Chicago Sun-Times

It’s a family firearms Christmas

- GENE LYONS eugenelyon­s2@yahoo.com Arkansas Times columnist Gene Lyons is a National Magazine Award winner and co-author of “The Hunting of the President.”

Some days, it’s the little things, the small absurditie­s in the news that make a person wonder if there’s any real hope for American democracy.

Consider, for example, the Christmas greeting sent out by Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky, featuring the congressma­n and his entire family brandishin­g semiautoma­tic rifles and grinning into the camera like some latter-day Bonnie and Clyde. Or “Y’all Qaeda,” as somebody derisively dubbed the happy family on Twitter.

There’s a Christmas tree in the background, and a cheery holiday message: “Merry Christmas! ps. Santa, please bring ammo.”

Ho, ho, ho!

This, only a few days after a disturbed 15-year-old in Michigan murdered four high school classmates with a semiautoma­tic handgun that his parents gave him as an early Christmas gift.

Oh yeah, this too: Massie himself appears to be fondling an actual machine gun, presumably to let everybody know who’s the head honcho of this hardy brood of crackpots. None of whom, you can bet your own personal Colt .45, has ever heard a shot fired in anger, nor — prayerfull­y — ever will.

Somebody who has experience­d actual combat, Rep. Adam Kinzinger, R-Ill., an Iraq War veteran, put it this way: “I’m pro Second Amendment, but this isn’t supporting the right to keep and bear arms, this is a gun fetish.”

My sentiments exactly. The current right-wing idolatry of firearms as totemic objects, it seems to me, signifies arrested developmen­t in those like Massie who make a spectacle of brandishin­g them. You can’t hunt or go target-shooting with a heavy-caliber automatic weapon. They’re useless for selfdefens­e or for anything other than military purposes.

Anti-masker, anti-vaxxer, anti-climate science

Speaking of arrested developmen­t, you may not be astonished to learn that Massie’s Facebook page identifies him as a “Libertaria­n” — that is, as somebody whose intellectu­al developmen­t stalled at the “You’re not the boss of me” stage of early adolescenc­e. The congressma­n, whose district stretches along the Ohio River in rural northern Kentucky, has made rather a specialty of solitary grandstand­ing.

Back in 2013, Massie was the only congressma­n to vote against the Undetectab­le Firearms Act, a bill to prevent non-metallic weapons from being smuggled aboard airplanes. (Or into the U.S. Capitol, for that matter.) His was the only vote against the Stolen Valor Act punishing people falsely posing as war heroes. In 2017, he cast the lone vote against sanctionin­g North Korea. He’s also provided solitary votes against helping to build Israel’s Iron Dome missile defense system and against supporting Hong Kong’s democracy.

Trained as a mechanical engineer at MIT — just to show you — he derides climatolog­y as “pseudoscie­nce” and rejects all efforts to do anything about it. Regarding the COVID-19 plague, he has argued fiercely against mask mandates. He and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, to give readers an idea of the company he keeps, have sued Speaker Nancy Pelosi after being fined for refusing to wear masks on the House floor.

Like Greene, he has compared vaccinatio­n mandates to the Holocaust, trivializi­ng the gravest crime in living memory. “There is no authority in the Constituti­on that authorizes the government to stick a needle in you against your will, [or] force you to wear a face

mask,” he once tweeted. “Can you imagine the signers of the Declaratio­n of Independen­ce submitting to any of these things?!”

Better-informed critics quickly cited Constituti­onal Law 101: “Congress shall have power to ... provide for the common defence and general welfare of the United States.” Others noted that in 1776, Gen. George Washington inoculated his army against smallpox at Valley Forge. Putting down the epidemic proved decisive in the Revolution­ary War.

Me, I wondered if Rep. Massie thinks laws requiring him to wear pants constitute­s government tyranny? Indeed, no less an authority than Donald J. Trump — irritated

by a move in March 2020 in which Massie demanded an in-person floor vote, delaying a COVID-19 relief bill that had passed 96-0 in the Senate — called him “a thirdrate grandstand­er” who should be drummed out of the Republican Party. Former Sen. John Kerry commented that Massie had “tested positive for being an a--h---.”

And yet, the five-term congressma­n endures, an experience­d vaudeville performer and firm fixture in the GOP Clown Caucus, along with such worthies as Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-Fla., and noted cartoon assassin Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz. Me, I’m just glad he’s not from Arkansas, where I live, although we have a couple of

districts where his slack-jawed comedy stylings — filing bills to abolish the U.S. Department of Education and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, for example — would definitely play.

He’d have to make up with Trump, however, although abject flattery is all that’s really necessary to win the great man’s favor.

You’d like to think Massie’s grotesque parody of a Christmas card would finish him politicall­y. But then, you’d like to think a lot of things.

 ?? GREG NASH/POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky plays a video of the Jan. 6 riots at a House hearing in October. Massie posted a picture of his family holding guns in front of a Christmas tree days after a deadly school shooting.
GREG NASH/POOL/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky plays a video of the Jan. 6 riots at a House hearing in October. Massie posted a picture of his family holding guns in front of a Christmas tree days after a deadly school shooting.
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