NRA's vision of 'genuine monsters'
December 21, 2012 -- Updated 2040 GMT (0440 HKT)
LaPierre: Society populated by monsters
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
- Kristin Goss: National Rifle Association's statement brought out familiar cultural wars
- Goss: The organization missed an opportunity to engage in reasonable dialogue
- She says NRA broke with precedent by blaming a host of producers and industries
- Goss: NRA's attempt to shift the focus to anything but guns was predictable
Editor's note: Kristin A. Goss, associate professor of public policy at the Sanford School of Public Policy at Duke University, is the author of "Disarmed: The Missing Movement for Gun Control in America."
(CNN) -- With Friday's defiant statement, the
National Rifle Association massed its troops along familiar fronts in
the culture war -- and even opened some new battle lines. But it also
squandered an opportunity to participate in reasonable dialogue with an
America that has begun losing its appetite for political extremism.
Longtime NRA Executive
Vice President Wayne LaPierre, eager to keep the rank-and-file "mothers
and fathers" among his membership from going soft, sounded themes
critical to maintaining gun owners' collective identity and solidarity.
These themes included:
The NRA is reasonable and
a good citizen. Consistent with past practice, LaPierre recounted the
NRA's horror at the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre and stated its
silence came out of respect for the victims. Others exploit such
tragedies, LaPierre said, but the NRA and its members are better than
that.
Kristin A. Goss
More guns, less crime.
That is the title of the NRA's bible, a 1998 book by Yale professor John
Lott (whose core findings have been refuted by other scholars), and it
is the logic behind the NRA's proposal to put an armed officer in all
140,000 American schools. The proposal is founded on the NRA's position
that guns are merely tools that can be used by "monsters" or by "good
guys." The NRA and its allies are good guys.
Become a fan of CNNOpinion
Stay up to date on the latest opinion, analysis and conversations through social media. Join us at Facebook/CNNOpinion and follow us @CNNOpinion on Twitter. We welcome your ideas and comments.
Gun owners are the
victims. To the NRA, gun ownership is fundamental to virtuous
citizenship. Go to any NRA convention, or look around the group's
website, and you will learn that gun owners are the true American
patriots, the only force standing between democracy and a tyrannical
state delivered by emotional elites with naive but dangerous ideas. When
LaPierre said he was there to deliver "the truth," he was referring to
elites' "false" belief that even modest gun regulations might work. When
he talked about "political prejudice" or "personal prejudice," he was
referring to the indignities that beleaguered gun owners suffer in a
society that has failed to appreciate their civic contributions. This is
the NRA's perspective on the culture war.
While these themes are
familiar, LaPierre broke with precedent in key ways, most significantly
with his explosive broadside against journalists, movie studios, video
game producers, record labels and elected officials who have failed to
embrace the NRA's policy goals. If you want to blame someone besides the
shooter for Sandy Hook, then blame the "enablers" and NRA haters and
purveyors of "dishonest thinking."
LaPierre's attempt to
shift the focus to anything but guns was predictable, but the particular
message may have some resonance. A Pew Research Center poll found that
47% of Americans -- including 54% of women -- thought the Sandy Hook
massacre reflected broader social problems, such as parental failures,
moral and religious decline, a general devaluation of life, violent
depictions in the media and problems with mental health and its
treatment. Although 18% cited easy access to guns -- the most popular
single answer -- the poll showed that Americans are far more likely to
see gun massacres in a broader context.
Protesters interrupt NRA statement
A similar pattern emerged
after the Columbine High School shooting in 1999 when Americans were
much more likely to place the blame on family and cultural factors than
on failures of gun policy.
Of course, as with
airplane crashes and other disasters, gun massacres are the product of
many interacting forces, as is the "everyday" gun violence that occurs
outside the media spotlight. Most Americans understand the causes are
complex and are sensible enough to see that a multipronged approach
involving personal, social and public policy action will be needed.
LaPierre's apocalyptic
vision of the "unknown number of genuine monsters" who at this very
moment may be plotting the next attack on our schoolchildren -- and the
organization's single-minded and unrealistic call to put an armed guard
immediately in all our schools -- felt weirdly out of step with the
equally urgent yet more thoughtful conversations occurring at dinner
tables around the nation. It was a missed opportunity.
Follow us on Twitter @CNNOpinion.
Join us on Facebook/CNNOpinion.
The opinions expressed in this commentary are solely those of Kristin A. Goss.
Nenhum comentário:
Postar um comentário