the war by other means. There is a distinction worth making between the Klan that existed immediately after the war and the one that was 'reborn' around the time of the movie Birth of a Nation. There is a distinction worth making between that second Klan and the one(s) that exist now. Those distinctions are for clarity among historians, though: none of them were any good.
This is Legislative Day 26, if you're counting. 14 more working days until they have to go away and leave us in peace.
1 comment:
The original Klan, under Nathan B Forrest, was intended for other purposes. Construction, helping one's fellow man, reconstruction, rebuilding, forging stronger relations with the money rich North.
That would mean the Klan had 3 phases, not just 2.
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