A
Counter-Attack in the War of Semantics
I
don’t know about you, but I find one of the most frustrating aspects of this
debate on gun ownership comes from the fact that those we call the
“anti-gunners” just don’t seem to get it.
We “pro-gunners” point at the Bill
of Rights, quote the founding fathers to demonstrate precisely what they
meant, show how the accidental death statistics from the FBI and ATF do not
support the wild claims being made about firearm mortality – and yet, it seems
to go right over their heads. In
practical terms, it really is
going over their heads – no different than green recruits firing over the tops
of the opposing troops. Doesn’t
do a lot of good that way.
In
a public debate, following the normal rules of rhetoric and logic, point and
counterpoint, this affair would be one-sided.
An objective judge would recognize that one side is based on
Constitutional law, publicly available data, sound statistics and reason.
The other side is based mostly on gut-feel, emotional pleas, and
(disturbingly) demonstrable untruths.
But
clearly, there is more to these debates than well-reasoned thinking – there
are some very hot emotions at work here. And
it is not the logic of these debates that attracts the media
sharks, but rather the emotions. The
anchormen and the news teams know that murder and scandal sell papers, not
discussions on the nature of mankind. Stirring
people into frenzy so they burn city blocks at a time is a particular specialty
of theirs.
So
how are these emotions communicated? What’s
the trick? How is it that both the anti-gunners and the media continue
to influence otherwise intelligent citizens, despite having no logical arguments
to present?
The
answer lies in the semantics they use.
One
of their tricks is simply the use of inflammatory words.
This is especially successful when you can get the other side to use
these words, because you can both redefine the playing field as well convey a
bias to the discussions. Maybe you
and I can see past these words, but when our arguments are considered by
ordinary folks trying to form an opinion on the subject, the message is already
undercut.
I
have had close friends (not particularly gun-oriented) hear just the words “assault
rifle” and turn to me and say “nobody really needs
an assault rifle.” You see,
without even knowing the arguments on either side, an opinion can be formed, and
a vote can be swayed, and “inalienable rights” can be lost.
I
suggest we change this – as soon as possible.
Let me illustrate how a similar situation developed in the media during
the coverage of the Vietnam War.
I
was reading the excellent new book “Unheralded Victory: The Defeat of the Viet
Cong and the North Vietnamese Army, 1961-1973” by Mark W. Woodruff this last
weekend, and was fascinated by the way Hanoi spin doctors biased the language
which the American media used to describe the war.
This process was formally called dich
van (action among the enemy), and was expressly designed to convey the
message that the war was unwinnable and immoral.
The United States did not use bombs, it used “anti-civilian bombs”
(despite the fact, as described in this book, that our soldiers did an
absolutely amazing job of avoiding civilian casualties, and that immediately
after the war, most of North Vietnam was largely untouched).
The NVA described themselves as “anti-war” or “liberators” and
the South Vietnamese as “pro-war”. And
their enemy was not South Vietnam nor the United States so much as it was
“those pro-war factions”. So
Americans could feel the NVA did not hate them – instead they hated only
MacNamara, Johnson, etc. And I’ll
bet most people still believe that Tet was a great disaster for the U.S. and
victory for the NVA. It couldn’t
be further from the truth. But the dich
van policy established the way the American involvement should be seen
(while conveniently omitting mention of the enslavement of thousands of the
indigenous people, mass graves, torture, etc. committed by the NVA and the Viet
Cong throughout the war)
And
we bought it. Or at least the media did, after which they spoon-fed it to
us. This did not begin as a media
conspiracy, but was more a reflection of the relatively small amount of
experience of the war correspondents (there were some superb war correspondents,
but their messages were not what hit the 6:00 o’clock news).
As Woodruff’s book describes, these reporters conveyed the panic
they felt, rather than the events that
happened.
That
one observation changed the way I see many things now.
I
needn’t take this example further (please read the book for that) other than
to observe that these reporters needed an angle, a story, a heart-tug.
Consciously or otherwise, they latched onto the messages the NVA dich
van program provided them. And
by the end of the war, they were given explicit directives by their own editors
to pitch all news from the perspective of why we needed to get out of Vietnam as
soon as possible. It has been
suggested that the media wanted the
U.S. to lose the war, just to prove their earlier stories were right.
The
inflammatory and carefully-biased words from Hanoi fed directly through the news
reports, into the mainstream, and affected the opinion of Clark Clifford, who
was thought (incorrectly) to be knowledgeable in this area.
And his opinion directly fed to President Johnson, which affected the
bombing tactics, which led directly to higher losses of American lives when the
NVA returned to battle rather than repairing the bomb-damaged supply roads. Amazing what a few carefully chosen words can do.
There
is a very important point here and it is the crux of the matter.
The
media does not exist to report history as it happens.
Rather, the media
exists to keep the media in business. And
this means pitching emotional stories with a human angle.
Further, these stories are not typically written by experts in the areas
being covered -- they are written by experts in the field of writing stories
with emotional impact. As a result,
the media is not fair. It never has
been, nor will it ever be. We are
wasting our time if we expect the media to pick up our rational arguments and
stand them side-by-side with the anti-gun arguments.
So
are we completely out of luck?
I
don’t think so. We cannot influence the media on our terms, but we can
influence them on their own terms. We
can influence them the same way the anti-gunners did, by choosing carefully the
words we use in our discussions.
Frankly,
I think the anti-gunners out-flanked us in just the last few years by feeding
the media inflammatory words. Even
worse, we began to incorporate these same words in our debates (presumably as a
short cut to agreeing on a common terminology), thereby undercutting our own
arguments. But these words are poison.
Ask
some ordinary person on the street how he or she feels about those “gun
nuts” having “uncontrolled access” to “assault rifles”.
This person doesn’t even need to know any of the arguments, yet they
can come to a conclusion with which they are comfortable, and they can consider
themselves informed.
It’s
human. Don’t dismiss it lightly.
These folks will take the words at face value, form an opinion from them,
and feel no need to pursue it further. They
will typically not read any of the arguments of either side, so all the
statistics and founding father quotes are not a factor.
The gut speaks – the brain listens.
Like
it or not, these little words affect the opinions of a large number of voters.
The
solution is for us to reject these “anti-gunner” words in our debates, craft
new words to convey the real issues at stake, and be utterly rigorous in using
them in further discussions. When
new categories of firearms come under attack, it is up to us to anticipate some
inflammatory term for it and to come up with a better term first.
Let’s
take them one at a time. And by the
way, I have no particular skill at choosing these new words.
If someone has already coined them, let’s use those instead. But let’s at least get a public list we can agree to use.
Assault
rifle.
Now there’s a word that has a specific meaning that has been subverted
and reapplied to a different class of firearm.
We know that an assault rifle, by definition, has to be capable of
selective fire (semi-auto, and burst or full-auto). But someone latched onto that term because it carries with it
a certain level of adrenaline, and they redefined our semi-automatic cousins of
these assault rifles to be in this same class.
Yes,
this is incorrect. Yes, it was not
coined by someone knowledgeable with firearms, and, yes, it is inflammatory.
But now they can talk about this “dangerous” class of firearm and win
votes (without a single logical explanation).
No one cares to hear whether the term has a basis in fact.
As long as the term is used, it has a meaning.
Brian
Puckett advised me that the semi-automatic AR-15 clone you keep in your safe
is properly called your “militia
rifle”. Excellent term.
It moves the playing field away from the class of firearm and right back
to the 2nd Amendment. Not
only does it unload the prior term of its inflammatory power, it brings to the
table the real issue at stake here; the right and the responsibility of U.S.
citizens to protect their country and their freedoms.
“Anti-gunners”.
We use that word constantly. I’ve
used it in the paragraphs above. Yet,
we are the only people to whom it has any pejorative value.
If I wanted to ban all guns, I would want
to be called an “anti-gun” person. It
is gratifyingly self-righteous and defines the outlawing of guns as a legitimate
pursuit. But that’s their word. I’m
sure we can come up with several replacements, but I prefer “freedom
grabbers” or “anti-Constitutionalists”.
We have to convey the message that these people are after a fundamental
inalienable right enumerated in the Bill of Rights.
They are truly out to subvert the Constitution.
From my point of view, “traitors” is not semantically incorrect, but it will raise
blood to the boiling point too quickly.
Remember
-- the opposition of the “Pro-Life” movement is not “Anti-Life”.
They knew better and used “Pro-Choice”, and in so doing, redefined
the playing field. Even better,
their name restated the basic issue, and if there ever was an inalienable right,
being in charge of one’s own body has got to be one.
“Pro-gunners”.
This is the other side of the coin.
Unfortunately, it sounds as if members of this group are proposing gun
ownership as if it didn’t already exist.
It just invites the term “anti-gunner” and makes it appear there is a
fair debate whether guns should be considered for public ownership.
It does not convey any indication that such people are trying to defend
the basic freedoms of their country (which is why other people can get the idea
that “pro-gun” is the same as “duck hunter”) or that the possession of
firearms was expressly enumerated as an inalienable right in the Bill of Rights.
We need some term that says we are trying to defend what has already been
set forth by our founding fathers as a core freedom.
Ideas, anyone? How about “Pro-Constitution”?
“Gun-control”.
That term admits defeat. Think
of “pest control”. It presumes
there is a problem that needs to be controlled.
Without any supporting arguments, that term says “guns are a problem
and we need to do something about it.” However,
when you think of what it means in terms of the Constitution, it should be
called “arms infringement.”
Of course, that term is as loaded as the other, but it at least restates
the real issue.
Saturday
Night Special. Now there’s a loaded term.
Someone who knows nothing about handguns will suspect there is a class of
handguns that blow up in your hand. It
is not fair (nor is it intended to be) nor is it correct.
It is, however, inflammatory. I’m
open to suggestions on this one, but something like “affordable self-protection” comes to mind.
The message has got to be delivered that even inexpensive handguns from
all the major manufacturers are strong and reliable, or they would have been
sued out of business long ago. Further,
the very people who can least afford the “luxury” of self-protection and
cannot afford a $600.00 handgun are the very people who often have to resort to
self-defense first. If such people
need affordable housing, they definitely need affordable self-protection (which
makes Clinton’s campaign to regulate firearms in such a setting all the more
clueless and destructive).
Sniper
rifle.
Don’t even let that one get started.
By now you can smell this family of words coming.
Someone must sit around thinking of how they can best make bogey men out
of inanimate objects. I don’t know about you, but I would prefer to talk about my
“competition
rifle” (which is how I use it) or my “hunting
rifle”. Don’t let these
people put innocents in your cross hairs – you certainly don’t.
Gun
nut
(or the older “gun
crank”). We use this word
ourselves to refer to those of us who make their major hobby involved with
firearms. It’s self-effacing and
a form of good-natured kidding. But
putting the word “gun” and the word “nut” in the same sentence is
exactly what the freedom-grabbers and media want most.
In their eyes, it means someone who is not to be trusted, someone who is
a danger to the public just by having a firearm at home.
Sadly, it was our own term, and it has merely been subverted (not unlike
the word “hacker” in the software world).
Time to jettison it. I
prefer “gun hobbyist”, or
“firearm
collector”.
So
let’s recap:
THEIR
NAME |
OUR
NAME |
Assault
Rifle |
Militia
Rifle |
Anti-gun |
Freedom-grabber,
Anti-constitutional |
Gun
Control |
Arms
infringement |
Saturday
Night Special |
Affordable
self-protection |
Sniper
rifle |
competition/hunting
rifle |
Gun
nut |
Gun
hobbyist, firearms collector [lawful, peaceable gun owner] |
KABA
Additions When Editing This Article |
Trigger
lock |
crime
prevention inhibitor, criminal-enabling device |
Registration |
Pre-confiscation,
criminals don't have to register (self-incrimination, US vs. Haynes) |
Gun
show loophole |
Attempt
to stop fair trade in private property, attempt to force backdoor
registration (pre-confiscation) on private sales, freedom
is not a loophole |
This
poll shows... |
Look
at OUR polls. We will NOT be giving up our guns. Period. |
"Cop
killer" bullets |
Don't
exist |
Semi-automatic |
Self-loading,
so what? People can fire a revolver just as fast as a self-loading
handgun. |
Waiting
periods |
Criminals
have no waiting periods on the black market. Why should a woman wait to
be able to defend herself when she has been threatened with bodily harm? |
Licensing |
You
cannot license a right. Would you support a Free Speech License? A
License to Worship? A Parent License? |
Vigilante |
Self-preservation
is wrong? |
Just
hand over the money, the sex, etc. |
So
they know their business is lucrative? How long would it be until their
friends join in the looting? Give in to every whim of the criminal if
you want to, but leave my choice to me. |
Guns
are bad. |
Then
why are they used to stop criminals every day? If cops had no guns, we'd
be in a state of lawlessness. Guns save more lives than their misuse
costs. Study the facts. |
I
don't believe in guns. |
They
exist, criminals have them, taking them from lawful people would turn
our streets over to criminals. |
Dial
911 |
and
die |
Leave
it to police |
They
can't always be there and they have no duty to protect. |
My
opinion is different. |
I'm
not talking about opinions; I'm talking about facts, reality, and saving
innocent lives. Don't you care about saving lives? Why would you
want to disarm lawful people with the criminals on the loose? |
There
are many others, but I think we need other creative minds here.
Will
it work? Is there time enough to make a difference?
I
honestly don’t know, but I do know what will happen if we do nothing.
It’s
too late to persuade the freedom-grabbers using reason.
They’re gone. Their minds
were made up out of the gate. Save
your breath. The only way these
folks will change their minds is by suffering some crime they could have
prevented with a gun.
What
matters is whether we can persuade those still undecided.
If we can win back some of this war of semantics and influence the
media’s choice of terms, I think we have a real chance.
Recommended
further reading on this important topic: