By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, December 16, 2015
In the wake of the San Bernardino attack, liberals are in
a total panic over guns. The New York
Times broke a 95-year precedent to editorialize about gun control on its
front page. But the Times seems
restrained compared with the full-on meltdown at the New York Daily News, which has taken to calling the head of the NRA
a “terrorist.”
I have no desire to rehash the all-too-familiar debate
over whether such policies would have their intended effects or whether they’d
pass constitutional muster. Let’s just stipulate I am skeptical on both counts.
But it is worth contemplating why the gun-control
movement has been such a complete failure. And it might be constructive to
compare the war on guns to a regulatory war liberals actually won: the war on
tobacco.
For a long time, smoking cigarettes was seen as even more
American than owning a gun. Hollywood’s golden age is like a celluloid smoking
lounge. The opening scene of Casablanca
is a close-up of an ashtray with a lit cigarette. The camera pans out and
Humphrey Bogart takes a nice long drag.
Cigarettes, much like guns, were deeply tied to notions
of masculinity — remember the Marlboro Man? But they were also symbols of
urbane sophistication, for men and women alike (Marlene Dietrich in Morocco, Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany’s). James Bond was
a chain smoker. In the books, he smoked 60 a day. Sean Connery cut back, just a
bit, for the movies.
Now, cigarettes are so widely reviled that the MPAA
includes smoking along with violence and sex in its warning language.
There are, of course, a great many reasons why we’ve seen
such a remarkable shift in such a short span of time, though medical science is
probably the biggest. But there’s another factor that doesn’t get its due.
Smoking was, until recently, a very bipartisan habit. City mice and country
mice alike would walk a mile for a Camel.
The universality of smoking made it possible to
proselytize against it without unleashing a full-blown kulturkampf. Sure, conservatives and libertarians complained —
often correctly by my lights — about lost liberties, but an attack on smoking,
backed up by solid evidence, didn’t simultaneously feel like an attack on one
cultural group by another.
Because nonsmokers knew smokers, the war on tobacco could
be fought face-to-face in our homes, businesses, movie theaters, planes,
trains, and automobiles. And when nonsmokers pleaded with their friends and
loved ones to give up tobacco, they at least understood the appeal of smoking.
Cigarette America wasn’t a foreign country. You can’t say the same thing about
Gun America.
My wife grew up in Fairbanks, Alaska, where gun ownership
was nearly as common and natural as snow-shovel ownership. I grew up on the
Upper West Side of Manhattan and I never knew anyone who owned a gun. When my
mother was an auxiliary mounted policewoman, she was not permitted to carry
one.
The absence of guns in urban liberal environments leads
to a kind of Pauline Kaelism. Kael is — apocryphally — credited with saying she
couldn’t believe Richard Nixon won the election because she didn’t know anyone
who voted for him.
Likewise, many urban liberals only hear about guns when
they’re used in crimes, and simply can’t imagine why anyone would want one. As
a result, they’re tone-deaf in their arguments.
Even worse than the tone-deafness is the arrogant
condescension. In the 2008 campaign, when Barack Obama tried to explain why
some rural voters were not supporting him, he infamously said that it was out
of bitterness — a bitterness that caused them to “cling” to their guns and
their religion. Obama has been trying to unring that bell ever since.
To urban liberals, guns are like cigarettes — products
that when used as intended only hurt or kill people, and that are also
low-class and crude. The Second Amendment, Washington
Post columnist Gene Weingarten wrote, is “the refuge of bumpkins and
yeehaws who like to think they are protecting their homes against imagined
swarthy marauders desperate to steal their flea-bitten sofas from their rotting
front porches.”
Such smugness doesn’t help, but the real reason the war
on guns has been such an abysmal failure is that guns and cigarettes aren’t
alike after all. You can’t hunt or, more importantly, defend yourself or your
family with a cigarette. That’s why, in the wake of San Bernardino, millions of
Americans didn’t think, “We’ve got to get rid of guns.” They thought, “Maybe I
should get one.” I know I did.
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