Eminem’s new music video highlights the urgency for gun control in the US

By Brianne Patrice

Updated Jan 25, 2021 at 01:17 PM

Reading time: 3 minutes

5469

Fifteen times Grammy Award-winning and controversial rapper, Eminem dropped his eleventh studio album Music To Be Murdered By in a surprise release. Alongside his newly released album, the rapper also dropped the music video for his new song ‘Darkness’, which depicts him taking on the role of Stephen Paddock, the mass murderer who claimed the lives of 60 people, as well as his own, and wounded over 800 during a Las Vegas music festival in 2017.

The video ends with Eminem watching a bank of TV screens with news footage recounting not just the Las Vegas shooting but other mass shootings that have happened around the US within the last four years. As the video ends, the US flag is shown upholding the message: “When will it end?” followed by the answer “When enough people care,” leaving us with a clear call-to-action urging Americans to register to vote so that we may “make our voice be heard and change gun laws in America.”

The fact is that President Trump chooses to turn a blind eye to the growing gun violence that continues to plague the US. His silence teeters the line of support as his infamous campaign slogan ‘Make America Great Again’ is used as the premise for the pro-gun protesters and their cause.

“We must stop the glorification of violence in our society. This includes the gruesome and grisly video games that are now commonplace. It is too easy today for troubled youth to surround themselves with a culture that celebrates violence,” said Trump in response to the El Paso, Texas and Dayton, Ohio mass shootings in 2019. My answer, and many will agree with me, is no, Mr President, video games are not the ones to blame. The real problem lies in the fact that it is too easy for mentally incompetent beings to obtain firearms, thanks to you scrapping a federal rule imposed by former President Barack Obama.

Science shows there is no direct link between video games and mass violence. However, the Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) showed that in 2017, the year Trump was inaugurated into office, there were nearly 40,000 gun-related deaths—the highest it’s been in 50 years. Coincidence? I doubt it.

While some people should be allowed to carry firearms as long as they stay informed on how and when to use them by finding out more on where to find The very best pistol scopes available for example, others are clearly too unstable to get this right.

Trump failing to denounce white nationalism and declare it as a threat to national security and the violence that it produces is why we can no longer ignore his role in this growing epidemic. Not when shooters like Crusius (who was responsible for the El Paso attack) wrote and released a four-page manifesto that was full of hateful rhetoric and ideologies that have augmented under Trump. Crusius’ manifesto ‘justified’ this imminent attack as “a reply to the Hispanic invasion,” alleging Democrats of “pandering to the Hispanic voting bloc” and fenced against “traitors” while condemning “race-mixing and interracial unions.”

Additional statistics released by the FBI in late 2018 showed that hate crimes in the US rose by 17 per cent in 2017 compared to the previous year. Approximately 7,175 hate crimes were reported and committed in 2017 and of those provoked by hatred over race and ethnicity, nearly half involved African-Americans and about 10 per cent were anti-Hispanic.

When it comes to intense political debates, the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino (CSUSB) provided more distinct results. Researchers found that in August 2017, the month of the violent brawl amid white-supremacists and counter-protestors in Charlottesville—when Trump infamously noted there were “very fine people on both sides”—hate crimes increased to 663 incidents, the second-highest tally in nearly a decade.

On 15 March 2019, a far-right gunman murdered 51 Muslims in Christchurch, New Zealand. The gunman left behind a document identifying Muslim immigrants as “invaders” and Trump as “a symbol of renewed white identity and common purpose.” Can you see the pattern?

In a tweet following a Trump rally in Panama City Beach, Florida, Barack Obama stated: “We should soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fear and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments.” This came as a response to someone yelling out “shoot them” after Trump posed the question, “How do you stop these people?” in a conversation about border patrol.

Trump is what’s wrong with gun control. As the poster boy for white nationalism, he continues to renege pledges and rollback on restrictions while ignoring the Democratic’s call for tougher restrictions. His lack of accountability, his chosen sense of ignorance and his hate-filled rhetoric is a growing tumour that needs to be removed, and I haven’t even mentioned his climate change denial. His refusal to acknowledge fascism and the surge in white nationalist terrorism makes him an accomplice to murder and its perpetrators.

Until Trump holds himself and the modern-day Klansmen responsible for the violence that has become commonplace in the US since the day of his inauguration, he and his ‘brotherhood’ will continue to pose as an imminent threat to the citizens, more specifically to the minorities, of these ‘United States’. So come on Mr President, let’s put those Twitter fingers to good use—speak love, not hate.

Keep On Reading

By Abby Amoakuh

The Tortured Poets Department might have some flops, but it’s Taylor Swift at her most vulnerable

By Abby Amoakuh

GK Barry gets real about Channel 4 show Boss Pitches and working with Nella Rose

By Abby Amoakuh

Dermatologists accuse Nara Smith of promoting skin cancer with latest homemade sunscreen video

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Student dies a painful death after inhaling two to three bottles of laughing gas every day

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Mother who drowned two young sons in 90s now lining up sugar daddies ahead of prison release

By Abby Amoakuh

Attention to all performative reading guys: here’s what your book selection says about you

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

What does the US Supreme Court’s decision to abolish mass protests in three states mean for democracy?

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Gen Z in Kenya is reshaping politics by taking a stand against the Tax Bill on social media

By Malavika Pradeep

8 celebrities and fashion moments you might have missed at the $600 million Ambani wedding

By Charlie Sawyer

Kinky, colourful, and queer: Why Chappell Roan is the most exciting thing in pop since Lady Gaga

By Abby Amoakuh

Explicit search results for Sydney Sweeney reveal dangerous content moderation on X

By Abby Amoakuh

Hot rodent boyfriends are so yesterday. Get ready for the era of hunky beefcakes

By Abby Amoakuh

From drag queens to go-go dancers, we found London’s best antidote to boredom

By Charlie Sawyer

Netizens are revisiting P Diddy and Kim Porter’s relationship following the disturbing Cassie hotel video

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Netflix’s Monster season 2 tackles one of the most gruesome murder cases in history

By Charlie Sawyer

What is snarking? TikToker Lily Chapman reveals intense online harassment she’s experienced on Reddit

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

TikTok’s airport tray aesthetic trend says a lot about Gen Z’s quest for control and creativity

By J'Nae Phillips

How TikTok’s Kendrick Lamar Girl Aesthetic strips away Black culture’s significance

By Charlie Sawyer

Two close assassination attempts on Donald Trump prove that political violence is here to stay

By Abby Amoakuh

Comedian Arj Barker responds after throwing breastfeeding mother and baby out of his show