Gun control activist David Hogg said the gun control movement was started by racial minorities, gay women, and "non binary people."

"This is a tweet for for [sic] the founders of the gun violence prevention movement started centuries ago by almost entirely black, brown and indigenous lgbtq women and non binary people that never got on the news or in most history books," Hogg said Sunday on Twitter. "We may not know all your names but thank you."



This is a tweet for for the founders of the gun violence prevention movement started centuries ago by almost entirely black, brown and indigenous lgbtq women and non binary people that never got on the news or in most history books.



We may not know all your names but thank you. — David Hogg (@davidhogg111) January 27, 2020



Hogg, 19, did not say when he thought the gun control movement began.

In the past, he has linked pro-gun culture to racism in American history. The activist claimed in an interview last fall that pro-gun culture was connected to genocide and white supremacy.

"I think it comes down to reckoning with our history and our history of white supremacy in the United States and the fact that we live in a post-genocidal society oftentimes that was orchestrated by the United States government," he said at the time.

Hogg is a survivor of the 2018 Parkland mass shooting and a co-founder of the gun control advocacy group March for Our Lives. He is currently attending Harvard, where he studies political science.

