Talya wrote:
To be fair, the gun-rights lobby in the USA treats the 2nd ammendment with a remarkable reverence that ranks right up there with Jesus.
It's only "religious," however, metaphorically.
This might be more fair if it weren't for the fact that the various rights enumerated in the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th and 8th Amendments and often the 14th as well are treated the same way by pretty much all parts of the political spectrum. The only reason the gun-rights lobby appears this way is that they have an opposition group making the case that a right enumerated in the Bill of Rights isn't actually a right like all the others because of special-pleading arguments. A case they continue to make 7 years after it was finally affirmed by the USSC, using such creative arguments as "Well, that decision was from Antonin Scalia and is therefore 'conservative ****' and doesn't count because the rules magically change for precedent and the powers of the courts if guns are involved." Think of how absurd an argument like this would sound were it applied to a USSC case on any other amendment.
If anything, the anti-gun lobby behaves far more as if gun control were an object of (metaphorical) religious devotion. The gun control lobby treats gun control as a goal and an end in and of itself that must be accomplished for its own sake, and presents supposed benefits to society of having it as beneficial side effects. Gun control is ALWAYS presented as if it were a self-evident necessity that will, happily, make things better in the process. The primary tactic for getting it is to push any and all measures at gun control, knowing that if any are implemented that will simply become the new "extreme" gun rights people are forced to defend and a new "compromise" will be asked for. The idea is to erode gun rights by any and all means by portraying any position other than total or near-total bans as extreme.
The pro-gun lobby is largely
forced to behave as it does by the tactics of the opposition. The NRA, historically, did favor certain types of gun control and restrictions - they ceased doing this when they realized that acquiescing to
any restriction meant just more demands for yet
more restrictions. Many of the measures that seem to more middle-of-the-road people as reasonable are not opposed by the gun lobby because they're unreasonable but because once they're imposed, that will become the new extreme and a new "reasonable middle" will appear.
Think about the howling from the anti-gun people when Canada ceased its registry despite its high cost and total lack of evidence of actually accomplishing anything.