That's how I feel about reading about the Right wing reaction to the latest mass shooting in America - it pretty much nauseates me as offensive both to reason and emotion, but can't stop looking.
The latest: as Jason Wilson writes in the Guardian, they're attacking the very idea that teenagers who survive a school shooting should be paid any attention. Because, you know, teenagers. Even Ben Shapiro, barely out of braces himself, is taking that approach.
The line between emotional and rational decision making is, as it happens, in the matter of gun control, one where the emotional does deserve extra weight. Because you can rationalise away legislative responses to almost any tragedy if you want to, and gun rights nutters are highly motivated to do so. The easiest way - routinely deployed - make the perfect the enemy of the good. It's a rational argument in its own way - you need emotional clout to say "stop deploying what you think is a 'rational' response to repeated death and mayhem, when there are sensible things that could be done."
Second point: Trump's response is only to call again for banning bumpstocks - not even implicated in the latest killing. At this rate, he'll contemplate increasing the age for buying AR-15s after another 6 mass shootings by teenagers.
Third point: a lot of discussion happening about how the attitudes of under 35's towards gun control is not as "liberal" as you would expect. Vox has a good article about it, but one thing I reckon would be important about this - the way polling is conducted on this issue is, I suspect, particularly open to uncertainty, given the speed with which recent shootings drop out of the public mind, and the very vagueness with some of the terminology such as "gun control". Hence it is an issue where politicians are entitled to take a lead and not just try to work out a response based on imprecise readings of what steps a majority would approve. But of course, politicians on the Right are the least likely to want to make any effort at all.
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