On
the Daily Show, sportscaster Bob Costas tells Jon Stewart about the uproar over
his mild comments linking gun use to football violence, while a New York Times business columnist fills
his space with 15 shooting death reports across the country in the past week.
The
struggle over the lethal effects of a legal product is beginning to resemble a
decades-long effort to make millions aware of cigarette dangers and suggest the
way forward may lie less in sweeping legislation than in small steps to curtail
its use and, most important, heighten public awareness of the dangers.
Just
as tobacco lobbyists forestalled legislative action against smoking for
decades, the firearms makers’ creatures of the NRA have the financial and
electoral clout to limit sweeping gun reform. Meanwhile, local smoking bans
were being met at first with outrage but slowly gained public acceptance as
evidence of their efficacy accumulated.
By all
means, Congress should push the efforts of Joe Biden and even more so those of
Dianne Feinstein, but as they are being slowed by silly side shows such as
whether the President is an avid skeet shooter, the long-term return to sanity
about American guns may parallel the cigarette story.
Talk
about smoking guns...
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