Gays Against Guns
Gays Against Guns is a direct action LGBTQ group supportive of gun control, with the intent to use nonviolent means, civil disobedience, and activism to further this aim. The group was founded by Kevin Hertzog, Brian Worth and John Grauwiler in 2016, as a result of the Pulse nightclub attack in Orlando, Florida which had killed 49 people and wounded 53 others in a mass shooting. It is the deadliest incident of violence against LGBTQ people in U.S. history and the deadliest terrorist attack in the U.S. since the September 11 attacks in 2001.
Two weeks after the June 2016 attack, a group of activists presented a large banner made by Gilbert Baker, inventor of the rainbow flag, stating “Gays Against Guns”, and led the New York City LGBT Pride March. Their contingent of 750 marchers, plus 49 veiled in white, staged die-ins along the 5th Avenue route and introduced their “Human Beings”, people dressed in white with white veils representing the gun violence victims. They also had a second massive banner stating "Republican Hate Kills." Within two months the group had over 300 New York City members, and chapters in nine cities across the U.S. They were going to go after gun manufacturers, including Smith & Wesson and Sturm, Ruger & Co. the two largest gun companies, gun lobbyists, their shareholders, and corporate backers. In an October 2017 Teen Vogue op-ed, GAG's social media director posited that gun violence is a disease that can be treated and cured.
Opposition to the National Rifle Association
From the beginning the group included veterans of ACT UP, a famous LGBTQ direct action group, and set an intention to take action in opposition to the National Rifle Association of America, one of the most influential lobbying groups in Washington, D.C. Part of the strategy was to target where the NRA would get its funds, including from corporations like Wyndham Hotels and Resorts, The Hertz Corporation, and FedEx. In early 2018 they staged protests at FedEx's Manhattan corporate headquarters and local chapters targeted stores across the country. The nationwide protests took place on the 26th of each month to bring attention to the 26% discount FedEx gave to NRA members. In October 2018 FedEx cut ties with the NRA.The group has staged die-ins at money managers BlackRock, one of the largest funders of gun makers. Starting at a local park, the protesters followed people draped in white veils holding placards honoring victims of gun violence. The protesters had signs with “Gun$ sell. People die. $tock soars.” At BlackRock, no one from the company would come out so they staged a die-in, twelve people laid down, representing the twelve people killed in the 2012 Aurora, Colorado shooting. The participants were given white chalk outlines and surrounded with red popcorn to represent the spilled blood. Said a campaigner, “They’re smart enough to acknowledge they profit from massacres but can’t find a way to unload those stocks? That’s amoral.” Other companies targeted include MetLife and Visa Inc. GAG warns companies to drop the NRA or lose the LGBTQ communities’ business, which was estimated at $917 billion in 2017.