So it will fall to the poets and
organizers – the faith communities and those not bound by the constraints of
politics – to advance the cause of the beloved community. And I discern that this will include challenging
the vicious propaganda manufactured by the NRA and its allies while offering
clear and compelling alternatives in a quiet, faithful and often poetically
playful way. One of my mentors in both
ministry and social justice, Dr. King, put it best: “History will have to record that the
greatest tragedy of this period of social transition was not the strident
clamor of the bad people, but the appalling silence of the good people.” It is to this truth is to this that I now turn
my attention: specifically calling into
question the current activity and moral legitimacy of the NRA and its allies.
Challenging the Influence of the
National Rifle Association
In January 2013, after
participating in the White House sponsored task force concerning new safeguards
to increase the safety of America’s children in the context of rampant gun
violence, the NRA issued a challenge to their supporters in Congress. Not only did they denigrate the effectiveness
of gun control but they diverted public attention from the danger of assault
weapons. By pointing at various straw
men – including Hollywood, violent video games and our mental health system –
the NRA hoped to distract public attention one more time. And by utilizing time-tested, political double-speak
and buzz words to demonize their opponents,
the NRA announced that they were going to go on the offensive against the Obama
administration.
The National Rifle
Association of America is made up of over 4 million moms and dads, daughters
and sons, who are involved in the national conversation about how to prevent a
tragedy like Newtown from ever happening again… we will
not allow law-abiding gun owners (and hard working tax payers) to be blamed for
the acts of criminals and madmen. Instead, we will now take our commitment and
meaningful contributions to members of congress of both parties who are
interested in having an honest conversation about what works — and what does
not. (NRA home page @ http://home.nra.org/#)
Let me be blunt: I believe that individually and personally
the leadership of the NRA is as heart-broken about the massacre at Sandy Hook
as anyone. I am certain, too that this
management cadre is as profoundly interested in stemming the culture of
violence in the United States that has now reached epidemic proportions as the
President.
At the same time,
to use the words of an old political insider from the Watergate scandal, in
matters of public trust, “follow the money.”
And when you follow the money, the reality of the NRA shows an
organization that is far less a simple association of small town individuals
and hunters and much more a national lobbyist working on behalf of gun
manufacturers. In 1990, the NRA created a new “corporate
sponsor” program designed, according to their own Vice-President Wayne LaPierre,
to be “an opportunity for corporations to partner with the NRA … (in a way that
is) geared toward your company’s corporate interests.” (Violence Policy Center,
www.vpc.org/
press/1104blood.htm) In 2005
As a result of this policy change, the gun
industry was now able to directly support the NRA with financial gifts. Of the 24 corporate sponsors, 22 are gun
makers including: Arsenal, Inc.; Benelli; Beretta USA Corporation; Browning;
DPMS Panther Arms; FNH USA; Glock, Inc.; H&R 1871, LLC; Marlin Firearms;
Remington Arms Co., Inc.; SIGARMS, Inc.; Smith & Wesson Corp-oration;
Springfield Armory; and, Sturm, Ruger & Co., Inc. And
of those 22 gun manufacturers, 12 specialize in assault weapons and/or the
production of high-capacity ammunition maga-zines. (Peter Drier, Huffington
Post, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/peter-dreier/nra-gun-manufacturers_b_2468565.html and Friends of the NRA http://www.friendsofnra.org/
National.aspx?cid=2&sid=0)
According to Forbes Magazine, “the gun
industry – led by Ruger – has benefited tremendously from the NRA. According to IRS fillings, from 2004 to 2010,
the NRA’s revenue from fundraising — including gifts from gun makers who
benefit from its political activism — grew twice as fast as its income from
members’ dues.” (Peter Cohan, Forbes, www.forbes.com/sites/petercohan/
2012/07/23/the-nra-industrial-complex/ )
Over 50 firearms-related companies have given
at least $14.8 million to NRA according to its list for a donor program that
began in 2005. That was the year NRA lobbyists helped get a federal law passed
that limits liability claims against gun makers. Former NRA President Sandy Froman wrote that
(this act) “saved the American gun industry from bankruptcy,” according to Bloomberg.
So while it
was once true that the NRA was driven and funded by sports enthusiasts and
individual hunters and outdoors-people, today less than half the organization’s
funding come from program fees or membership dues.
“The bulk of the group's money now comes in the form of
contributions, grants, royalty income and advertising, much of it originating
from gun industry sources.” Specifically:
Since
2005, the gun industry and its corporate allies have given between $20 million
and $52.6 million to it through the NRA
Ring of Freedom
sponsor program. Donors include firearm companies like Midway USA, Springfield
Armory Inc, Pierce Bullet Seal Target Systems and Beretta USA Corporation. Other supporters
from the gun industry include Cabala's, Sturm Ruger & Co, and Smith &
Wesson. And the NRA also made $20.9 million — about 10 percent of its revenue — from selling
advertising
to industry companies marketing products in its many publications in 2010,
according to the IRS Form 990. (http://www.businessinsider.com/the-nra-has-sold-out-to-the-gun-industry-to-become-their-top-crisis-pr-firm-2012-12#ixzz2Hz5YPBuT)
Walter Hickey
of The
Business Insider has noted that this turning away from an authentically
member-driven organization to a corporate lobbyist has had two important
consequences:
· First, the gun industry has created a highly effective marketing
mechanism through their NRA sponsorships that nourishes a direct link with
consumers. There are immediate economic
benefits to having a built-in link with those most interested in your products
– and weapons manufacturers have reaped record profits.
· Second, these same manufacturers have also been shielded from direct
blame in the wake for such acts of mass violence as Virginia State, Aurora, CO,
Tucson, AZ or Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT. In a word, the NRA has been able to run
effective interference so that the CEOs of these corporations are not directly
held accountable for the massacres let alone forced to personally testify
before Congress.
It's possible
that without the NRA, people would be protesting outside of Glock, SIG Sauer
and Freedom Group — the makers of the guns used in the Sandy Hook Elementary
School massacre — and dragging the CEOs in front of cameras and Congress. That
is certainly what happened
to tobacco executives when their
products continued killing people. Notoriously, tobacco executives even attempted
to form their own version of the NRA in
1993, seeing the inherent benefit to the industry that such an effort would
have. Philip
Morris bankrolled
the National
Smokers Alliance, a group that
never quite had the groundswell of support the industry wanted. Notably, the
tide has shifted slightly in the wake of Sandy Hook, with Cerberus Capital
Management's decision to sell
Freedom Group, the company
that makes the Bushmaster rifle.
(http://www.businessinsider.com/the-nra-has-sold-out-to-the-gun-industry-to-become-their
top-crisis-pr-firm-2012-12)
What a far cry from the
original intent when the National Rifle Association was created in 1871. Two
Civil War veterans, Col. William C. Church and Gen. George Wingate, in the
aftermath of their experiences in combat realized that poor marksmanship was
partially to blame for the war’s bloody duration. Their solution was to “promote, teach and
encourage rifle shooting on a scientific basis." (http://www.nrahq.org/history.asp) In time, the NRA opened shooting ranges throughout the
country to advance careful marksmanship and gun safety. After WWII, they expanded their educational
efforts to include hunters in 1949 and later still law enforcement in 1956.
Since its inception, the NRA had
consistently supported common sense gun legislation as well as education. In 1934 they endorsed and help secure passage
of the National Firearms Act that prohibited the sale and distribution of
sawed-off shot guns and machine guns. It
was under-stood that this legislation was essential for helping law enforcement
officers fight organized crime.
Likewise, in the 1968 after the assassinations Robert Kennedy and Martin
Luther King, Jr., a law was passed to make the guns used in these – and the
assassination of President John Kennedy in 1963 – harder to acquire. “When he testified before Congress on the
legislation, NRA President Harold W. Glassen said that "200 million guns
did not strike down Senator Kennedy; only one did." And the NRA endorsed
the law.” (http://www.nationaljournal.com
/congress-legacy/the-evolution-of-the-nra-s-defense-of-guns-20121221)
This public spirited commitment was
altered, however, by a dramatic leadership change in the 1977. In what some have called a corporate coup,
the NRA’s emphasis shifted from that of gun education and safety, to a
hyper-conservative political agenda that not only resonated with the Republican
Party’s so-called “southern strategy” but enflamed rural America’s fears over
alleged violations of the Second Amendment.
Given the rising support for
increased gun control in the United States during 1970s – fundamentally a
backlash against rising urban crime rates and Saturday Night Specials – the old
guard NRA leadership chose to leave the world of Washington politics, relocate
to Colorado Springs, CO and deepen their mission to hunting and sports activity. Their primary interest in weapons was
recreational including marksmanship, hunting and safety training. Jonah Sugarmann writes in his history of the NRA
that the old guards’ “concerns of over gun control were limited to
its effects on traditional sporting activities. (http://www.vpc.org/ nrainfo/chapter2.html)
This enraged an emerging group of gun-rights
hardliners who thought guns weren't primarily about hunting; they were for
self-defense against criminals. Led by Harlon
Carter, the hardliners secretly organized against the NRA's moderate
leadership at the annual meeting of the membership in Cincinnati. Manipulating the
rules of order, the hardliners staged a coup from the floor.
When the sun
rose the next day, the entire leadership of the NRA had been replaced by strong
advocates of the right to bear arms. Rather than move to Colorado Springs, the
new NRA built a larger headquarters in the Washington, D.C., area and made its
central mission to fight against gun control. The hardliners' answer to gun
violence wasn't more gun control. It was more guns. If only more law-abiding
people were armed and prepared to fight back, then criminals wouldn't be able to
so easily victimize Americans (In this) the new NRA became an important member
of the New
Right coalition that lifted Ronald
Reagan to the presidency. (http://www.sfgate.com
/opinion/article/NRA-took-hard-right-after-leadership-coup-3741640.php)
Harlon Carter’s 1977 “Revolt
at Cincinnati” began the transformation of the NRA from a once mainstream organization
committed to the common good to a polarizing political network that continues to
advocate a paranoid vision of government.
1 comment:
very enlightening history. Hope your flu recovery goes quickly
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