According to Wikipedia, E.J. Dionne Jr.
is a journalist, political commentator, and “long-time op-ed columnist” for The Washington Post. He is also “a
Senior Fellow in Governance Studies at the Brookings Institution, a
University Professor in the Foundations of Democracy and Culture at the McCourt
School of Public Policy, and an NPR, MSNBC, and PBS commentator.” His experience as a political commentator and
political science academician is a testament to his credibility and knowledge in
all things political.
In a recent Washington Post article “Why is only one side in the gun culture war required to show respect?,” Dionne Jr. argues that advocates for greater gun control laws are often required to be empathetic and respectful of the beliefs and fears of ardent 2nd Amendment supporters, yet the opposite is not evident. He claims that a similar call for empathy and respect is not demanded of those individuals with what he calls “extreme pro-gun views.”
In a recent Washington Post article “Why is only one side in the gun culture war required to show respect?,” Dionne Jr. argues that advocates for greater gun control laws are often required to be empathetic and respectful of the beliefs and fears of ardent 2nd Amendment supporters, yet the opposite is not evident. He claims that a similar call for empathy and respect is not demanded of those individuals with what he calls “extreme pro-gun views.”
While one
could argue that Dionne Jr.’s intended audience is the collective of ardent 2nd
Amendment supporters he references, I suspect his intended audience is truly meant
to be the everyman who doesn’t recognize that he is a pawn in the NRA’s scheme
to keep us at each other’s throats. In
fact, Dionne Jr. highlights recent Quinnipiac polls which show much broader
support for tightening of gun control laws across all Americans, gun owners and
otherwise, thus emphasizing that we have far more common beliefs and goals on
guns than is purported by the NRA, the media outlets which profit from them,
and the politicians that are in its pockets.
This is a strong statement and one that I wish Dionne Jr. had truly made
the centerpiece of his article. Instead,
his message gets muddied by erroneous talk of mutual respect and empathy and
lack of “cross-cultural understanding.” His
own included statistics challenge that notion and point a solid finger of blame
toward the NRA and its complicit partners.
Let’s call a spade a spade, Dionne Jr., and let go of the inflaming rhetoric
about respect and empathy – it feeds right into the hands of the NRA.