ABC's Special
on NRA
by
Harry
Schneider
Chairman, Pennsylvania Sportsman's
Association
The theme of the hour long ABC Peter Jennings attack(1,
2)
on gun owners was that NRA is deceiving members to panic them into donating
money to NRA. ABC claims that NRA uses the money to defeat politicians who voted
for reasonable gun control laws.
Peter Jennings focused on the fact that NRA is campaigning against
congressman Stupak for voting against NRA only one time: Stupak voted for House
concurrence of an anti-gun bill that the Senate already passed (S.254) with the
support of Rick Santorum.
Wayne LaPierre defended the NRA's attack on Stupak by bragging that NRA
leadership supports more gun control laws and stricter enforcement of existing
gun control laws
S.254 will expand instant check to include transfers between private
individuals at gun shows. Instant check already applies to dealers at gun shows,
just the same way that it applies to dealers in their stores. Wayne LaPierre and
Sarah Brady both support
expanding the instant check to include private transfers at gunshows. They
disagree on the definition of a gun show and Sarah wants "instant" to
mean 72 hours, while Wayne wants "instant" to mean 24 hours.
Both versions have the potential to destroy gun shows which are vital to the
gun rights movement. Gun shows are where thousands of gun enthusiasts gather in
one place. They meet with fellow enthusiasts and gun rights leaders. As they
view thousands of firearms and accessories they learn more about their hobby and
have a chance to upgrade their collections. They learn about the latest threats
to their culture, about how gun banners have learned that soften their rhetoric
to make their legislation sound reasonable and safety oriented to lull gun
owners to sleep. They learn who to vote for and who to vote against. They learn
which groups fight gun control and which only claim to fight gun control.
INSTANT CHECK HAS THE POTENTIAL TO DESTROY GUN SHOWS - the Justice Department
has repeatedly shut down the instant check during major gun show weekends. This
year Justice stopped all dealer sales at the Pennsylvania Gun Collectors Assn
show in Pittsburgh and the Harrisburg Show. The following weekend they shut down
NICS again during the Ohio Gun Collectors Assn. show. Only private transfers
kept the shows from being a total loss - and thus discouraging participants from
returning to future shows.
EXTENDING INSTANT CHECK TO INCLUDE PRIVATE TRANSFERS at gunshows will greatly
increase the ability of the government to destroy gun shows. The 24 hour vs. 72
hour issue is insignificant compared to the proven fact that extending instant
check to include private sales will stop all sales and destroy gunshows when the
NICS computer is again shut down for "maintenance" during gun show
weekends.
Jennings confronted Wayne LaPierre and accused him of misleading NRA members
by telling them that there were no federal prosecutions for Brady violations
during a three year period 96,97,98. Wayne corrected the NRA position by saying
that there was one prosecution during that period. Jennings produced documents
claiming that there were about 600 Federal prosecutions during that period -
LAPIERRE LOOKED LIKE A DEER CAUGHT IN THE HEADLIGHTS and I have yet to see NRA
respond.
Instant check is especially devastating to Pennsylvanians. It isn't just
felons who can't possess guns, almost every person who was convicted of any
misdemeanor in Pennsylvania prior to 1968 is prohibited from possessing guns.
The Gun Control Act of 1968 contains an ex post facto provision mandating
lifelong loss of gun rights for any person who has ever been convicted of any
misdemeanor punishable by more than two years - even if the person got no jail
time at all. Up until 1968 all, yes all Pennsylvania misdemeanors were
punishable by up to three years. This includes drag racing, bastardry, a single
DWI, and many sealed juvenile offenses that were recently unsealed and entered
into the instant check computer.
Most of these people were unaware that they had lost their gun rights under
the ex post facto provisions of The Gun Control Act of 1968. Most lived their
lives as model citizens until Wayne LaPierre's instant check caught them when
they tried to buy a shotgun at their local sporting goods store and they were
shocked to discover that they were rejected. Wayne LaPierre wants people
prosecuted. We disagree.
Since 1992 each year Congress has voted to prevent these people from applying
to have their rights restored. NRA has never asked members to lobby to give
these people a chance to have their Constitutional rights restored. Like any
good "consumer" we need to learn to differentiate between advertising
rhetoric and actual performance.
Harry Schneider is the Chairman of Pennsylvania
Sportsmen's Association. Permission to distribute is granted if this article is
not edited. If you read it first on KeepAndBearArms.com, please say so when you
pass it on.
"No State shall convert a liberty into a
privilege, license it, and charge a fee therefore." ~~ Murdock v.
Pennsylvania, 319 US 105
KeepAndBearArms.com Note: We agree with Mr.
Schneider. The true intentions of closing the so called "gun show
loophole" are to register private sales as part of the Master Plan to
disarm our nation - and to close gun shows. No, thank you. For more
information on gun shows, we recommend a very good article written by Dave Kopel
called The
Truth About Gun Shows.