The Culture of Guns and Misinformation
Mistrust of "mainstream media" is nothing new. It can be traced back to Civil War Era southern resentment towards snobby, educated, northeastern, liberal elites trying to "impose their way of life on the South." These feelings were reaffirmed during the Civil Rights Movement when news cameras exposed the dark side of southern living, inviting criticism from reporters, celebrities and musicians. The South fought back against what they perceived as an attack on their cultural identity by developing their own media. With the advent of the Internet Age independent news has become widespread. Anyone can publish an opinion and disseminate it to an audience. As a result, a culture developed in which people have the option of picking facts based on their political beliefs, instead of the other way around. The current debate over gun control is a testament to this trend.
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Of course, today one can simply refuse to acknowledge the evidence, claim conspiracy, and still be taken seriously. Gun rights advocates are prime examples of the power of cognitive dissonance. Kleck himself responded to criticisms of his research by claiming that all his academic critics letting personal bias cloud their interpretation of the numbers. Similar claims have been repeated countless times by gun rights advocates nationwide, including conspiracy theorist, Alex Jones, who accuse the media of having an anti-gun agenda. There are even those who claim that Sandy Hook was a staged event by the government and the media to take away the guns.
In spite of this trend, it would still be unfair to paint the picture that the culture of misinformation is destroying our political system -- to the contrary, these conspiracy theorists do not represent the direction America is moving, but rather a reaction to it. With an increasing number of major news publications fact checking, more and more Americans are opening their eyes, especially on the issue of guns, and politicians are taking notice. Recently, Senator Dianne Feinstein has proposed an assault weapons ban, and President Obama has outlined a new approach to gun control. The louder the gun rights echo chamber gets, the more indicative it is that the ground is shrinking underneath it.
The tactic most often used by the right-wing gun lobby is that of attacking the messenger, and not the message (because that would take actual thought and facts). They keep repeating the same lies over and over again, which is the marketing philosophy of "repetition sells product."
Wrapping themselves in the flag while hiding behind the Second Amendment is a tried and true right-wing tactic, but most Americans are seeing through the "gun rights" fiasco that gun nuts have been peddling. The call for sensible gun control measures is rapidly gaining ground with Americans, including most rational gun owners.
upaloopa
(11,417 posts)When they call a progressive talk show.
They first state a false talking point then expect you to defend yourselves against it.
They say they want a discussion but they really want to play games. They make up some shit statement and attribute it to you and argue against it. Then there are the endless questions. When finally they have nothing else to say they verbally insult you.
Gun culture itself is a negative force because guns were made for killing. So to be a part of gun culture is a choice to submerge yourself in this negativity
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We see it on DU frequently, but most of them don't last too long and the remaining vocal minority of gun nuts is losing ground.
Thinkingabout
(30,058 posts)Go to the extreme. Hopefully the extreme will return to their caves and sensible and safe gun ownership will return. We should not have to strap on guns in order to sit down and enjoy a meal.
billh58
(6,641 posts)of American gun owners, yet the right-wing extremists presume to speak for ALL gun owners. Thank you for putting the lie to that claim.
Thinkingabout
(30,058 posts)But the radical bunch are just making A$$es of themselves.