Opinion: Gun Crazies Embracing Newtown Conspiracy Theories

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Mr. Scott is the owner and publisher of Mad Mike's America. He is a U.S. Army veteran, career law enforcement executive, and dog trainer. He is a university professor, and criminal justice consultant, holding several degrees, including a master's in criminal justice and human services. He has completed the requisite coursework toward his doctorate, and is still working on his dissertation.
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America has a lot of problems, not the least of which is its population of crazies, with most, but not all, being Right wing bible toting, gun nuts, and that includes their duly elected representatives.

The latest American disgrace shocks even the most hardened of us, those who are supposedly inured to the crazy conspiracy theories that plague events like the Kennedy assassination, the moon landing, and that most evil of all government plots: vaccinations.

boy scouts salute a funeral procession for benjamin wheeler 6 who was killed in the sandy hook Opinion: Gun Crazies Embracing Newtown Conspiracy Theories

Boy Scouts salute a funeral procession for Benjamin Wheeler, 6, who was killed in the Sandy Hook massacre.
John Moore/Getty Images

Ryu Spaeth of The Week observes that in the aftermath of the massacre at Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown, Conn., President Obama has moved to strengthen America’s gun laws, and public opinion has swung significantly in support of stricter gun control. Gun-rights advocates have responded passionately, but opposition has also begun to take on uglier forms — most notably in conspiracy theories that contend the shooting was a hoax perpetrated by the government, the media, or some wildly improbable combination of the two.

What kind of conspiracy theories are out there? One contends that something is amiss because the adults in Newtown — particularly Robbie Parker, who lost his 6-year-old daughter Emilie in the shooting — haven’t grieved hard enough. According to this theory, many of the shattered adults you’ve seen on camera are actors. Another claims that Emilie is still alive, appearing in a photograph with President Obama (the person in the photo is Emilie’s sister). Yet another claims that there were other gunmen besides Adam Lanza. For a comprehensive list, as well as a thorough debunking (not that you’d need one), check out this article from Salon.

The thread that connects the various theories is gun control. “The underlying theme in all the theories is that the media, the government, and the Obama administration specifically either manipulated or orchestrated the shooting to move political opinion on gun control,” says Laura Edwins at The Christian Science Monitor. Analysts say the theories may be a way to deflect blame from guns to imaginary culprits.

Of course, conspiracy theories abound on the internet. But the Sandy Hook variety are gaining traction, approaching Obama-was-born-in-Kenya ubiquity. One YouTube video, “The Sandy Hook Shooting—Fully Exposed,” has been viewed more than 10 million times. Gene Rosen, a Newtown resident who sheltered six children during the shooting, has reportedly received creepy phone calls and emails from those who believe he is an actor. And it’s all over social media, according to Ben Smith and CJ Lotz at BuzzFeed:

“It’s by far the hottest topic of the moment,” said David Mikkelson, the co-founder of the popular fact-checking website Snopes.com, which offers a detailed and extensive debunking of the theory’s various planks.

The term “Sandy Hook conspiracy” was also a “hot search” on Google this week. [BuzzFeed]

It may be unwise to attribute these theories to a bunch of cranks. As the National Rifle Association showed this week, with an anti-gun control ad harping on Obama’s daughters, a conspiratorial strain runs through the gun lobby’s public relations approach. As David Weigel at Slate explains:

The idea that the government is one short step away from a gun ban is actually integral to the lobby’s pitch…At the 2012 Conservative Political Action Conference, [NRA head Wayne] LaPierre warned that the first-term Obama administration’s “lip service to gun owners is just part of a massive Obama conspiracy to deceive voters and hide his true intentions to destroy the Second Amendment during his second term”…

The fact that Obama responded to Sandy Hook at all validates LaPierre’s fears, and he’s said so. Why would anyone be surprised when that paranoia grows into a full-on conspiracy theory? [Slate]

I’ve little doubt that the crazies will actually draw traction with even some of the more sober politicians.  Just yesterday I learned that the gunners were spreading the lie that Adam Lanza didn’t use the Bushmaster in the murders, leaving it in the car instead.  This untruth was disseminated almost on day one of the investigation by fanatic gunners, fearing their “rights” were about to be taken away.

In conclusion, the only way the American Disease of guns can be cured will be to repeal the outdated 2d Amendment and return the nation to a more responsible course.

 

 Opinion: Gun Crazies Embracing Newtown Conspiracy Theories
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Posted by + on January 19, 2013. Filed under COMMENTARY/OPINION. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response or trackback to this entry
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5 Responses to Opinion: Gun Crazies Embracing Newtown Conspiracy Theories

  1. HenryPollock49 Reply

    January 19, 2013 at 11:03 am

    Even an attempt to repeal the Second Amendment would cause a furor unseen since the Civil War, but it needs to be done nonetheless.

  2. bitcodavid Reply

    January 19, 2013 at 11:08 am

    Couldn’t we argue the opposite? That the NRA staged it to gin up anti-gun sentiment thereby causing a run on gun and ammo stores before the inevitable ban on guns occurs? I’ve read several articles that state that gun sales have gone through the roof since Sandy Hook. Gun nuts thrive on FUD anyway. It makes perfect sense to me.

    This stuff’s so simple to get started – and impossible to truly debunk, because people are going to believe what they want to believe. If we can make some of them believe that Obama staged this thing, why not try to make some of them believe that Lapierre did it?

    All I know is – and I never thought I’d say it – I’m actually missing Heston.

  3. Michael John Scott Reply

    January 19, 2013 at 11:18 am

    When I hear NRA, I hear “gun nuts” David, although I know that’s not fair to the millions of members who are responsible gun owners. As to Heston, he had his things, but he was no nut in the tradition of Wayne LaPierre. Second thought: I wonder what other countries think of this nonsense?

  4. James Smith Reply

    January 19, 2013 at 12:05 pm

    There is something in the human psyche that is attracted to conspiracy theories and other unprovable, unbelievable nonsense. That accounts for the Tea Party, all religions, and most Republicans.

    Wayne LaPierre is the Poster child of all that is insane about America. In a Rational society, he would be in a mental institution with frequent medication.

  5. Bill Formby Reply

    January 19, 2013 at 12:06 pm

    I have begun to wonder about these gun nuts and their love of guns. How many of them did not take the opportunity to join the military where they could really play with guns. I know Wayne LaPierre never even came close to showing his love of country by joining. He has never been anything but a lobbyist.

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