Tag Archives: Vichy NRA

That’s One Of My Conditions…

… to ever even consider re-joining the Vichy NRA.

JUST IN: Wayne LaPierre Resigns as NRA Leader Days Before Trial Brought By NY AG Letitia James
On Friday Wayne LaPierre announced he will be resigning as the National Rifle Association’s (NRA) leader just days before his civil trial brought by New York Attorney General Letitia James begins.

That’s one. Well, actually two, now, since getting rid of Chris Cox was another of my conditions.

Seriously. Fire Wayne LaPierre. Chris Cox, too.

Then repudiate ERPOs and bump-fire bans. Apologize for opposing constitutional carry, for helping draft “assault weapons” bans, and endorsing obviously anti-human/civil rights politicians. Hell, apologize for supporting NFA ’34, GCA ’68, FOPA ’86, et cetera (it’s a long list).

And I’ll at least think about maybe joining.

I don’t expect them to actually apologize for all that, but then I expected E-Veep-For-Life LaPierre to die in office.

And it’s a minor thing, pertinent only to me, but I’d like them to either give me the magazine back issues I missed when they kept canceling my membership in the ’90s and sending me membership renewal notices, or refund me for the years of a five-year membership they disappeared. That and the city “assault weapon” ban that the NRA wrote were the final straws. It’s sort of a toss-up whether I quit or they canceled me again.

Well, his resignation is effective January 31. I guess we should watch to see how much more damage he can do on the way out.

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Return of the Vichy NRA?

It’s not as if it ever went away.

The NRA “compromised” to saddle us with the National Firearms Act (taxing and registering wide classes of firearms).

The NRA “compromised” to saddle us with the Gun Control Act prohibited persons, loss of mail order, and more).

The NRA “compromised” to saddle us with the Firearm Owners Protection Act (loss of new NFA items).

The NRA “compromised” to saddle us with NICS (preemptively prove your innocence).

The NRA “compromised” to saddle us with a bureaucratic bump stock ban.

Along the way, the NRA also fought against constitutional carry, and helped write “assault weapon” bans.

Also along the way, the NRA turned around to fund raise to “fight against” those infringements its “compromises” created.

It appears we can add another “compromise” to the list.

NRA asked for mental health funding, school hardening money and 10-year sunset on juvenile records in background check system, per this document.

We can expect an NRA announcement that it will fight this new collection of infringements in 3… 2…

Oops.

BREAKING: NRA Announces Opposition to Senate Gun Control Legislation

“This legislation can be abused to restrict lawful gun purchases, infringe upon the rights of law-abiding Americans, & use fed dollars to fund gun control measures being adopted by state & local politicians.”

I expect NRA “gimme money” mailings to hit my mail box any second now.

Oh, yes. And there’s this.

The NRA won that case? That’s a surprise to me. I do not see them as a party in the case. It did file an amicus brief. But parties to suits don’t have to file amicus briefs.

Kinda reminds of how the NRA tried to claim credit for HELLER, after trying to kill the case they feared would be lost if it went to SCOTUS.

 

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A Challenge

There are days when I wonder if Harold Hutchison gets a check from the Vichy NRA.

Or maybe Bloomberg.

When All You Can Do Is Limit the Damage
The other benefit damage control can have is that it could prompt anti-Second Amendment extremists to kill a bill. This happened 20 years ago in the wake of the Columbine shooting. After the NRA’s damage-control bill became the preferred version in the House, anti-Second Amendment extremists voted it down, teaming up with “no compromise” Second Amendment supporters.

He’s a big fan of compromises, and wastes a lot of ink justifying rationalizing the Vichy NRA’s preemptive surrenders.

compromise [ kom-pruh-mahyz ]
noun
a settlement of differences by mutual concessions; an agreement reached by adjustment of conflicting or opposing claims, principles, etc., by reciprocal modification of demands.

Mutual. As in, I’ll give you this, you give me that. The way the VNRA plays it goes thusly:

Victim Disarmers: “We want a [insert VD wishlist].”

VNRA: “OK, we’ll give you [insert VD wishlist]. What will you give us?”

VD: “The shaft.”

VNRA: “What? No.”

VD: “Fine. We’ll give you half the shaft now, and the rest later.”

VNRA: “Sold!”

More specifically, the Firearms Owner Protection Act, for example, was a VNRA compromise. They gave the VD carriers machineguns. The VDs gave us…. must… not… say.. it… gave us interstate transport protections and a registry ban. Those concessions to our side have been so effective that no one has been arrested for lawfully transporting a firearm in New York since, and the ATF stopped copying dealer records en masse. And it isn’t like it also led to the banning of bump-fire stocks (in which the VNRA bypassed compromise and went straight to preemptive surrender).

Oh. Wait.

Here’s a three-part challenge for Mr. Hutchison:

1. Name one VNRA compromise in the past 50 years that resulted in a net gain for Second Amendment rights.

Gain; not deferred or delayed loss. Not It coulda been worse. HELLER doesn’t count; they tried to stop it, and only jumped in later when they realized it was going forward to SCOTUS. MCDONALD doesn’t count; SAF and ISRA, not VNRA.

2. Explain how refusing to compromise hurts Second Amendment rights. Specifically:

The other benefit damage control can have is that it could prompt anti-Second Amendment extremists to kill a bill. This happened 20 years ago in the wake of the Columbine shooting. After the NRA’s damage-control bill became the preferred version in the House, anti-Second Amendment extremists voted it down, teaming up with “no compromise” Second Amendment supporters.

The VNRA-backed House version expanded background checks. The Senate version expanded background checks even more. The no-compromise faction caused the bill to die in the House. It appears that not compromising prevented the expansion — lesser or greater — in that fight. Explain why I’m wrong.

3. Explain why we should ever compromise on an enumerated, constitutionally “protected” right at all.

The Bill of Rights, including the Second Amendment, is a list of things specifically protected from government abuse. We aren’t supposed to have to compromise on any of it, because these rights were hard-coded into the document. But compromisers let slip in the idea of differing levels of scrutiny. At least “strict scrutiny” used to be the default setting for all of the Bill of Rights, but the VNRA bargained it away — we’re now lucky if 2A human/civil rights even get intermediate scrutiny.

Suddenly, infringements become hunky-dory so long as the government invokes a magic need to override what was never supposed to be overriden, for some alleged public good.

Even the infamous 1857 decision in Dred Scott saw the majority maintaining that if Scott were recognized as a citizen then he — as an individual — would have the right to bear arms and all other enumerated rights; because that’s what rights are without question. But in 1934, the VNRA capitulated on 2A rights, and the Second Amendment was effectively edited to add “unless we want to.”

Please Mr. Hutchison, tell what good “compromise” has done us, and why we should be compromising in the first place.

[Permission to republish this article is granted so long as it is not edited and the author and The Zelman Partisans are credited.]

 

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