Posted on 10/02/2001 1:45:55 PM PDT by CFW
Edited on 04/13/2004 2:06:53 AM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (CCRKBA) today condemned three gun control organizations for attempting to dupe Americans into financially supporting their cause by contributing to a benefit concert airing Oct. 2 on TNT.
Americans who contribute to the John Lennon Tribute benefit concert in the belief they are supporting relief organizations that responded to the World Trade Center Attack could find their donations going instead to the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence, Million Mom March and Violence Policy Center.
(Excerpt) Read more at boston.com ...
Brady Campaign Phone: (202) 898-0792
Brady Campaign Fax: (202) 371-9615 >br>
Brady Center Phone: (202) 289-7319
Brady Center Fax: (202) 408-1851
I wouldn't want to deprive the legitimate WTC funds of badly needed contributions, but this is an outrage and we can donate directly to those funds if we so wish, so....
Call, call often, talk a lot, pledge your CASH contributions IF they can make the appropriate guarantees (wonder if they'll lie) and hang up and call again!
(1)
STUDENT ACTIVISTS LAUNCH GUN INDUSTRY WATCH New Film, Deadly Business, Chronicles Industry Abuses
WASHINGTON, DC More than 150 campus and community events across the country today launched a campaign to force the gun industry to take responsibility for its deadly products. A new student organization, Gun Industry Watch, will monitor gun industry and National Rifle Association (NRA) practices surrounding the manufacturing, marketing, and sale of guns and will take direct action aimed at gun makers and the gun lobby. Todays campus rallies were part of the First Monday Campaign, an annual day of action organized by the Alliance for Justice with Physicians for Social Responsibility.
Nearly thirty thousand Americans die every year from gun violence, said Nan Aron, president of Alliance for Justice. Its time to demand the industry take responsibility for its deadly products. It makes sense that students who have been leading the call for greater corporate social responsibility, should lead the way in demanding accountability from Americas most unregulated and dangerous industry.
To make its case against the gun industry, the First Monday Campaign also released a new documentary film, Deadly Business, that exposes industry abuses. The 30-minute film by award-winning documentary filmmaker Glen Pearcy reveals how the gun industry and gun lobby work together to ensure that guns remain the least regulated and most lethal product sold in America. The film draws powerful parallels between the misleading marketing tactics of the gun industry and the tobacco industry. Deadly Business was shown at todays campus rallies and will be premiered at a Monday evening screening in Washington, DC.
First Monday is activating a new generation of Americans willing to take action to make our future safer, said Robert K. Musil, Ph.D, MPH, CEO and executive director of Physicians for Social Responsibility. Through Gun Industry Watch students are focusing their energies on the real culprit behind Americas epidemic of gun injury and death: the gun industry.
n the coming months, student members of Gun Industry Watch will take the lead on organizing grassroots activities aimed at gun manufacturers and the gun lobby, including:
· Exposing deceptive advertising used by gun makers;
· Boycotting corporate partners and sponsors of the gun lobby;
· Demanding consumer product safety standards for firearms.
In the same way that a dedicated group of activists exposed the tobacco industry and changed Americas smoking culture, its time to expose the gun industry and change Americas gun culture, said Aron.
First Monday is an annual, campus-based campaign that focuses on social justice issues and takes place on the first Monday in October to coincide with the opening day of the U.S. Supreme Court. More than 140 national and state groups have co-sponsored First Monday 2001, including the Brady Campaign, the Million Mom March, the National Education Association, the American Bar Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Public Health Association, the Childrens Defense Fund, and the United States Student Association. More information about First Monday 2001 is available at the website www.firstmonday2001.com, at the Alliance for Justice website at www.afj.org or at the Physicians for Social Responsibility website, www.psr.org.
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(2)
May 10, 2001
Ashcroft and Advocacy: Did foundations cross the line?
http://www.jewishworldreview.com -- THE battle over the nomination of former Missouri Senator John Ashcroft to be attorney general ranked among the nastiest political fights in recent memory. Those who opposed Ashcroft depicted him as a bully likely to trample on the rights of women, minorities, and workers; for their part, supporters accused his detractors of religious bias.
The battle was waged on editorial pages and over the airwaves; People for the American Way unveiled a dedicated nationwide advertising campaign to warn senators about the consequences of voting to confirm their former colleague. More interesting for private philanthropy is the fact that some of the wealthiest and most prominent private foundations in the country underwrote the entrenched interests that went
Republicans likened the anti-Ashcroft campaign to a lynch mob, but the characterization is inapt: the groups were far better organized than that. At a packed January 9th meeting in Washington, representatives of some 90 groupsincluding Planned Parenthood, People for the American Way, the American Bar Association, and staffers from the Democratic congressional caucusformulated their strategy. It was audacious to suppose that they could convince a majority of Ashcrofts former Senate colleagues to reject his nomination, but they had to try. How could they wield sufficient influence to stop Ashcroft even as they stayed within IRS requirements that restrict political lobbying by nonprofit groups?
According to National Review Online, legal experts were on hand to explain to attendees how they could tailor their roles in the stop-Ashcroft movement to make them appear completely within the law, by characterizing their activities as research into Ashcrofts background.
The groups then set to divvying up the assignments. The National Abortion Rights Action League would lead the charge on womens issues, while People for the American Way would coordinate the campaign. Money was apparently no object: At a January 9th news conference (at which Ashcroft was depicted as soft on hate crimes and even willing to allow rat poison in drinking water), NARAL executive director Kate Michelman declared, Were going to spend whatever it takes. An overall figure is not available, but a similar effort to defeat Robert Borks 1987 Supreme Court nomination cost an estimated $10 million.
The groups swung into action, and the early returns were impressive: the anti-Ashcroft campaign dominated the news for several weeks. Errant Democrats were quickly brought into line; when Senator Robert Torricelli of New Jersey praised Ashcrofts nomination, he was deluged with phone calls from constituents urging a no vote. Was this a grassroots swelling of support? Hardly. As the Wall Street Journal reported, a dozen volunteers settled into phones at NARALs headquarters to call New Jersey abortion rights supporters and urge them to pressure the senator.
In the end, the movement to Bork Ashcroft drew blood, but not enough. On February 1st, the Senate approved his nomination 58 to 42, virtually along party lines.
FUNDING THE FIGHT?
Whatever else the campaign may have lacked, it didnt fail for want of funds. Both NARAL and PFAW say they keep their charitable and lobbying arms separate. Ralph Neas, executive director of PFAW, says all anti-Ashcroft efforts were funded by PFAWs 501(c)(4) lobbying arm, which he maintains is strictly separated from the groups tax-exempt educational arm. Not only was no foundation money used for [opposing Ashcroft] but no 501(c)(3) money [from the PFAW Foundation] was used. We dont use it for lobbying.
Often, lobbying was arguably disguised under the rubric of education. For example, during the Ashcroft campaign, the People for the American Way Foundations Web site, Right Wing Watch Onlinefunded by money from private foundationsdeclared that George W. Bushs campaign promise to be a uniter, not a divider was being drowned out by his decision to nominate an ultra-conservative and favorite son of the Religious Right to the position of Attorney General....
The site continued that it is safe to assume that the Religious Right will do everything in its power to rally its troops in support of Senator Ashcroft and, in turn, gain significant influence over one of the most powerful offices in the nation.
In the end, Right Wing Watch directed viewers to another PFAW-sponsored site, www.OpposeAshcroft.com, the Internet hub for anti-Ashcroft forces. There, concerned citizens could read up on Ashcrofts background, contact local organizers involved in anti-Ashcroft activities, and print out a form letter to be sent to members of Congress.
OpposeAshcroft.com clearly envisioned advocacy, and it is not easy to see how the foundation-funded Right Wing Watch Online is different, especially since PFAW makes it easy to jump between the two. Yet PFAW legal director Elliot Mincberg insists that Right Wing Watch is clearly a 501(c)(3) activity. None of it is lobbying or urging people to take positions on legislation but simply providing information on what the right wing has been up to. [Italics - mine]
FLIRTING WITH POLITICS
What do the foundations that fund PFAW think about the possibility that their money may have been used either on anti-Ashcroft activities or to free up other monies to oppose the former Missouri Senator?
Most want to avoid the question entirely. I have no idea, says a spokesperson for the Packard Foundation, which gave $5 million to the NARAL Foundation in 1999 alone, when asked if its funding supported anti-Ashcroft activities. I dont know if it relates to that at all. I cant comment on that.
Neither the Turner Foundation ($20,000 to NARALs Choice for America campaign) nor the Tisch Foundationbankrolled by media mogul brothers Laurence A. Tisch and Preston Robert Tischwhich recently gave $50,000 to the group, would return phone calls seeking comment. Ditto for the Archer Daniels Midland Foundation or the Samuel Bronfman Foundation ($25,000 each to PFAW) or the Slim-Fast Nutritional Foods Foundation, which gave $19,000.
Those foundations that will discuss their grants deny any culpability for the Ashcroft fight. Allen Greenberg, executive director of the Buffett Foundation, says he gave NARAL written instructions to use more than $1 million in grants only for the Choice for America campaign. Greenberg insists the grant is not political. It had nothing to do with Ashcroft, and adds that NARALs most recent quarterly report on the grant, for expenditures from October 1st to December 31st of last year, indicates no money was used to defeat the Ashcroft nomination.
Yet even some donors and grantees agree that the line between education and advocacy can be a thin one in a political fight like the Ashcroft nomination. The
Though John Pomeranz, the nonprofit advocacy counsel for the alliance, denies that it received funds specifically for the purpose of blocking the Ashcroft nomination, he admits that donors certainly realize the alliance was publicly opposed to Ashcroft. They certainly have not told us they were against it. Geffen Foundation president Andy Spahn is downright grateful for the ferocious battle waged by PFAW, whose educational arm received $25,000 from his foundation in 1998. It sends an important signal to the administration that Ashcrofts nomination was so narrowly confirmed, he says.
Buffett Foundation director Greenberg, who previously worked for Ralph Nader and Democratic Senator Charles Schumer of New York, says he agrees 100 percent that charitable activities can often seem, in the broadest sense of the word, political. It would be ridiculous to say were not interested in politics. But Greenberg agrees that foundations should stay far away from the line between education and advocacy.
In the Ashcroft fight, was that line crossed? Maybe, maybe not. But with the line becoming fuzzier every day, perhaps it doesnt
JWR contributor Evan Gahr is a Washington-based investigative reporter. To comment click here.
Nearly thirty thousand Americans die every year from gun violence, said Nan Aron, president of Alliance for Justice. Its time to demand the industry take responsibility for its deadly products."
Not to discount this loss of life, but it pales in comparison to ABORTION by many of these same doctors, does it not?...
I'm sick.
FMCDH
Thanks again.
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