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Edited on Fri May-30-08 03:51 PM by SteveM
I haven't found it yet in the used book store, but it'll get there.
One of the dynamics of how politics shifted since the '70s is how the far right established a virtual culture of anti-liberalism throughout the South and elsewhere, and did so with virtually no opposition. I think most folks (including many in DU) followed the "strategy" of ceding these areas and focusing on the remaining coasts and some metro areas; in short, the Democrats knowingly shrunk their base. I cannot speak to all of the social issues used to rivet-in support for the GOP, but one of these is most certainly "gun rights."
The "policy" of gun control started showing up in Demo politics in the late '60s, but came to real fruition in the '80s. The movement was and is little more than a conjured-up front in the culture wars, using the conceit of gun prohibition. And like all prohibitionist movements, relies heavily on painting millions of people as despicable, corrupt, reactionary, dangerous and evil because the "research", logic and legal arguments for a prohibition fail rather quickly. I suggest this read:
The Great American Gun Debate, Essays on Firearms and Violence by Don B. Kates, Jr. and Gary Kleck, Pacific Research Institute for Public Policy, San Francisco, 1997.
This book gives just a sample of the kind of hateful, degrading speech relied on to "frame" gun-owners. And the folks doing the framing were not a bunch of foul-mouthed bloggers or anonymous poison-pen artists. These folks were academicians, editors, columnists, political leaders, celebrities, etc. If you haven't read this stuff, you will be shocked. But there can be no surprise at how many "liberals" swaggered in to "take out" some conjured enemy. And got their asses whipped.
THIS is the balance sheet of animosity which has to be owned up to before Democrats can win back sizable portions of those fellow Americans we have lost or pushed away. Frankly, the best way to deal with this particular social issue is to no longer include it in the Democratic Party platform and to no longer float more "prohi" legislation, esp. at the federal level where the GOP can most efficiently tar the entire community of Democrats. That is why I am active in Democratic Underground.
Consider: Before the latter '60s the issue of gun control was NEVER in the Democratic Party platform. 70+% of Americans believe the Second Amendment protects an INDIVIDUAL RIGHT to keep and bear arms. Some 30% of gun owners consider themselves liberal (not to mention independents).
If folks want "guns" to not be an issue (as many have stated in these threads time and time again), then quit proposing more bans, more meaningless restrictions, more attacks on gun owners. Many Dues are doing just that.
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