Analysis of
CNN's Latest Gun-related Reporting
by Angel Shamaya
April 27, 2002
KeepAndBearArms.com -- CNN's Friday edition of Newsnight
with Aaron Brown offered coverage of yesterday's mass
school shooting in Germany. In the hourlong segment, NRA president Charlton
Heston was given airtime, as was the Mount Holyoke College chapter of the Second
Amendment Sisters. Excerpts below may be of interest to you; a full
transcript can be viewed here: http://www.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0204/26/asb.00.html.
Most surprising of all was the fact that CNN
broadcast so much overall positive commentary about guns. Heston and the SAS group each made some very
important points for our side. And they each also made some errors, too.
Second Amendment Sisters Segment
The Mount Holyoke College flareup began a few
months ago when SAS launched a chapter in the liberal all-women college. They've
done lots of good PR work and have definitely raised awareness about the right
to keep and bear arms. For this they should be commended and praised.
And many good messages did indeed get out in
this interview, as you'll see if you stop to read the transcript.
Unfortunately, a ball was dropped, as well:
Second Amendment Sister: "No, I
wouldn't want to carry on this campus anyways. I don't think college campuses
are really the appropriate place."
Such a statement should never be able to pass
the lips of a spokesperson representing the right to keep and bear arms on
national and even international television. And it's safe to say SAS National
Leader Maria Heil would never have made such an error, too. With so many SAS
chapters, getting people up to speed nationwide on the fundamentals of the right
to keep and bear arms is no small chore. Hopefully, in reviewing this interview,
SAS leadership will help assure that their liberal all-women college group
doesn't go on television again until they know better.
Any place anyone chooses to keep and bear
firearms in a peaceable manner is the appropriate place. (And to be clear:
carrying for self-defense is a peaceable activity, as is firing on a violent
attacker if such a situation is warranted.)
Maybe the fact that "none of her [SAS
group] members own their own guns" has something to do with the lack of
understanding -- it's a newbie issue. It's nice seeing more women get trained to
shoot. Very nice, indeed. Let's just be more careful about the people we put in
front of newsfolk, yes?
As the reporter, another member and Holyoke
chapter leader Christy Cawood were on their way to an indoor shooting range,
Christy said, "This is us exercising our rights." Well, sorta. Your
right to shoot at paper is certainly covered by the Second Amendment -- but it's
your right to shoot a would-be rapist through his black heart, on campus, that
is under attack.
Charlton Heston Segment
AARON BROWN: What is it that gets your
members riled these days, if there's no big issue out there?
CHARLTON HESTON: Well, to enlarge the
membership, which is one, has been one of our goals for a long time. Any
company or movie studio or anything like that, you want to get more people
involved.
Though I'm hesitant to go to great lengths to
point out every message contained in the above, a couple of things jumped right
out at me.
1) Why is the NRA being compared, by its
president, to a company or movie studio -- why not to the patriots that founded
this nation by giving their lives, fortunes and sacred honor to put an end to
tyranny?
2) Why is the first thing that should
rile NRA members, to Heston, enlarging the membership -- why does that come to
mind above putting an end to the widespread, ruthless and systematic oppression
of lawful, decent, longsuffering gunowners?
Mr. Brown also said: "Is it
in a time when there is not a great controversy over guns, and when the
political front is relatively quiet, does membership fall off and fundraising
fall off?"
To which Heston replied:
"Well, I think we've had an unusual increase in membership because of the
last election, which was a huge win. And the president, the then president,
was certain that he could bring down the NRA, which of course it worked just
the other way. Naturally, all the members are very happy about this."
If Mr. Heston was better trained, he'd have
seized the inaccuracy in Brown's presupposition -- that we are "in a time
when there is not a great controversy over guns" -- and would have
corrected his interviewer. Something along the lines of the statement below would have
been more appropriate, in my opinion:
Well our membership keeps growing, because
your assumption is incorrect, sir. There is indeed a great controversy over
guns, and it's intensifying. In fact, in my own home state of California, the
anti-rights people just tried to ban a gun that has only ever been used in one
crime on American soil even though it's been around for several decades: the
.50 caliber rifle. Our members know that, and they, along with members of the
much larger gun community -- the 85 Million non-NRA-member gunowners --
stopped that nonsense in its tracks.
To his credit, Mr. Heston did a great service
by addressing a woman's right to carry a concealed firearm in her purse. And
that's a very good thing.
I just wish someone would give him a weeklong
intensive in gun rights, liberty, and generating conversations about pivotal
issues on the fly. Or that he'd be replaced by a commoner who is much more in
tune with the issues than he will ever be.