Tuesday, April 30, 2024

Vic Mensa Pens Emotional Essay for Rolling Stone on America’s Gun Culture

Vic Mensa attends the 2018 BET Awards at Microsoft Theater on June 24, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.
Vic Mensa attends the 2018 BET Awards at Microsoft Theater on June 24, 2018 in Los Angeles, California.

*Rapper Vic Mensa calls gun culture in America “a virus” in a searing op-ed for Rolling Stone, published Wednesday (July 18), and says that it’s time to enact a “widespread ban on assault rifles.”

Mensa’s emotional essay describes losing childhood friends to gun violence and his own 2017 arrest for violating California’s concealed-carry law. — which has been one of the rallying cries of many gun control activists in the wake of the deadly school shootings in Marjory Stoneman Douglas in Florida, and Santa Fe High School in Texas earlier this year.

“My heart sank into my gut as the voice on the other side of the phone fed me words I could hardly stomach. ‘Are they talking about Cam?’ I asked, referring to the barrage of R.I.P. tweets flooding my timeline as I sat in a sweaty recording studio on Chicago’s near West Side. ‘Yes,’ she answered, her voice devoid of emotion. ‘He got shot,'” Mensa opens the piece.

“He got shot. He got shot. These words have reverberated through my eardrums too many times in my 25 years,” he continues. “Too many blissful summers have been stained with the blood of men cut down in a vicious cycle of ultra-violence that rips through my city like a cyclone, tearing apart families and leaving broken homes and broken men on street corners adorned with makeshift memorials for the dead. Later that day, I got a call from Cam’s best friend, Brian, as I bent the corner to the ramp from Lake Shore Drive to I-94. He sounded as if he had spoken these words one too many times, imparting a grim message I have held on to, and passed down to younger generations of loved ones: ‘You are of that age now where you will start losing people you love, and there’s nothing you can do to control it.'”

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Vic Mensa performs "We Could Be Free" during the "March for Our Lives" rally in support of gun control, Saturday, March 24, 2018, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)
Vic Mensa performs “We Could Be Free” during the “March for Our Lives” rally in support of gun control, Saturday, March 24, 2018, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Mensa, who performed as part of the March For Our Lives protest organized by the student survivors of Marjory Stoneman Douglas in March, is a gun owner who has lost too many loved ones to gun violence. In the wake of the recent spate of deadly mass shootings and the echo of Brian’s words in his brain, he asks, “Must we accept the devastation of gun violence as the reality of life an American? Or can we reject that terrible fate?”

While Mensa realizes it’s impossible to completely wipe out America’s gun culture — especially in black communities, where he says infrastructure, government spending and support are needed to turn the tide — he writes that mass shootings are something that can be affected by “having some common sense and courage to challenge the billionaires profiting from our sorrow.”

Mensa writes that he “vehemently” supports gun control, specifically a ban on the AR-15 rifle. He recalls a moment earlier this year, in which he was asked about the school shootings in the headlines by TMZ while leaving an L.A. nightclub. At the time, he struggled with how to connect the “poverty-stricken violence of my war-torn hometown [Chicago]” with the “white-picket-fence communities being assaulted by disgruntled young men borrowing dad’s guns to cut down their classmates.”

But then he attended the March For Our Lives, where he met activist Matt Deitsch, and suddenly he was able to make that connection for the first time. “Matt greeted me with a handshake and a hug, and launched into a story of how he had been to a festival performance of mine, and listened to my music for years,” he says. “That’s a single degree of separation between myself and the killing spree that claimed 17 lives on that fateful day in February. White, black or brown – we all bleed red.” He decries the “venomous” responses from the NRA to the activism of the Parkland students and acknowledges that some might discredit his voice because of his own arrest last year for carrying a concealed firearm; the weapon was registered for concealed carry in Illinois, but not in California.

“As someone who clearly supports gun ownership, I believe it is time we stop allowing distractions to divert our attention from the single most important piece of gun control legislation currently possible: a widespread ban on assault rifles,” he writes. “Las Vegas, Pulse Nightclub, Sandy Hook, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. 152 dead. Just four shooters. What do all of these attacks have in common? Long barrel assault rifles with high magazine capacity, commonly referred to as AR-15s.”

Read Mensa’s full essay here.

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