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The politics of paranoia won't go away

If the pending legislation intended to prevent gun violence is as awful as critics claim, they should, in theory, have a fairly easy task ahead. After all, they
The politics of paranoia won't go away
The politics of paranoia won't go away

If the pending legislation intended to prevent gun violence is as awful as critics claim, they should, in theory, have a fairly easy task ahead. After all, they simply have to point to the legislation's many flaws, and watch it crumble under the weight of its own futility, right?

But that's always been the funny thing about demagoguery -- it's what desperate people rely on when they can't win a debate on the merits. If accurate talking points are ineffective, just make stuff up, scare the bejesus out of people, and hope fear triumphs in the end.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), for example, published this tweet over the weekend, warning of a "national gun registry." As a factual matter, is there a "national gun registry"? No. Has anyone proposed a "national gun registry"? No. Would the pending legislation lead to a "national gun registry"? No.

Does the bipartisan compromise on expanded background checks explicitly rule out the possibility of a "national gun registry"? Yes.

But it doesn't matter. Either Ted Cruz has created a fantasy world in which legislative details are the opposite of reality, or Ted Cruz assumes his far-right allies are easily fooled into believing nonsense. Either way, by counting on paranoia to rule the day, the Texas Republican -- a U.S. senator, not some random media personality -- has no qualms about promoting a ridiculous message like this.

Similarly, in recent days, Red State blogger and Fox News contributor Erick Erickson argued that "believing in a resurrected Jesus" will make you ineligible for gun ownership in five years under the bipartisan background-check compromise. Why does Erickson believe such silliness, and feel the need to share this nonsense with others? I haven't the foggiest idea.

I do know, however, that it's spreading -- as we talked about over the weekend, Tony Perkins and the Family Research Council also argued that Christians may be prevented from buying firearms.

None of this relates to our version of reality in any way, but for the right, real-world arguments are apparently unpersuasive, creating a demand for garbage.

The politics of paranoia are apparently all conservatives have left.