The Field: The Specter of Political Violence

Published: Oct. 29, 2020, 9:58 a.m.

This episode contains strong language.\n\nWith an election in which uncertainty may abound, concerns are swirling around the possibility of political violence. Experts and officials \u2014 including those charged with the security of polling stations and ballot counting facilities \u2014 have been taking extra precautions.\n\nAmericans across the political spectrum appear to be preparing themselves for this possibility, too: Eight of the 10 biggest weeks for gun sales since the late 1990s took place since March this year. Many of those sales were to people buying guns for the first time.\n\nToday\u2019s episode examines these anxieties from two perspectives.\n\nAndy Mills, a senior audio producer for The New York Times, speaks to patrons of gun stores in Washington State about their motivations and sits down with a first-time gun owner who relays his anxiety, ignited by the unrest and protests in Seattle over the summer.\n\nAnd Alix Spiegel, a senior audio editor for The Times, visits three women of color in North Carolina, one of whom says the scenes in Charlottesville, the killing of Black people at the hands of the police and the threat of white militias have encouraged her to shift her anti-gun stance.\xa0\n\nGuests:\xa0 Andy Mills, a senior audio producer for The New York Times; Alix Spiegel, a senior audio editor for The Times; and Reid J. Epstein, who covers campaigns and elections for The Times.\xa0\n\nFor more information on today\u2019s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily\xa0\n\nBackground reading:\xa0Gun buyers say they are motivated by a new sense of instability that is pushing them to purchase weapons for the first time, or if they already have them, to buy more.