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Frank Arthur's avatar

What a coherent summary of the gun evolution in our society. I’m in my early 70’s and grew up at a time when girls had dolls and boys had toy guns. We watched Davy Crockett and Gunsmoke, wore coonskin caps and advanced to BB and pellet guns. I joined the NRA while still in my teens and served both in the military and later the FBI.

Somehow, despite all this I must have had a different belief system; as I haven’t owned a firearm in decades, despise the NRA and am both embarrassed and afraid of what the gun lobby has instilled in our Country. Assault weapons in private hands? Lack of background checks? Little or no comprehensive gun registration or regulation? What a tragic situation which Americans overwhelmingly want corrected yet lobbyists and self serving politicians continue to block. It sickens me and I will do my best to support Gabby Gifford and others in their efforts. Thanks HCR for presenting this and keeping the dialogue going. We are better than this and deserve better from our elected officials.

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Charlotte Clymer's avatar

This is an excellent summary of the cultural magnet holding the pieces of obstruction together.

I honestly believe that these men want so badly to have an enemy to fight. Their sense of masculinity is inextricably bound to movies where the rugged, masculine, white hero faces down evil with firearms.

As you so deftly made clear here, it goes far beyond a gun crisis. We have a crisis of masculinity in this country. Tens of millions of grown men--to say nothing of boys--who have been conditioned to believe that their only worth as men comes from violently defending their families, their homes, or themselves against a vague evil that so often takes shape in the form of their worst bigotries.

Insecurity in manhood drives the bulk of this.

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