Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - Cautionary Tales Presents: Getting out of Dodge from Revisionist History
Episode Date: September 19, 2023The longest running television series of the 20th century was Gunsmoke, a western set in the notorious Dodge City, Kansas. Malcolm sweeps away mountains of legal scholarship to make a bold claim: The ...simplest explanation for the Supreme’s Court’s puzzling run of gun rights decisions may be that the justices watched too much Gunsmoke when they were growing up. Enjoy this episode from Revisionist History, another Pushkin Industries podcast.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Over the last few decades we've adopted all kinds of new medical technologies. Ventilators,
IVF, brain implants, and when bioethics consider these innovations they return to the same questions.
Just because we can do something, does it mean we should?
And who gets to make these kinds of decisions?
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and the implications they have throughout everyday lives.
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Hello, today we're bringing you something a little bit different, an episode of revisionist
history, another podcast from Pushkin Industries.
This season on revisionist history, Malcolm Gladwell is diving into the infuriating issue
of guns.
The six episode series looks at America's gun problem through topics such as the insanity
of the US Supreme Court and the world of trauma surgeons.
And one of the episodes which caught my attention was all about the influence of Westerns.
As you know, I love cautionary tales that use true stories from history to teach us valuable
lessons about the world we live in.
But, asks Malcolm in this episode, what if we're not learning valuable lessons from studying
the truth about history, what if instead we're watching pure fantasy, mistaking it for history,
and drawing entirely the wrong conclusions, and by it we, I mean, well, the US Supreme Court.
You can binge listen to the whole series ad-free by subscribing to Pushkin Plus on Apple
podcasts or by visiting pushkin.fm slash plus or here the episodes each week in the
Revisionist History Podcast feed.
And now I am proud to present on cautionary tales this visionist history episode getting out of dodge.
covered his landscape like a slum. And he'd be able to do so and get paid for a tabooed,
is to be doubly blessed.
The co-creator of the greatest television
western of all time was a man named John Meston.
My needed figure is the western hero
who arrives along, pumping his guitar,
nasally singing a synthetic ballad,
and looking for all the world like a fugitive from a cheap circus.
I spit in his milk, and he'll have to go elsewhere to find somebody to pour the lead for his gold and bullets.
Now, the best way to destroy something bad is to ride it down with something better.
And I've got a guy I think out classes, any of these
phony big heads.
Mesting gave the world gun smoke, which ran on CBS for an astounding 20 seasons,
from 1955 to 1975. One of the most widely watched TV shows ever. When it's run,
finally ended, the LA Times film critic referred to it as our own
Iliad and Odyssey, only in the place of Odysseus and Achilles, Mastin gave us Matt Dillon.
Lanky, Lachonic, impossibly brave. One of the great reluctant heroes in television history. This hair is probably red if he's got any left.
He'd be handsomer than he is if he had better manners, but life and his enemies have left
him looking a little beat up.
And I suppose having seen his mother back about 1840, struggling to take a bath in a
wooden wash tub without fully undressing, left his soul a little warped.
Anyway, it had to be something wrong with him, or he wouldn't have hired on as a United States marshal in the heyday of Dive City, Kansas.
Dodge at that time was the wildest town in America, and it was populated by men just as warped and more so as a matthewon.
My name is Malcolm Gladwell.
You're listening to Revisionist History.
My podcast about things overlooked and misunderstood.
This episode is about Westerns and the long shadow they've cast across American life.
It's possible you've never thought about Westerns.
Maybe you've never even seen one,
but your parents, and particularly your grandparents,
most certainly did.
In the mid-1950s, Westerns took up a third
of all evening television viewing time.
If you lived in a major city like New York,
you had your choice of 51 different Westerns
in a given week.
And what were westerns?
Well, they were stories about big strong men.
The heroes of the top six westerns of 1962 average 6'4 and 210 pounds.
White big strong men.
There wasn't a lot of ethnic variation in the TV western.
There weren't a lot of women.
Or families, even though the reason all those pioneers moved to the Wild West was of course to provide a
better life for their families. There wasn't a lot of moral ambiguity or
introspection or shades of gray. These were action shows, but what was there a
lot of? There were a lot of guns.
And in this installment of our series on gun violence, I wanna figure out what it means
that an entire generation of Americans grew up watching a world
in which big strong men shot at each other with guns
in the absence of any kind of cultural or moral
or psychological ambiguity.
Our case study, Gunsmoke, the greatest of all the TV Westerns, and one episode in particular.
Season 1, Episode 8, Kite's Reward.
Picture a long dusty street straight out of the Old West, downtown Dodge City, the most
infamous of the cattle towns of the 1870s. Long row of ramshackle wooden buildings, bars,
stables, general store, cowboys, santaing, two and fro, our hero, Matt Dillon, is sitting
on a porch talking to his friend Chester. They spot a man, a stranger. Lurking around the long branch
saloon, then a second stranger, much younger handsome blonde approaches on horseback and dismounts. Come, come. Some trail hand come to lose his wages.
Probably.
The blonde man walks into a bar, orders a beer.
The older man, the one who had been lurking, follows him in,
pulls out a sick shooter, and says in that biting tone peculiar to this era of TV villain.
Turn around.
tone peculiar to this era of TV villain. But the young man is much too quick for his foe.
He pulls out his revolver in what seems like a heartbeat.
His pursuer lies dead on the floor.
Just as the man of the law, Marshall Matt Dillon, comes rushing in.
Self-defense, Marshall, you saw it.
I want your gun.
I didn't write it with self-defense, pure and simple.
I said I want your gun.
All right, take it.
And Matt Dillon takes his gun away.
Now, let's pause here, because this is a hugely significant moment.
First thing, maybe an obvious thing, this whole scene is very American.
CBS made a western setting Canada at around the same time.
It was about a mountain named Sergeant Preston, who went around saving damsels and distress
with the aid of an adorable dog named King.
Sergeant Preston never resorted to violence.
He relied on his wit, his courage, and the assistance of his adorable dog, King.
How did every episode end?
Sargent Preston turns to King and says,
Well, King, this case is closed.
I mean, how Canadian is that?
It's one of my greatest regrets that during my Canadian childhood,
we didn't have a television in our house,
and so I never got a chance to learn of the role.
Large, fluffy dogs played in Taming the Canadian North.
Oh, but gun smoke?
That's a different story.
Episodes of gun smoke did not end with Matt Dillon saying,
good doggy, good-ducky.
Good-ducky.
Second thing, why do we care so much about Gunsmoke?
Because, and this is important, I'm trying to solve a puzzle
having to do with the 2022 case of New York State Pistol and RIFE
Association V. Bruin.
The landmark decision with a Supreme Court ruled that a New York state law restricting handgun
licenses was unconstitutional.
If you listen to the first episode of this mini-series, which I dearly hope you do before you
listen to this one, you'll know I have strong feelings about the court's infatuation in
that case, with a certain disputatious 17th
century slave trader named Sir John Knight. But here we are concerned with a broader puzzle.
It came during oral arguments. Oral arguments are a big deal. Lawyers of both sides gathered
to present their arguments publicly before all the assembled justices.
Arguments are tested, questions are asked, the whole thing goes on for hours.
It's Daniel in the Lions den, one lawyer versus nine of the keenest legal lines in the country.
So, November 3rd, 2021.
The Solister General of the State of New York is up at the front of the police hearing room. Barbara Underwood, serious glasses, kindly smile. Kind of
looks like your grandmother. That is, if your grandmother had argued 22 cases
before the Supreme Court. Mr. Chief Justice and Maid please the court. For
centuries English and American law have imposed limits on carrying firearms in public
and the interests of public safety. She begins with a detailed explanation of how New York State
is justified in not letting anyone carry a handgun who wants to carry a handgun. But then
she's interrupted by Samuel Alito, one of the most conservative members of the court and almost certainly the grumpiest
Could I explore what that means for
ordinary law-abiding
citizens who
Feel they need to carry a firearm for self-defense. So I want you to think about
people like this
people who work late at night
In Manhattan
It might be somebody who cleans offices might be a door man at an apartment, might be a nurse
or an orderly, might be somebody who washes dishes. None of these people has criminal record.
They're all law-abiding citizens. They get off work around midnight, maybe even after midnight
they have to commute home by subway, maybe by bus,
when they arrive at the subway station or the bus stop, they have to walk some distance
through a high crime area.
They're scared to death, Alito said, so why shouldn't they be allowed to carry a handgun
on their subway right home?
Now, it should be pointed out that Barbara Underwood has spent years
working in the DA's office in Brooklyn, Manhattan, and Queens. She's a New Yorker. She's
familiar with the subway. Alito, meanwhile, is a kid from New Jersey. Went to school at Princeton,
worked most of his life in the New Jersey suburbs before moving to the Washington DC suburbs.
in the New Jersey suburbs before moving to the Washington DC suburbs. I'm going to guess that most of what he knows about the New York subway is from
all Beastie Boys videos that he was trying to stop his kids from watching.
So, Underwood says, as any longtime subway rider would say,
I think the extra problem in Manhattan is that you at your hypothetical quite appropriately entailed the subways and
tailed public transit and there are lots of people on the subways even at midnight as I can say from personal experience and
the particular specter of a lot of armed people in an enclosed space. There are a lot of armed people on the streets of New York
and in the subways late at night right now, aren't there?
I don't know that there are a lot of armed people.
No.
First thing here, Alito Cleary thinks New York City
is some kind of modern-day Dodge City.
It's not, of course. It's one of the safest big cities in the country.
The number of gun crimes per capita in New York City is a fraction of what it is and say,
Jacksonville, Florida, or New Orleans, or Birmingham, Alabama, or literally dozens and dozens of other
American cities.
New York City is an exception to the general type of violence in the United States, in
part because of the
law that the Bruin case seeks to overturn, but whatever.
Something about the idea of New York City makes Justice Alito very nervous.
Any thinks as a result, the prudent course for any late-night commuter is to be packing
heat.
But underward, no, it's different. There are a lot of people
on the subway, even at midnight, as I can say from personal experience. Lawyers work late. Lots
and lots of times, she's taken the two or the three or the eight train back home at night.
She did not find the experience as terrifying as Justice Alito apparently believes it to be.
as Justice Alito apparently believes it to be. And as he's talking, she's clearly imagining the alternate universe where Alito gets his way.
It's late at night.
There's a confrontation at one end of the car.
One guy pulls a gun because her Justice Alito's instructions he's come prepared for anything untoward happening.
In response, the other guy pulls his gun.
The two of them start shooting, but of course they're terrified and they're spraying bullets
everywhere because handguns, as even the most devoted gun lover will tell you, are really,
really hard to shoot accurately.
Even under the best of circumstances, with people who know what they're doing and practice every day, and these are not the best of circumstances, and these are not people
who practice every day. They are in justice Alitos hypothetical, dormant, nurses, and dishwashers.
People who have worked long hard days and are exhausted and have kids at home and don't exactly
have the time to drive to a shooting range every weekend and fire through 200 rounds.
So there's boats everywhere.
And everyone else on the train is screaming and rushing to one end of the car and hammering
on the doors and climbing over each other to get out, but of course they can't.
There's glass everywhere because one of those arant shots took out a window, blood on
the floor, a third person, and then a fourth pull out their handguns because everyone's gotten handgun fever and just then
the chain goes underneath the east river for like two minutes. And the lights go
out which they sometimes do, I mean I guarantee you as someone who has taken the
subways like Barbara Underwood for most of my adult life, this is the number one nightmare scenario
of every single New Yorker.
But not for Samuel Alito of Hamilton Township, New Jersey.
How many illegal guns have you had?
Yeah, that's where I'm talking about. How many illegal guns have you heard about?
How many illegal guns were seized by the New York Police Department last year?
Do you have any idea?
I don't have that number, but I'm sure there's a substantial number.
But all these people with illegal guns, they're on the subway, they're walking around the
streets.
But the ordinary, hardworking, law-abiding people I mentioned,
no, they can't be armed.
Samuel Alito is in the grip of a peculiar and powerful fantasy
that says that below the surface of one of the safest cities
in the country, late at night, all rules of civilization
have been suspended.
You're on your own.
And Barbara Underward, who no doubt prepared long and hard
for the state before the highest court in the land,
does not seem to have prepared for this.
I mean, who would?
How would she have guessed that Samuel Lito thinks
the A-Train is Lord of the Flies?
Well, I think the subways,
when there are problems on the subways
are protected by the transit police is what
happens because the idea of proliferating arms on the subway is precisely I think what
terrifies a great many people.
The other point is that proliferating guns in a populated area where there is law enforcement
jeopardizes law enforcement.
Because when they come, they now can't tell who's shooting and the shooting proliferates
and accelerates.
She's trying really, really hard at this point, not just to say, are you effing kidding me,
Jersey Boy?
Have you ever ridden a subway before?
But Barbara Underwood is a lawyer of long experience.
Her obligation is to her client, not her own mounting feelings of incredulity.
So she takes a deep breath and holds it in.
And in the end, that's why there's a substantial law enforcement interest in not having widespread
carrying of guns.
So here's the puzzle.
Where did this completely lunatic idea come from?
How did Samuel Alito, legal powerhouse, come up with this weird violent fantasy with the
best path to ensuring the safety of a subway rider,
is to encourage that rider and all of his fellow commuters to stuff a handgun in their wayspan
and face down their assailant Mano-Mano on the A-Train as it passes underneath the East River.
There are countless law review articles devoted to the origins of the American love affair with guns,
histories of the evolution of our American love affair with guns.
Histories of the evolution of our thinking about the Second Amendment.
When confronted with a powerful idea, we assume that it has deep and serious roots.
But come on, this isn't an idea, it's a fantasy.
And where do fantasies come from?
From the stories we're told in childhood.
When I look at grown-up Samuel Alito dreaming about bad guys on the A-Train,
I think of little Samuel Alito growing up in the 1950s in Hamilton Township, New Jersey.
And I wonder, did he watch one too many episodes of Gunsmoke?
In particular, episode 8 from season 1, Kite's reward.
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Terms and conditions apply.
Free plans have limited functionality.
Over the last few decades,
we've adopted all kinds of new medical technologies.
Ventilators, IVF, brain implants,
and when bioethics consider these innovations,
they return to the same questions.
Just because we can do something, does it mean we should?
And who gets to make these kinds of decisions?
Playing God is a new podcast about the complex decisions made in medicine and public health
and the implications they have throughout everyday lives.
Listen to Playing God.
In the 1870s, cattle will be heard into market from Texas to Kansas, up to the so-called
cattle towns that were junction points connected to major railway lines.
The longest lived and most infamous of those cattle towns was Dodge City.
It sits on the banks of the Arkansas River and was connected by rail to the east to Kansas
City. In its heyday, dark city was like Fort Lauderdale during spring break, only with a fraction
of the girls. Just lots of young men, alcohol and guns. 1200 full-time residents, 19 bars, filled with fortune seekers, buffalo hunters,
cowboys, gamblers, desparados, what they call in westerns, hard characters.
Here's a typical Dodge City story that appeared in the Witchtob beacon in November of 1872.
Three or four Texas men, the paper reported, took over the Kellyanne-Unt Dance Hall.
One of them made whiskey and sugar free to everybody while the others kept up the dance,
music and condiments until daylight.
I think you're getting a picture.
The article goes on.
The dance room was also occupied by a gambling outfit.
Oh, okay.
One of the Texas men, who were giving away the free booze
and sugar, accuses one of the gamblers of cheating,
and, quote, grabbed up the entire wealth
of the concern to appropriate it.
Unquote.
We're upon one of the gamblers, fractured skull
of one of the Texans with a sick shooter.
He dies.
The cowboys come to the aid of their fallen comrade. There's a gun battle, two more shots dead, a third wounded, the bodies are thrown
out onto the street and here's the crucial detail. The party goes merrily on.
That's Dodge City. As you can imagine, the tablets of the era couldn't get
enough of this. The expression, which I'm sure you've heard,
we've got to get out of Dodge, is a reference to Dodge City.
So what is Gunsmoke? It's a TV show set in Dodge City, where the hero, Matt Dillon,
has a job of restoring law and order amidst the mayhem. Every other episode begins with a shot
of Dillon squaring off against a bad guy in
the Main Street of Dodge. He out draws him, shoots the bad guy dead, then after the credits, we see
Dylan walking through a cemetery where all the many dead are buried, and in voiceover, delivering
a little homily about the enormous weight on his shoulders. They all drifted here to Dodd City, one time or another.
The buffalo killers, the saddlebums, the spoilers.
It's the end of the track in the start of the wilderness.
The dumping ground of odds and ends and beginnings
and leftovers to place to stop and take
the kind of pleasure you need.
To place to pass through, and sometimes it's a place to die.
So episode 8, Season 1, Kite's reward.
The young blonde man's name is Andy.
He's just shot the stranger dead.
Dylan has taken his gun.
They go back to Dylan's office where Andy is given a lecture.
Trouble sure come running after you know hurry, didn't it?
What's the man's supposed to do in this town?
Stand there and take a belly full of bullets?
Then Dylan says, I can give you back your gun.
But I think you shouldn't wear one anymore.
You're too good with it.
You're going to get a reputation.
People will come after you to see if they can best you.
It happened to me once, Sandy.
It's happening to you.
They have a heart to heart. Dylan is the wise father figure Andy clearly never had.
Dylan, why don't you quit wearing it?
Andy, I don't know.
I'd feel kind of naked, I guess.
Dylan, you know, I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy.
I'm not a bad guy. I'm not a bad guy. I'm not a bad guy. I'm not a bad guy. I'm not a bad guy. father figure Andy clearly never had. Dylan, why don't you quit wearing it? Andy, I don't know.
I'd feel kind of naked I guess. Dylan persists.
But it's going to be one man after the other from now on. You're going to have to kill
whether you like it or not. But I'm not going to watch it. How you leave that gun off for you,
get out of Dodge and go do your killing somewhere else. Finally, Andy agrees. Unbuckles his gun belt, hands over his sick shooter and holster.
Alright, let's pause once again, because there are so many things to discuss.
First of all, let's deal with the non-tribule matter of the homicide that just occurred inside
the Long Branch Saloon. To help put this event in some kind of
statistical perspective, I recruited the services of my very able assistant and producer, Tali
Eman.
Okay, so I, a couple weeks ago, I gave you an assignment. Just describe, describe first
the assignment. So the assignment was to watch...
Well, first you said to watch all of gun smoke.
Which is bitch.
Yeah, it's like 20 seasons, something like that.
But then the assignment turned into watching the first two seasons of gun smoke.
Tally ordered the complete gun smoke collection on DVD.
Do you even know what a DVD is?
Like, this is like, so prior generation.
Oh, I grew up watching DVDs.
Just checking, just checking.
But I don't have a DVD player, so I got the DVDs and then I wound up having to watch
on my roommates PS4.
Which was kind of funny. and then I wound up having to watch on my roommates PS4.
Which was kind of funny.
This is the first time in human history
someone watched Gunsmoke on a PS4.
On a PlayStation.
There are 39 episodes per season.
So Tali watched 78 in total,
a statistically representative sample.
Yeah, so the assignment was to watch every episode and make note of any time there's a gun
shot and any time there's a homicide.
So I counted any time somebody was killed on purpose.
So there's a few instances of someone accidentally getting shot and I didn't count that as homicide.
And was, and then you, you created a kind of an Excel spreadsheet.
Yeah.
And in which you did, you also described the nature of the shooting.
Yes.
Yes.
And so give me the, give me the bottom line on the statistics of number of gunshots and homicides in the first two seasons of gun smoke.
All right, let me just pull this up really quick.
Okay, so starting with season one, we had a total of 212 gunshots in the whole season.
And this includes gunshots in the air,
just to scare people or something like that.
And then of those 212,
a hundred and thirty two were shots specifically pointed
at people.
There were 59 homicides and 46 of those homicides
were from gunshots.
Okay, and then season 2?
So the number of gunshots that I counted for season 2 was 151 of those.
There were 52 homicides and of the gunshots in total in the season, 111 were pointed specifically at people.
As far as I can tell, Tully performed the first ever statistically rigorous forensic analysis
of the gun smoke archive. You know, um, Tully, I went, I used those numbers and I calculated independently what the homicide rate per
hundred thousand is for the town of Dodge as depicted in gun smoke.
And that works out, given there's twelve hundred people in Dodge, a homicide rate of, I think, 4917 per 100,000,
which would be like eight times higher
than the highest homicide rate in any city
in the United States today.
Oh my God.
It's like the most murderous, it's the most,
there was one episode where eight people were killed.
Yeah, yeah, that was all it wants to,
I remember that episode.
That's a mass shooting.
Yes.
The writers of Gunsmoke were committed to portraying Dodge City as a very, very dangerous place.
Now, was Dodge in real life that dangerous?
Was it actually the case that a river of blood flowed through the center of Dodge City, Kansas,
in the latter half of the 19th century.
There was so much myth-making that surrounded Dodge City, that for the longest time people
assumed that the mythical Dodge City and the actual Dodge City were the same.
This was the Wild West.
But a homicide is a matter of record.
Towns even deeply dysfunctional towns, collect death certificates.
They have newspapers that report on murders, court records that document criminal trials,
graveyards where people are buried.
And in the 1960s, a historian named Robert Dykstra decided to fact-check the claims about Dodge City.
Here's what he discovered. In 1872, the year Dodge City was founded,
the homicide count was 18, which in a town of 1,200 people
is nuts.
But that was before the town had a police force.
They promptly got themselves a county sheriff,
and for the next couple of years, there
were no homicides at all.
And for the 11 years that follow until
the cattle trading period ends, Dodge City averages 1.6 homicides a year, which is still a lot
for a small town, but not that bad for a place that's basically spring break on steroids.
The real Dodge City is nothing like the mythical Dodge City. The real Dodge City is proof that law-n order works.
You bring an Alamun and the place goes back to normal,
which is 100% the opposite lesson
of television's Dodge City, isn't it?
Gunsmoke says that you can be blessed
with a diligent, wise, rangel, indefaticable,
courageous US Marshal, the legendary Matt Dillon,
and he will invariably catch
the bad guy and gun him down on the street, but at the very thing that police are supposed
to do.
And in fact, do in the real world, that is, stop murders from happening, Matt Dillon is
helpless.
He's the US Marshal for Dodge City, for 20 seasons, and the bodies just keep piling up.
He's the head of law enforcement in a town with an implied homicide rate 80 times higher
than St. Louis, Missouri, the murder capital of the Western world.
He's terrible at his job.
He should have been run out of town.
And yet, he is not. Because in the bizarre fantasy being peddled by gunsmook, there are so many bad guys and
so many guns, and so many shootouts and bars that every man must take responsibility for
protecting himself.
If you have a quiet drink at the long-branch saloon, and a stranger comes in with a nitchie
finger, you have to be prepared
to defend yourself. It's up to you, because there's no guarantee that Matt Dillon will rush in
in time to help you. Now, do I worry that lesson reverberated with little Samia Lito,
watching Gunsmoke on his parents black and white RCA, back in Hamilton, down ship, New Jersey.
Yes, I do.
By the way, it wasn't just Alito. Right after Alito goes off on his strange rant about the
perils of the A-Train, guess who chimes in? Justice Brett Kavanaugh, of course he does.
Brett Kavanaugh, child of the Washington DC suburbs, whose only experience at mass transit
was being carpooled to private school in the back of his mother's dodge minivan.
What if you are a runner?
You say I run a lot.
And as you correctly pointed out earlier, there are a lot of serious violent crimes on running
paths to real problems.
It's a real problem. Justice Kavanaugh now wonders if the runners of New York would be well served strapping
on a glock in order to defend themselves against the murderous grievances of their fellow
joggers as they charged their way around the Central Park reservoir.
If Barbara Underwood was taken aback by Samolito, then Kavanaugh, I mean, she's like, what is happening?
She tries to explain.
Have you thought about what would happen if New York issued a handgun to anyone who
wanted one?
The problem with the shallower regimes is that they multiply the number of firearms that
are being carried in very densely populated places,
and there is a much higher risk without assuming any
ill intent on the part of the carriers of weapons. They
greatly proliferate the likelihood that mistakes will be made, fights will break out.
Barbara Underwood dearly does not want to find herself
in the middle of a gun battle when she walks her dog
around the reservoir on a Sunday morning.
But she's not up against a rational argument here.
She's up against a fantasy.
A fantasy shared by a whole group of middle-aged men
on the Supreme Court.
The fantasies of little boys who won't
spent too many hours
in front of the television.
Business notifications getting out of hand,
buried under an avalanche of customer emails, texts,
and social media messages,
keep your edge with thrive small business software
and never miss a message again. Thrive offers one solution to communicate, market, and run your business,
but simply small businesses run better on Thrive. Get Command Center for free today at
thrive.ca. That's THR-Y-V dot CA. Terms and conditions apply, free plans have limited
functionality.
Over the last few decades, we've adopted all kinds of new medical technologies.
Ventilators, IVF, brain implants,
and when bioethics consider these innovations,
they return to the same questions.
Just because we can do something,
does it mean we should?
And who gets to make these kinds of decisions?
Playing God is a new podcast about the complex decisions made in medicine and public health
and the implications they have throughout everyday lives.
Listen to Playing God.
The heyday of Dodge City, the real Dodge City, overlaps with the invention of one of the
most important firearms of that era, maybe one of the top five most important weapons ever.
The sick shooter, patented by Samuel Colt,
perfected by Mr. Smith and Mr. Wesson.
So revolvers were fairly easy to get by about 1850,
but by 1870 and 1880,
you could order them for just a few dollars through a catalog.
It was incredible.
The number of revolvers that were in that were available and circulating in public as compared to
decades past. That's the historian Brennan-Rivas. The pistols of the early 19th century were cumbersome,
unreliable, inaccurate. People were more worried about booing knives than they were about handguns.
Unreliable, inaccurate. People were more worried about booing knives than they were about handguns.
The arrival of the revolver changed all that.
The inventionable weapon with a cylinder filled with bullets that rotates every time the
trigger is pulled, solves every problem that plagued the 19th century handgun.
So you have a proliferation of a gun that is a significant innovation.
It's cheap, it's effective.
It has all kinds of other.
Can you describe a little bit the kind
of social and political response
to the proliferation of the revolver?
Well, a major response from American people
was to talk about how sad it was
that people were being shot all the time.
You see a tremendous outpouring
of sadness and frustration that people are being, lives are being lost, people's lives are
being ruined, all as a result of someone resorting to using these really deadly weapons. So
the social response was something that we're not all together unfamiliar with.
The primary media of the day, talking about and lamenting the loss of life as a result
of these weapons, and saying that something should be done.
What walked me through the various strategies that were tried in this era in response to
the revolver?
Well, the first strategy is what scholars are now calling public carry laws.
And they started out by prohibiting in statutory language in clear black and white.
You can't carry or conceal these certain weapons in public spaces.
And there would be some sort of a penalty.
There were laws prohibiting guns from certain sensitive places, taxes imposed to make guns
more expensive.
If we just use Texas as our example, so how many of those strategies are being deployed
in Texas in the latter part of the 19th century?
I believe all of them except for personal taxation and banning the sale of certain weapons.
So in Texas, there by 1900 in Texas, there was a sensitive places law that was very broad.
It covered everything from polling places on election days to circuses.
Any public gathering was a disarmed space. There was also a public carry law that
applied not only to concealed weapons but to openly carried weapons as well. So
you could not carry a booey knife or a pistol or various other conceivable
deadly weapons in public beyond the confines of your own property at all. By the
turn of the 20th century, there were also taxes on gun dealers and a
log and selling arms to miners. So Texas gun laws in 1890 are way more restricted than they
are in 2023. Yes. And is Texas an outlier in those years? There are other kind of large
states that have similar kind of positions on gun violence
to that.
I would not say Texas is an outlier.
It was a very common approach.
Huge parts of the country were covered by gun control laws in the 19th century.
Laws that would seem unacceptable today.
That's how much people were spooked by the rise of the revolver.
There's even a sub-specialty of American history devoted to digging up all the old gun laws that were on the books around this time.
Patrick, can you do me a favor? Can you pull up the list of cities that you know had discovered, had gun control ordinances in the late 19th century and just read me,
read me 20 of the city names
turd i'll go to my um appendix because i have these things all over the place
this is Patrick Charles one of the leading gun law sleuths
all right let's go um so i think great examples are you know so if we go to California, right, we got Sacramento,
we've got San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Sanja, Anita, if you go to Kansas, these are cities
that probably, unless you're from Kansas, you don't even know Argentine, Lake and Concordia,
coffeeville.
But then if you go beyond that, I mean, we've got places such as, and you know, Brooklyn was not always part of New York City. You got Brooklyn.
You've got Nashville, Tennessee, Christmas, Erie, Wheeling, West Virginia, Singapore, Minnesota,
and Wisconsin, didn't know what. There's also Chicago, had it.
So, wait, so South Air.
Guess who else had a gun line place?
Dodge City, Kansas.
After that first murderous season in 1872, the town cracked down.
At the bridge over the Arkansas River, which every cowboy crossed on his way into Dodge
City, there was a big sign, the carrying of firearms strictly prohibited.
The law said that you had to check your gun at the Sheriff's Office or Town Hall or some other
designated building. One spot was the local brick factory. The owner said that at one point he had
hundreds of revolvers stacked up in his storeroom. You got a chit, like a coat-check token, which you turned in for your gun when you left town.
In Darge City, the penalty for breaking that law was $100 or three months in jail, or both.
When the murder rate ticked back up to one or two a year, the local paper got all upset,
and accused the police of going easy on gun owners.
Like the time when the marshal took a gun off a junk and troublemaker in a bar and foolishly
gave the gun to the man's boss, who promptly gave it back to his employee, who then killed
somebody.
Not smart.
So gun smoke comes along in the mid-1950s.
And in its first season, with half the country's television audience
watching, it introduces us to their version of Dodge City, the world's most dangerous
place. And in those first few episodes, it has to deal with the question of what Matt
Dillon, the symbol of law and authority, should do about this extraordinary violence. He can't turn a blind eye to it, Kenny.
Oh no, he has to take action.
They decide to have him try what his real life counterparts tried.
Gun control.
So Matt Dillon takes away Andy's gun.
And Andy is transformed.
Our blonde haired gunman gets a job with the local stables.
The owner loves him, says, I wish he was my son.
We see Andy at the local saloon having a single chased beer, chatting politely with a beautiful
proprietress.
A bully challenges him to a fist fight, Andy drops him with a punch.
Matt Dillon looks on admiringly because he has liberated Andy from his gun.
Dillon has been given moral purpose.
Andy has been given redemption.
Both men see a way forward
out of the unrelenting bleakness that is Dodge City.
You know something Marshall?
What?
You was right about me not wearing a gun. I'm glad I took it off.
You was right about me not wearing a gun.
But then commercial break.
And when we come back, a stranger shows up in Dodge City asking
after Andy says, Andy's in outlaw.
Says, Andy used to be part of the Fisher Gang
down in Laramie, Wyoming.
There's a bounty on his head, a thousand dollars, get her alive.
The stranger finds Andy in the stables, says, you're coming with me.
Andy says, no way. Andy goes for his gun, but he's got no gun.
Matt Dillon took it. He grabs it air, and the bounty hunter shoots him in the chest.
Matt Dylan rushes in.
Too late.
He goes to the stricken Andy, lying on the ground.
I forgot.
I forgot about my gun.
I went forward for a remembered.
Didn't work out so good, didn't work out so good.
That's so good.
Just because I've forgotten what you're doing.
He dies, and the bounty hunter turns to Matt Dillon.
He went first gone.
I had a killin'.
Dillon is gazing, grief-stricken, into the endless prairie horizon. Now you didn't kill him.
What?
I killed him.
And somewhere in the suburbs of Hamilton Township, little Samuilito, already dreaming of one day
wearing the long black robes of the I-Cord, learns a lesson he will never forget.
Guns don't kill people.
Gun control does.
Our revisionist history gun series was produced by Jacob Smith, Ben Nadav Haferi, Kiarapowl,
Tally Emlin, and Leem and Gistu.
We were edited by Peter Clowney and Julia Barton, fact checking by Arthur Gompertz and
Kishel Williams, original scoring by the Viscara, mastering by Floen Williams, engineering
by Nina Lawrence.
I'm Malcolm Gladwell.
Over the last few decades, we've adopted all kinds of new medical technologies.
Ventilators, IVF, brain implants, and when bioethicists consider these innovations,
they return to the same questions.
Just because we can do something, does it mean we should?
And who gets to make these kinds of decisions?
Playing God is a new podcast about the complex decisions made in medicine and public health and the
implications they have throughout everyday lives.
Listen to Playing God.