OPINION
MICHELLE
GOLDBERG
America May Be Broken Beyond Repair
May 27,
2022
Michelle
Goldberg
By Michelle
Goldberg
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/27/opinion/uvalde-shooting.html
In an ad
released last year, Blake Masters, a leading candidate in Arizona’s Republican
Senate primary, cradles a semiautomatic weapon. “This is a short-barreled
rifle,” he said, ominous music playing in the background. “It wasn’t designed
for hunting. This is designed to kill people.”
For
Masters, this isn’t an argument against allowing such guns to proliferate.
Rather, it’s an acknowledgment of why access to these weapons is, for the
right, a matter of existential importance. “The Second Amendment is not about
duck hunting,” said Masters. “It’s about protecting your family and your
country. What’s the first thing the Taliban did when Joe Biden handed them
Afghanistan? They took away people’s guns.” Guns, in this worldview, are a
guarantor against government overreach. And government overreach includes
attempts to regulate guns.
These days,
it’s barely remarkable when Republicans issue what sound like threats against
those who’d dare curtail their private arsenals. “I have news for the
embarrassment that claims to be our president — try to take our guns and you’ll
learn why the Second Amendment was written in the first place,” Randy Fine, a
state representative in Florida, tweeted on Wednesday.
It will be
impossible to do anything about guns in this country, at least at a national
level, as long as Democrats depend on the cooperation of a party that holds in
reserve the possibility of insurrection. The slaughter of children in Texas has
done little to alter this dynamic.
Republicans
have no intention of letting Democrats pass even modest measures like
strengthened background checks, and as long as the Democratic senators Joe
Manchin and Kyrsten Sinema refuse to amend the filibuster, Republicans retain a
veto over national policy. Victims of our increasingly frequent mass shootings
are collateral damage in a cold civil war, though some Democrats refuse to
acknowledge it, let alone fight it.
Fine’s
words echoed Donald Trump’s during the 2016 election, when he said that “Second
Amendment people” might be able to stop a President Hillary Clinton from
appointing Supreme Court justices. What was once a barely concealed insinuation
of violence has morphed, especially since Jan. 6, into an even more forthright
menace. As ProPublica has reported, dozens of members of the Oath Keepers
militia were arrested in connection with the attack on the Capitol, but that
hasn’t stopped the organization from “evolving into a force within the
Republican Party.”
In Shasta
County, a conservative part of rural Northern California, a militia-aligned
faction has secured a majority on the board of supervisors, in what members of
the movement see as a blueprint that can be deployed nationally. Throughout the
country, reported The New York Times, “right-wing Republicans are talking more openly
and frequently about the use of force as justifiable in opposition to those who
dislodged him” — meaning Trump — “from power.” Expecting those same Republicans
to collaborate with Democrats on public safety is madness.
The
horrifying irony, the hideous ratchet, is that the more America is besieged by
senseless violence, the more the paramilitary wing of the American right is
strengthened. Gun sales tend to rise after mass shootings. Republicans
responded to the massacre in Uvalde by doubling down on calls to arm teachers
and “harden” schools. An article in The Federalist argued that parents must
home-school so that kids can learn “in a controlled environment where guns can
be safely carried for self-defense or locked away when not in use.” It’s a
vision of a society — if you can call it that — where every family is a
fortress.
Guns are
now the leading cause of death for American children. Many conservatives
consider this a price worth paying for their version of freedom. Our
institutions give these conservatives disproportionate power whether or not
they win elections. The filibuster renders the Senate largely impotent. Trump,
a president who lost the popular vote, was able to appoint Supreme Court
justices who are poised to help overturn a New York state law restricting the
carrying of concealed weapons. It’s increasingly hard to see a path to small-d
democratic reform.
And so
among liberals, there’s an overwhelming feeling of despair. Even as people
learn the names of all those murdered children, the most common sentiment is
not “never again,” but a bitter acknowledgment that nothing is going to change.
America is too sick, too broken. It is perhaps beyond repair.
Two years
ago, David French, an anti-Trump conservative, published a book, “Divided We
Fall,” warning of the possible crackup of the United States. It included two
chapters imagining scenarios for how the dissolution of the country might
happen. One involved a mass shooting at a school in California, to which the
state’s people reacted “with white-hot rage.” French envisioned furious state
politicians defying the Second Amendment, leading to a nullification crisis and
blue-state secession.
He meant it
as a cautionary tale, but rereading the chapter after Uvalde, it feels less bleak
than our reality. In French’s scenario, atrocity has the effect of energizing
people rather than immobilizing them. They are determined to fight, not
resigned to defeat. They have audacity and hope.
The real
nightmare is not that the repetition of nihilist terrorism brings American
politics to an inflection point, but that it doesn’t. The nightmare is that we
simply stumble on, helpless as things keep getting worse.
Michelle
Goldberg has been an Opinion columnist since 2017. She is the author of several
books about politics, religion and women’s rights, and was part of a team that
won a Pulitzer Prize for public service in 2018 for reporting on workplace
sexual harassment. @michelleinbklyn


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