Friday, October 20, 2017

TPM's readers on gun owners and the zombie apocalypse


Last week, Talking Points Memo published three letters from its readers about guns and gun culture.  Two of them deal with guns in a post-apocalyptic world, one of them specifically about the zombie apocalypse.  The first was Readers on Guns #2, which deals directly with a theme I explored in Zombies meet preppers on 'Fear the Walking Dead' Season 3 -- racism as a motivation behind prepping for the zombie apocalypse.
I know that a lot of the rhetoric from the pro-gun crowd revolves around “protection from tyranny,” but my sense is that the “tactical situation” they are mostly thinking about is more lurid than that. You sometime hear them talking about the “zombie apocalypse” or more generally some sort of “social breakdown,” where their stockpiles might form the basis of a protective arsenal. Are they really worried about zombies? Of course not. That’s just a wink-wink, nod-nod.
Follow over the jump for the rest of this letter and all of the next.

The worry is even worse than anything the writers of "Fear the Walking Dead" writers came up with as a motivation for the Ottos and the rest of the survivalists at Brokejaw Ranch.
The tactical scenario the gun-crowd is thinking about is swarms of n___ers flooding out of the cities — perhaps after a natural disaster or some riot promoted by the Black Panthers or BLM or something. Their vision is some combination of Nat Turner’s rebellion, the Watts riots, and gangs engaged in “wilding.”

Obama’s election resulted in a frenzy of gun-buying, not because they suddenly thought the government would seize their guns, but rather because of a vision of Obama leading an army of “inner city” people to loot, rape, and otherwise dispossess whites.

Anyway, that is the “tactical scenario” they are planning for.
Not only are these guys racists, they're dumb racists with lurid imaginations. 

Readers on Guns #3 riffs on the use of "tactical" while describing a post-apocalyptic or post-collapse world, with or without zombies.
Creative Writing MFA candidate here, with some further thoughts on the word ‘tactical’ as it seemst o be used/intended in current gun culture. These are mostly implicit in the point made by your earlier reader but:


‘Tactical’ is, as your reader points out, something of an epidemic usage in modern gun culture. Partly this just looks like an infectious marketing usage–it’s easier to sell a Tactical Widget than a regular old widget, and once your competitor is selling Tactical Widgets you’d better be selling them too. But it’s precisely these kind of seemingly-dead usages we’ve got to be most careful of–thoughtless language fills in gaps where we prefer not to have to think about our thinking.

So what’s really happening with ‘tactical’–well, for starters ‘tactical’ is fundamentally an oppositional term. A tactic is an action you take in contact with an enemy. It’s supposed to give you some kind of an advantage relative to their movements or operations. It’s notable that we’re almost always thinking of a human–or at least a reasoning–enemy. One doesn’t need tactics to shoot ducks or deer–only humans. It’s also worth noting that the conventional (and marketing) usage of tactics refers to situations that are more or less evenly matched–situations where a different type of stock or sight might make a difference. What specifically isn’t tactical is the common fantasy of armed revolt: a tactical widget isn’t much use against a bombing run. Or maybe it’s better to say that the fantasy of armed revolt only becomes tactical when it also recruits the fantasy of mass military mutiny. A tactical conflict–a tactical society–is a society where the social contract has completely collapsed. It’s a society that consists entirely of competition between consumer-sized groups of vigilantes.

But in addition to referring to a human opposition, the idea of the tactical refers to the idea that violence between these human factions is basically meritocratic–a tactic, after all, is a good idea. It’s a maneuver, a stratagem. ‘Luck is the residue of design,’ a tactics-consumer might say–and by buying so many tactical widgets they intend to be the luckiest. A world defined by tactics is a Darwinian world. The smartest and best-practiced survive (become warlords?) and the soft, secular liberals get what they deserve. This is a desire that’s increasingly prominent in modern right politics–the sense (wrong or right) that Our Tribe is the best and most deserving, and that all society is doing is keeping us from expressing the dominance we really ought to. This is the same thread that’s behind Trump’s GOP-standard ‘That makes me smart’ attitude about tax evasion, and probably that underlies much of the recent private-jet contretemps.

It’s unclear whether ‘tactical’ as a marketing term predates the (seemingly recent) prominence of these associations with ‘tactical.’ But it is clear that the world we’re ushered into by this use of tactical is one we probably don’t very much want to live in.
Not only do these people want to shoot their fellow Americans, they want civilization to collapse so they can as well as to reduce human organization down to a size they can manage.  This Crazy Eddie does not approve.

6 comments:

  1. Delving into the minds of the gun nuts; an interesting take - perhaps the most interesting I've seen in years.

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    1. Thank you, although none of this is original to me. I just found it and reproduced it here.

      Also, thanks for coming here from Crooks and Liars to read and leave a comment.

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  2. This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

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    1. I'm not procrastinating in deleting this spam comment.

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  3. Can You Guide Me Plase How To Play Zombo Calypse Game Online For Free..Thanks

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    1. LOL, "plase." Still, your link is on-topic and as much as I write about zombies, I'm in no position to complain about it. Lucky you, spamming Viking!

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