Not sure what our "collective blindness" is, unless it is that there is no racism. But I think most Americans understand that the legacy of our "peculiar institution" is still alive and well, albeit declining somewhat in influence as the old bigotry slowly dies away and America becomes browner due to our requirements for cheap labor that will leave the immigration doors ajar.
No doubt the main feature of modern US politics is the shift in rural, working class, anti-banking, fundamentalists, southern planters and racists - of course whites, from the former party of the southern planter and small farmer, working class, and slaveholder; to the Party of Lincoln (and bankers) on or about the period of the civil rights movement. It is a truly fundamental shift and I'm afraid it is a shaky coalition formed mainly to reject the Civil Rights and environmental laws of the 1960s that became associated with the Democrats.
It really is a conundrum for those whose former party was built around rural white people to be forced to vote against their best interests and align with the traditional party of the educated, professional, banking and ownership class who are least inclined toward workers and civil rights and protection of the environment.
A pretty good story on race religion & politicsOn the gun thing, I'm kind of in the middle. I think citizens should have guns, even to the point of mandatory reservist status such as in the Netherlands not so long ago, where all adult men were by definition reservists with issued weapons after serve a short but required active duty period. On the extremes, I'd rather everyone be forced by the government to learn and have a gun than everyone be prevented by the government from owning one. I'm sure that would not be a popular policy tho, LOL
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I only read in english so I don't know what fiction elsewhere looks like but much of popular male oriented fiction is about a man, put upon by society, hobbled by laws that coddle criminals, who is finally pushed beyond his limits and forced to take "matters" into his own hands.
Another opinion (I have thousands) is that our collective mythology is upward mobility and so the fascination with our Trumps and Kardashians. But the reality these last several decades is the chance s for moving on up are less in the US than elsewhere and folks are casting around for a scapegoat, no surprise that race is still a thing. Pretty sure it is elsewhere as well, no?
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)