The point of view of Arms, A.J. Somersets history of gun culture, might be more important than any of the stories he tells.
Instantly reminded me of Michael bellesiles (bell - ile) 'Arming America', which is a very good read with a few inaccuracies which the gun lobby made him pay dear for. It was also referred to as a 'history of America's gun culture'.
Will be interesting to see how the nra & gun lobby approach Somerset's book, whether they will attack it like the did Arming America.
A former soldier who is now a technical writer in Canada, he skewers the gun industry, particularly the NRA, for convincing many gun owners that the Second Amendment is the single most important sentence in the entire Bill of Rights and that any threat to expanding gun ownership universal background checks, for instance is an attack on Mom, apple pie, democracy, and Jesus himself.
(The color white plays an important role in this history: Somerset writes that race war has long been the drunken uncle of American gun culture.)
A recent Pew poll found that 49% of gun owners favor a ban on assault rifles and 61% favor a federal database of gun sales propositions the gun lobby vehemently opposes. Of course, all of those numbers are even higher for non-gun-owners, but they show that at least half of gun owners are moderate or as Somerset would say, sensible in their view of gun laws. But when was the last time we heard from these people? Somerset has a harsh answer: Culture war favors the blowhard, and by framing gun control as culture war, the NRA distracts us from the serious policy questions while silencing internal dissent.
Somerset is particularly critical of the gun industrys appeals to women, which he calls a strange nod toward feminism by the men in charge of the heavily male-dominated gun industry. The message is this: Women need a gun to be safe and strong, and it is their sovereign right to defend not just themselves but their rights. Somerset writes about Victoria Rutledge, a woman in rural Idaho who had a loaded handgun in her purse at Wal-Mart and was shot there with it by her 2-year-old son. The finger of blame here points not at [her], Somerset writes, but at the armed-camp vision of America, the culture of complete preparedness that insists you must go armed, that you must at all times have a loaded weapon within reach, with a round in the chamber, ready to fire. Veronica Rutledges death was not the tragedy of a young mothers negligence with a loaded handgun. It was the tragedy of a culture of negligence.