Dayton Daily News

Gun control is about saving lives, not waging culture war

- He writes for the Washington Post. E.J. Dionne Jr.

You have perhaps heard the joke about the liberal who is so open-minded that he can’t even take his own side in an argument.

What’s less funny is that on gun control, liberals have been told for years that if they do take their own side in the argument, they will only hurt their cause.

Supporters of even modest restrictio­ns on firearms are regularly instructed that their ardent advocacy turns off Americans in rural areas and small towns. Those in favor of reforming our firearms laws are scolded as horrific elitists who disrespect a valued way of life.

And as the mass killings continue, we are urged to be patient and to spend our time listening earnestly to the views of those who see even a smidgen of action to limit access to guns as the first step toward confiscati­on. Our task is not to fight for laws to protect innocents, but to demonstrat­e we really, honestly, truly, positively love gun owners and wouldn’t for an instant think anything ill of them.

It’s odd that those with extreme pro-gun views are never called upon to model similar empathy toward children killed, the mourning parents left behind, people in urban neighborho­ods suffering from violence, or the majority of Americans who don’t own guns.

Depending on the survey, somewhere from 58 percent to 68 percent of us live in households without guns. But nobody in the National Rifle Associatio­n is ever told to prove their respect for our way of life. Rarely is it pointed out that the logic of the gun lobby’s position is to create a world in which everyone will need a gun, whether we want one or not.

The students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, an institutio­n that suffered the worst effects of our inaction on guns, have not gotten the memo that they are supposed to shut up, and may they be blessed for this. You can tell their angry outspokenn­ess is having an impact, and not only because President Donald Trump has taken modest steps to suggest he hears the message. More telling is that some of the very right-wingers who demand deep respect for gun culture have shown no scruples about trashing the kids.

Bill O’Reilly was so upset at the attention their protests are drawing that he accused the media of “promoting opinions by teenagers who are in an emotional state and facing extreme peer pressure in some cases.” The condescens­ion is revolting.

Former Rep. Jack Kingston, R-Ga., doubted the capacity of these students to think or act for themselves. “Their sorrow can very easily be hijacked by left-wing groups who have an agenda,” he said on CNN.

How come only one side of the supposed culture war on guns is required to exude respect for the other? Because the culture war argument is largely a gimmick pushed by the gun lobby as a way of demonizing its opponents.

What truly alarms the gun lobby is that many steps to curb the scourge of gun violence enjoy broad support, from those who own guns as well as those who don’t. A Quinnipiac poll released Tuesday, for example, found that 97 percent of Americans favor background checks for all gun buyers. While the survey showed the highest level of approval for background checks in some time, it is not an outlier. Background checks have long been embraced by 85 percent to 95 percent of us.

I am all for Americans reaching across our cultural divides. But if we wait to act until our cross-cultural understand­ing is complete, many more who might have been saved will die.

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