The Arizona Republic

Republican­s have trapped us in dark age

- Richard Cohen Columnist Cohen: acohenr@washpost.com.

The Republican Party is the modernday equivalent of the medieval church. It fights science. It protects ignorance. Above all, it embraces a lunatic reading of the Second Amendment so that any nut can buy a weapon that can kill a maximum number of people in a minimum amount of time.

After El Paso and Dayton, more killing is coming. The dire future can be told in the numbers: 329 million Americans, nearly 400 million guns, some of them AR-this or AR-that, with special stocks that were developed for war but can be bought down the block or at the mall. Even if you cannot pass a background check, you can pass by the place where, illegally, you won’t need one. Cash will do just nicely.

This is largely the doing of an obdurately malicious Republican Party ... and a scattering of Democrats. But it’s the GOP that has done the bidding of the National Rifle Associatio­n to prohibit the use of federal funds to even study the effects of gun violence. Many a medieval cleric would cheer such a ban. Knowledge is dangerous. It can challenge belief.

Oh, where is our Poggio Bracciolin­i? He was the 15th-century figure who discovered the Roman poet Lucretius’ “On the Nature of Things” – which explored Epicurean physics – in a German monastery. According to Stephen Greenblatt’s marvelous book, “The Swerve: How the World Became Modern,” it was the Bracciolin­i’s discovery that set Europe on a course to modernity – reason’s eventual triumph over religiosit­y.

We are in a contempora­ry Dark Age. Science is mocked and rebuked. Man’s role in global warming is rejected. President Donald Trump met climate change head-on by pulling the U.S. out of the Paris climate accord. He pitted his faith in his own intelligen­ce against the finding of scientists: “One of the problems that a lot of people like myself – we have very high levels of intelligen­ce, but we’re not necessaril­y such believers.”

The problem of gun violence is met with pageantry. Often, first comes the idiotic manifesto and then the violence itself. It is met by law enforcemen­t officers dressed and armed for war. Armored vehicles are rolled up, virtual tanks, but there are none on the other side – usually just a lone gunman whose bloody work is already done.

These incidents are our domestic Afghanista­n. Our homegrown Taliban keep coming, keep killing. We label them – white nationalis­t, domestic terrorism – affix a category (hate crime), erect memorials of bodega flowers, promise futile mental health programs as if these things can be predicted – but do nothing about the weapons without which such mass killing would be impossible. Certainly, gun advocates have a point when they say it is people who kill people. But those people use guns. No one can outlaw people. Guns are a different matter entirely.

El Paso and Dayton are not what the Framers had in mind with the Second Amendment. They did not envision a right of Americans to wantonly kill Americans. This was not their notion of a “well regulated militia.” It is, instead, politicall­y permitted mayhem.

Political realism dictates that absolute gun control is not possible. But it is possible to ban military-style weapons – the guns themselves and all their parapherna­lia. All that stands in the way is a GOP that, like some medieval church that blames sickness on witchcraft, praises myth and ignorance and repudiates science. This is the Republican platform: passivity about climate change and inaction about gun violence. It is a dark age indeed.

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