NRA's Democrat Keynote Speaker More Pro Gun Than President Bush
NRA's Democrat Keynote
Speaker Slams Anti-gun Leader, Challenges President Bush to Arm Pilots, Equates
Guns with Freedom, and Much More!
Kudos to NRA Staff and
Management!
by Angel
Shamaya
April 28, 2002
KeepAndBearArms.com -- The National Rifle
Association's 2002 annual members' meeting in Reno marked another changing wind
in the gun control arena. Georgia Democrat Senator Zell Miller's keynote speech,
a rallying battle cry, is indeed a mile marker -- one that scares a few hardcore
gun prohibitionists silly. And that was before he said the things he said
Saturday night!
An example of fear from the anti-rights crowd
hails from the Brady camp's press
release the day before Senator Miller took the stage. Breathlessly, they
took a shot at Senator Miller and urged Democrats not to support the right of
the people to keep and bear arms. "The NRA leadership does not represent
the views of mainstream Americans," squeals Brady Campaign president
Michael D. Barnes.
In his speech, which started and ended with a
standing ovation, Senator Miller responded to the gun prohibitionist's erroneous
statement with the gentle but firm command of a matter-of-fact leader telling it
like it is:
"Handgun Control, Inc. criticized me for
being here tonight. They accused me of� -- "courting" is the
way they put it -- courting the NRA, saying you didn't represent mainstream
America. Folks, I ain't courted anybody since my wife Shirley said 'yes' 48
years ago. [laughter and applause] And when I look around this room, ALL I SEE
is mainstream America. I see a room full of patriots who love their country
and all it stands for, and there is nowhere I'd rather be tonight than right
here with you -- on the picket line of freedom's defense." [screams and
applause]
And with thousands present Saturday night
(4/27/2002), Sen. Miller said some things that are much more alarming to the
anti-rights Democrats than that, too. For example, early in his speech he
introduced his cousin to the crowd as a 40-year Life Member of the NRA, and then
had him stand up and take a round of applause. His doing so was a statement that
being associated with the largest gun rights organization in America is indeed a
badge of honor to be worn with pride.
If you listen really closely, you can almost
hear Brady leader Michael D. Barnes crying
-- his worst fears coming true. And he's definitely afraid of this
situation. "Before Senator Miller's colleagues rush to embrace his belief
that supporting sensible gun laws loses elections," Barnes whined in the
April 26 press release, reminding us that gunowners, and the NRA, sent Al Gore
off to grow a beard, "they should look around the Senate chamber" to
see the socialists who oppose your right to stop a rapist from harming your
family. If that isn't fear, what is?
The Brady Camp is scared, and they know that if
the Democrat party keeps harping against our gun rights, they will lose more of
their base -- so Barnes is doing his best to use peer pressure to keep the
anti-self-defense folks in his camp as best he can. And he's also using lies.
Here are just a couple:
1)� "The last two elections
demonstrate that Americans want common-sense gun laws and they will support
elected officials who pursue them," he fibbed, failing to mention that
Gore was only the third Democratic presidential candidate since the civil war
to lose every confederate state.
2)� "NRA Efforts to Weaken
'Concealed-Carry' Laws Floundering", Brady's press release absurdly
asserts. How this "fact" squares with the 30+ "shall
issue" concealed carry laws backed, supported, endorsed, funded,
promoted, fought for and won with NRA's assistance in most cases is a mystery.
Does the Brady Campaign's frontman do drugs, or does he just get off on
storytelling?
There is one thing Barnes got right in
his press release attacking the gun-friendly Georgia Senator. "Democrats
and Republicans who want to win elections would do well to listen to their
constituents and address gun violence prevention issues in their upcoming
campaigns." They are -- it's called "concealed carry
decriminalization," Michael. Wake up and smell the coffee, boy. Next up:
Ohio, Missouri, Colorado, Nebraska, and Kansas. The order may be off, but they
are all coming sooner or later.
"Here at home in our fight
against suicidal terrorists who slit the throats of flight attendants
and crashed planes into our cities, the most certain line of defense is
a skillfully trained, highly dedicated, ARMED U.S. airline pilot. Our pilots want that choice, and most Americans support
this. To President Bush and his administration, I say this: 'We trust the
pilot with our lives; it's time to trust him with a firearm.'" �U.S.
Senator Zell Miller (D-GA)
NRA National Members' Meeting
April 27, 2002, Keynote Address |
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Senator Miller may as well have kicked the
Brady leader right between the legs. (Does that hurt a eunuch?)
Miller told the crowd that he and Senator Larry Craig (R-ID) are the sponsors of
the "Lawful Commerce of Firearms Act", a bill that "addresses the
problem of junk lawsuits filed with the intention of driving the firearms
industry out of business by attempting to hold manufacturers and dealers liable
for the crimes of others." Said Sen. Miller, "28 states including my
own state of Georgia have enacted this kind of legislation; the U.S. Congress
should follow suit."� (Presumably, this will be the Senate version of HR2037,
Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act, which currently has 222
co-sponsors in the House and was heard in a subcommittee of the Judiciary
Committee on April 18. NRA Director Rep. Bob Barr signed on as a co-sponsor the
very day the bill was introduced, as did NRA Director Rep. Don Young. If your
U.S. Rep. isn't on board, use the red, white and blue form on the left side of
this page to locate contact information and apply some heat.)
The quotes coming out of Sen. Miller's mouth
during his speech in defense of the right to keep and bear arms -- the very
finest RKBA speech I have ever heard from a Democrat -- were exceptionally
well chosen. He quoted James Madison, calling him the father of the
Constitution. He quoted Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry.
That's enough to make a Michael D. Barnes
worshipper cower, but it gets even better. Senator Miller literally brought the
house down when he proclaimed with enthusiasm:
"I got my first gun, a 20-gauge Stevens,
when I was 12 years old. And since that time I've accumulated quite a few
others. Like many of you, I've got more guns than I need, but I don't have as
many as I want! [laughing, screaming, cheering] Now that may sound a bit
confusing to some -- a Democrat wanting more guns -- but just to clear
up any confusion, hear this good: I am also a Life Member of the National
Rifle Association with an A+ rating, and I'm darn proud of it!"
Then Senator Miller went into an eloquent
dissertation about FREEDOM, LIBERTY, and how being ARMED is very much about just
that.� And he didn't skate over the point; he drove it home, and then he
drove it home again.
THEN he threw a curve ball one would never
expect from a Democrat in a million years: he called for the arming of
pilots, and he challenged President Bush to make it happen:
"Here at home in our fight against
suicidal terrorists who slit the throats of flight attendants and crashed
planes into our cities, the most certain line of defense is a skillfully
trained, highly dedicated, ARMED U.S. airline pilot. [screams, cheers,
applause] Our pilots want that choice, and most Americans support this. To President
Bush and his administration, I say this: 'We trust the pilot with our lives; it's time to trust
him with a firearm.'"
"Put that in your pipe and smoke it,
Michael D. Barnes," said the cheers of thousands of gunowners, laughing,
screaming at the top of their lungs.
Hats off to NRA, followed by a bow of
appreciation -- for putting the Democrat anti-rights people on notice, and for
reminding us that it's time to cultivate more pro-RKBA allies from the political
Left.
I do confess to disagreement with Senator
Miller in an area where I also disagree with the NRA: "gun
free schools." If the librarian at Columbine High
School had a gun and knew how to use it, she could have saved 10 lives
including her own. Instead, she sat on the phone with police, crying, and waited
in fear for her executioners to come and do her in. I'm hopeful the NRA, and
Miller, will change their position and support arming teachers and
administrators -- before more students die needlessly at the expense of
political correctness.
But Zell Miller's overall political record on
gun rights is certainly a far cry beyond the vast majority of Democrats' records
-- he's even done better by gunowners than far too many Republicans.
I have the whole Senator Miller speech on tape,
but rather than laboriously transcribe it or invest time reproducing an inferior
recording for the internet, I'm waiting to see if NRA puts up both a cleaner,
high quality recording and a transcript. They are usually really good about
that, especially on important and pivotal speeches, and this one is HUGE. If
they don't have it up in a few days, I'll make it happen, and if they do get it
posted, we'll put a link up on our home page and in our Newslinks
section -- you've got to hear what this congressman said to a packed
house of gun owners; it's that good.
Now let's figure out how to use his speech in
creative ways to educate other Democrats in areas where an opinion shift is
possible.
�