David Limbaugh-The anti-gun bogeyman
The anti-gun bogeyman
                  Some of you may not believe me, but I used to think
                  the National Rifle Association occasionally — just
                  occasionally — exhibited a tinge — just a tinge — of
                  extremism and stridency. 
                  Don’t get me wrong. I’ve always been a staunch
                  proponent of the 2nd Amendment, but I just didn’t
                  understand why the NRA seemed to resist even the
                  most minor restrictions on gun ownership. Who
                  was this bogeyman they feared? 
                  Confession: I now have seen that bogeyman, and
                  he is real. My opinion — which changed many
                  years ago, but I’m just now getting around to
                  writing about it — is that it is not the NRA that is
                  extreme, but the anti-gun bogeyman. While we’re
                  at it, let me say that I intend to say “anti-gun,”
                  rather than gun control because I think it better
                  defines the bogeyman. 
                  Oh, sure, sometimes NRA spokesmen such as
                  Wayne LaPierre may engage in inflammatory
                  rhetoric. Even the venerable gun-advocate Charlton
                  Heston admitted that. Moses was quick to add,
                  though, that aside from his tone, LaPierre was
                  correct in his assertion that President Clinton has
                  been lax in the enforcement of existing gun laws. 
                  The NRA has been ahead of the curve in gauging
                  the bogeyman’s true intent. They have known that
                  his ultimate aim is complete private gun
                  confiscation. They have realized that the bogeyman
                  would not be satisfied with reasonable restrictions
                  and would use every incremental conquest against
                  gun rights as fuel to fight for more. 
                  The bogeyman’s extremism is demonstrated on a
                  variety of fronts. He demonizes gun supporters as
                  backwater, paramilitary zealots who are a
                  hair-trigger away from armed revolt. He
                  characterizes as evil even the most innocuous and
                  uncontroversial gun-safety programs such as Eddie
                  Eagle, simply because they are sponsored by the
                  NRA. He shamelessly exploits gun tragedies, using
                  each as an opportunity to emasculate gun rights
                  further. 
                  The bogeyman advocates ill-considered policies
                  such as gun buy-backs that make for great
                  photo-ops, but are ludicrous on their face. He
                  chooses to ignore repeated studies showing that
                  these buy-back programs have had no detectable
                  effect on violent crime or on firearm deaths. When
                  Congress fails to enact legislation to suit him, he
                  prevails upon his Constitution-circumventing
                  president to initiate lawsuits against gun
                  manufacturers to bully them into making
                  “voluntary” changes. 
                  He often distorts statistics, such as the number of
                  children who die each day from gunshot wounds,
                  because the facts stubbornly undermine his cause.
                  In his monomania against the weapons themselves,
                  he apparently overlooks the number of lives saved
                  each year because of private gun ownership. 
                  He is a selective advocate of the Bill of Rights,
                  treating the 2nd Amendment as a meaningless
                  aberration. He has convinced himself that the
                  framers intended to confer the right to bear arms
                  only on the militia and not the citizens proper. He
                  must have missed Phyllis Schlafly’s column citing
                  framers such as Samuel Adams: “The Constitution
                  shall never be construed … to prevent the people of
                  the United States who are peaceable citizens from
                  keeping their own arms.” 
                  The New York Times reports that the bogeyman
                  (OK, the Times didn’t use that term, but chose “the
                  gun control movement”) has begun the most
                  ambitious campaign in its history to raise money,
                  recruit soldiers and build public support for
                  stronger gun laws in preparation for this fall’s
                  national elections. Lo and behold, whom might you
                  imagine he is looking to for inspiration in this
                  effort? The NRA, of course. According to the Times,
                  the bogeyman is actually copying the NRA’s
                  grass-roots model. 
                  If you ever thought that it was the NRA that was
                  single-issue oriented, be advised that the bogeyman
                  is every bit as focused. In a recent Handgun
                  Control Inc. fund-raising letter, Sarah Brady wrote,
                  “My friend, if you and I truly want a safer America,
                  we cannot allow George W. Bush to be elected
                  president.” May I ask, “Safer for whom, Mrs.
                  Brady?” 
                  When judging the NRA, don’t confuse their
                  vigilance for paranoia. We should all be so vigilant.
                  The NRA and the bogeyman may be employing
                  similar strategies but they are quite different in
                  substance. The difference is that the NRA wants to
                  protect your rights. The bogeyman wants your
                  weapons.

 
        


