How expanding gun access and militarized enforcement made deadly encounters inevitable.
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ICE Shootings Are a Consequence of America’s Gun Policy Choices

How expanding gun access and militarized enforcement made deadly encounters inevitable.

March For Our Lives
Feb 2
 
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For decades, the United States pursued two policies simultaneously: expanding civilian access to firearms and militarizing federal law enforcement. These were sold as separate goals: one as freedom, the other as security. But they were always going to collide.

And collide they did when ICE agents killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old U.S. citizen legally carrying a firearm in Minnesota. The killing was not an aberration but a predictable result of policy choices made in plain sight. A country that floods itself with guns while deploying heavily armed federal agents into neighborhoods will generate lethal confrontations.

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Donald Trump’s response exposed the contradiction at the center of American gun policy. “Certainly he shouldn’t have been carrying a gun,” he said, dismissing rights that his own party spent decades expanding. And to be clear, Pretti was not at fault for exercising his legal right under Minnesota law. Trump’s words exposed the reality beneath the rhetoric: gun rights in America are conditional, upheld only when the person carrying the weapon is seen as aligned with the state rather than a threat to it.

This isn’t the first time history has shown this pattern. In 1967, when Black Panther Party members carried firearms openly in California to monitor police conduct, the state legislature swiftly passed the Mulford Act to ban the practice. Governor Ronald Reagan signed it. The same political coalition that would later build careers on gun rights proved willing to restrict them the moment Black citizens armed themselves. The principle became obvious — Americans can bear arms only when doing so reinforces state authority rather than challenge it.

The gun industry has spent decades selling firearms as tools of personal protection, even as shields against government tyranny. Research tells a different story. Gun ownership increases the likelihood of homicide, suicide, and accidental death within households. Firearms do not reliably protect their owners, especially in chaotic encounters with law enforcement. The industry succeeded by exploiting real failures in public safety and offering a product that worsens the very problem it claims to solve.

Federal agents now operate in residential areas with military-grade equipment and legal protections that make accountability rare. In Pretti’s case, and in others, agents deployed lethal force and justified it afterward. The framework assumes force first, questions later. When millions of civilians own guns and federal officers carry superior firepower with broad immunity, confrontations will escalate by default. The system won’t fail in these moments. It will be operating as built.

The burden of that system falls unevenly. Whether a gun appears protective or threatening depends on who holds it. Race, immigration status, and proximity to power shape perception. A firearm marketed as an equalizer becomes a justification for violence once the carrier is deemed suspicious or out of place. The tool doesn’t level the field; instead, it provides the state with a reason to act.

The structure persists because it serves powerful interests. Fear increases gun sales. The same fear justifies larger budgets for enforcement agencies. Both translate into political support and profit. The violence that results doesn’t undermine the system. It fuels the next cycle of fear, which drives more sales and more funding.

American children grow up inside this reality. They practice hiding from shooters in their classrooms. Now, they watch ICE raids in their neighborhoods, learning that armed agents can arrive without warning. They watch leaders expand gun access and enforcement power while offering no protection from the violence that predictably follows. The message is unmistakable: gun violence, whether from a classmate, a stranger, or a federal agent, is ordinary life in America.

Trump’s comment about Pretti was as disturbing as it was honest. He stated plainly what the system has always demonstrated. Rights in America are selectively enforced based on who exercises them and under what circumstances. Pretti’s gun didn’t save him for the same reason that militarized policing doesn’t make communities safer. Protection was never the point.

When heavily armed civilians meet heavily armed agents, both enabled by policies that prioritize force over restraint, the predictable result is escalation. ICE shootings belong to the broader crisis of American gun violence. They emerge from the same logic that produces school shootings, mass shootings, and police killings. Armed individuals and armed state actors, empowered by overlapping political commitments, collide in ways the structure makes inevitable.

The system works as intended — by lawmakers who expanded access to guns while expanding the scope and immunity of armed enforcement. People die. Children inherit a country where violence is the baseline.

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