Posted on 10/13/2003 4:01:20 AM PDT by johnny7
The National Rifle Association doesn't call it an enemies list, but deep in the recesses of the organization's Web site is a long, long compilation of the names of groups and individuals that the N.R.A. considers unfriendly.
I'm happy to report that I'm on the list, but my name is truly one among very many. The A.F.L.-C.I.O. is there, and the American Academy of Pediatrics. The Children's Defense Fund and the Lutheran Office for Governmental Affairs are there. The United States Catholic Conference, the U.S. Conference of Mayors and the Y.W.C.A. of the U.S.A. are all there.
Among the celebrities on the list are Dr. Joyce Brothers, Candice Bergen, Walter Cronkite, Doug Flutie, Michelle Pfeiffer, Vinny Testaverde, Moon Zappa and the Temptations. Also on the list are the Kansas City Chiefs, Hallmark Cards, the Sara Lee Corporation, Ben & Jerry's, and Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City. I'm sure there's a method to the N.R.A. madness, but to tell you the truth, all I can see is the madness.
All of the groups and individuals listed are supposed to be anti-gun. I can't speak for the Kansas City Chiefs or Moon Zappa, but I'm not anti-gun. I think soldiers, the police and certain other law enforcement officials should have guns. Civilians, however, should be required to demonstrate a good reason for having firearms. We should go to great lengths to keep guns out of the hands of children, criminals and insane people. All guns should be registered. And all gun owners should be properly trained and licensed. The N.R.A. sees this as a radical, even lunatic position. So I guess we're at odds.
I asked Andrew Arulanandam, the N.R.A.'s director of public affairs, why the list had been compiled and displayed on the Web site. He said, "We put the list together in response to many requests by our members wanting to know which organizations support the rights of law-abiding Americans to keep and bear arms, and which organizations didn't." I asked what he thought his members would do with the information. He said, "How they use the information is at their own discretion."
I recently read Jules Witcover's book "The Year the Dream Died: Revisiting 1968 in America." The murders that year of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy were among the great tragedies of U.S. history. Both were killed by freaks with guns. What is not so well known now is that President Lyndon Johnson tried, in the aftermath of the murders, to get Congress to pass legislation requiring the registration of guns and the licensing of owners. The gun lobby fought and killed that effort, and it continues to fight to the death any attempt to bring sanity to the manufacture, sale and possession of guns. Between 1968, the year of Johnson's failure to get his legislation passed, and 2001, the last year for which complete statistics are available, more than one million Americans were killed by firearms.
No number of gun-related fatalities or serious injuries is sufficient to deter the N.R.A. from its fanatical course. A former N.R.A. lawyer has admitted in an affidavit in a lawsuit that distributors and gun dealers have for years been illegally diverting guns that end up in the hands of criminals, and that the industry has closed its eyes to the practice.
Instead of fighting to end this threat to the public's safety, the gun lobby and its allies in Congress are pushing legislation that would protect the practice by granting special immunity from liability to gun manufacturers and sellers.
The big item on the legislative agenda next year is the federal assault-weapons ban signed into law by President Bill Clinton in 1994. Because of a sunset provision, the law will expire next September if it is not renewed by Congress and the president. The gun lobby has made it clear that it will do all in its power to bury the ban. The plan is to not even let the issue come up for a vote.
The N.R.A. Web site and its enemies list (which looks like nothing so much as a broad cross-section of America) has led inevitably to a counter Web site, nrablacklist.com, created by a group called stopthenra.com. In addition to facing off against the gun lobby on legislative matters, the new group and its site are inviting people to volunteer for a spot on the N.R.A. enemies list. Ah, free expression.
They are just trying to appease both sides, but their actions only appease the gun control side. What have they done to guarantee the right of all law abiding citizens to carry and own guns?
Nothing! Like I say their actions speak louder than their words ever will.
Thanks for going to the trouble to write them.
BUMP
Yep. And it's going to be hard doing without those Sarah Lee cheesecakes.
Do you really believe that? You should visit "gun free" Chicago sometime. Honest citizens are disarmed by "gun control" laws, and murder is rampant. "Gun control" is the great enabler of criminals.
Thank you for your response. I regard AARP's essentially anti-gun / anti-self defense stance as sufficient reason for my rejection of your offer for membership. Why in the name of John Moses Browning would I want to support an organization that wishes to restrict my rights and worse - makes common cause with those who wish to make ownership of firearms of any sort illegal?Regards -
Ward Dorrity
PS -
Those who reject the first principles of a rational and humane existence - that your life belongs to you and that the disposition of the fruits of your labors is and should always be a matter of your personal conscience - are enemies of human freedom and dignity.
What did he do or say, or who did he support? It certainly doesn't sound like something the author of "The Winds of War" and "War and Remembrance" would do. One of his principal characters gets turned into soap and lampshades in the camps. She was a basically non-religous American Jew, married to an American Submarine officer, who was trapped in Italy when the war began. (that's the short version anyway).
I do see him on the stopgunviolence.org site, but they'll count most any statement that doesn't directly contradict their views as supporting them. The list is everywhere, it's not clear that it originated with the NRA, in fact it seems to have come from the anti-arms rights sites.
"final solution to the right-wing Christian European homophobic reactionary gun-nut problem?"
We used to, before the nanny state decided it knew better than parents. And not that long ago either. I know I could buy ammunition before I turned 18, which was in 1967, but I never had enough money to buy a gun before then, although I did own a 20 ga pump shotgun. However it was the 1968 gun control act, which banned dealer sales to minors, that is under 21 for handguns, and under 18 for long guns. (Not ancient history to those of us who are getting kind of ancient ourselves). You could buy 'em through the Sears Catlog (they even had their own "house brand" of ammunition and guns, as did Wards. (JC Higgens and Western Field, respectively). So about the time I got enough money to buy guns, most especially a handgun, I couldn't anymore. For awhile they still sold them through their catalogs, but you had to appear in person to pick them up, and of course you had to meet the legal, but unconstitutional, age requirements. Ever since then, a kid could be old enough to be handed a 1911A1 or the latter 9mm substitute, and be told (in effect) "prepare to defend your self", by Uncle Sugar, but couldn't buy one to protect his wife or girlfriend, not mention himself while off duty in some of the "wonderful and friendly" locals off-post where he might have to live, due to his meager pay. He couldn't even buy ammunition for a handgun. Until '86 you had to show ID and a record was kept for every box of handgun ammo, including .22 rimfire, that you bought. (I'm on "the list" for a bunch of boxes of .22 short, which I shot through my wife's grandfather's Browning semi-auto rifle in that chambering. After I went on active duty, I used my military officer's ID instead of my driver's license, just because it seemed even sillier that way, and embarrassed the poor clerk, who probably weren't old enough to the buy stuff themselves in many cases)
Technically he's not, but he is anti arms rights, and thus a domestic enemy of the Constitution. Seems I remember taking an oath that had something to do with "domestic enemies" of the Constitution. Hmmmm. (No I'm not suffering Senior Moment, I remember it quite clearly)
Before 1968, you could, and before 1934, you could even fire a projectile that went BOOM when it got to the target. Didn't seem to be a problem, even if you were a producer or purveyor of Demon Rum, with "jealous" rivals.
And if you have to load it from the front, and only fire non-explosive projectiles, you can still keep 'em (or buy some more if you choose) You could certainly make a smell of a hess loading up with some Chain or grape, protecting your reload crew with a hand cranked Gatling, which are also still legal. But shhh, don't tell Sarah or Chuckie about that.
The liberal media is nothing if not predictable.
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