Arizona Gun
Rights/Liberty Meeting a Success
by Angel Shamaya
Director, KeepAndBearArms.com
Arizona gun owners and liberty advocates are
organizing. And if the meeting in Tempe on Wednesday night (9/20/2000) is any
indication of what is to come, Arizonans who love their freedom can expect a
breath of fresh air on the horizon. Not only are AZ free citizens organizing,
we're creative, energetic, determined to be heard and recognized, and willing to
set aside differences in a common commitment to end the assaults on Liberty
being waged against We The People.
At least
125 people showed up at the first Arizona TUG (The Unorganized Group) meeting.
Representatives from groups with opposing viewpoints sat in the room - and spoke
together and to the crowd - sharing ideas, information, insights and the common
thread that binds us all: commitment to restore full firearms freedom and all
other liberty rights to our society. When some disagreement was expressed about
one group's approach to gun activism, an agreement was offered to keep our
differences aside for future meetings to focus on the goal of the group: unified
activism, sharing of ideas, and collaboration on specific projects. Several
wonderful ideas were offered, and people interested in participating in these
suggested activities allied themselves toward the stated objectives.
Included in this mixed bag of freedom lovers
were representatives and/or members of all of the following organizations
(alphabetized): Arizona State Rifle and
Pistol Association, Arizona Trappers Association, Armed Females, Bloomfield
Press, Brassroots, Inc., Citizen's Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms,
Friends of the NRA, Free American, Grassroots of North Carolina, GunLaws.com,
Gun Owners of America, Jews for the Preservation of Firearms Ownership,
KeepAndBearArms.com, LegacyOfGunControl.com, Libertarian Party (Arizona),
Maricopa County Libertarian Party, Mothers Arms, National Rifle Association,
Second Amendment Is For Everyone, Second Amendment Sisters, Single Action
Shooting Society, and Tyranny Response Team. (If I missed anyone, the omission
is purely the fault of this writer and in no way intentional.)
TUG as a concept was explained to
the group and, while people ate from a buffet of pretty decent food, one-by-one,
various leaders or representatives of their respective organizations came to the
front of the room and shared their organization, many of them offering specific
activist campaigns for immediate or near-immediate deployment. Following are a
few of the suggestions that were born in the first TUG-AZ meeting. The next TUG
meeting will be held in the same location, on October 18th at 7pm. See
previous TUG announcement for details.
Rick DeStephens (Brassroots Vice
President and TUG organizer) and Tim Weaver (Brassroots Phoenix coordinator and
TUG organizer) started the meeting with an explanation of the goals and
objectives of this and future meetings. Alan Korwin, author of the best gun
laws books you will find anywhere, started us off with a brainstorming
exercise to inquire as to why we were all attending this meeting and what we
would like to achieve by combining forces. The entire group seemed to get into
it (save one or two fuddy duddies :-), and a sense of commonality and purpose
was established nicely.
I introduced the concept of 5
Minute Activism and asked the group for a commitment to invest 5 minutes
each day in a simple action step as presented on this website. Though I didn't
study every last hand in the room, at least 95% of the hands were up. Good. That
means at least 100 people now have their state and federal legiscritters'
contact info on a piece of paper next to their phone or computer - according to
today's Action Step.
Alan then introduced his ingenious
American Freedom Essay Contest, soon-to-be-deployed via his
website (and on this website and many others, I'm sure). Alan and Mike
Anthony - a local attorney who also spoke on the essay contest - developed this
program for deployment in schools. The goal is to enlist teachers and principals
in schools to have their students write essays on the topic of Freedom.
"Though it's no longer acceptable for our children to discuss guns or the
second amendment in their classrooms," said Korwin, "they can, thank
God, still talk about freedom. And guess what they'll find out when they begin
thinking and writing about freedom..." Rick urged us all to do a
search on the web on the word "freedom" to quickly realize how many
Thomas Jefferson-oriented and gun-related websites these kids will find.
And several people said they'd take it to their children's teachers for
consideration. Expect to see more on this pilot program later.
Alicia Wadas, founder of Mothers
Arms, once again reminded us of her wonderful, mother-supportive approach to
educating women about self-defense. Her approach is to first broach the subject
of self-defense - of any kind, up to and including firearms training - and then
to proceed gently along the path to discussions of freedom and the political
ramifications of being disarmed vs. keeping our guns. Her reminder to us guys
bear repeating, paraphrased in essence: "Stop scaring women by pushing
shooting on them forcefully. Take it slow, gentle and easy, and you'll have a
much better chance at producing the desired result. If they've never even
touched a gun, you might reconsider handing them a .45 on your first outing, and
be patient while they find their bearings." Thank you, Alicia. Alicia
found her way into the self-defense rights movement by realizing how our
freedoms have been slowly eroding; she wasn't even a gun owner, and now she's a
trained firearms instructor and a national spokesperson with members in 22
states and growing.
Craig Lindsay, webmaster for
MothersArms.org and quite the activist himself, introduced the billboard
campaign being deployed in Arizona right now. For as little as $125 a month,
6x12 billboards are sprouting up around the city of Phoenix, and these signs are
available for use nationwide. You can see a sample on the ASRPA
website, and we'd be happy to work one up with KeepAndBearArms.com on it if
people would like to help fund it. The total fee including all setup costs and
the 6 month commitment comes in under $1,000. Alan Korwin and Craig launched
this campaign in Arizona and have done a great deal of work to bring the project
to fruition.
Rick & Tim discussed their strategies for
dealing with Gun Buy-ups. Having created what they humorously dubbed "No
smelter shelters," we listened and considered the fun we will have dealing
with the next local government-funded scheme to strip guns out of the hands of
free citizens.
These energetic activists also described how we
can collectively push the city of Glendale to comply with the law regarding
their no firearms policy. The city has a NO GUNS sign posted at their local
library, and they tell gun owners they must either leave their firearms in the
car or call the police to come pick them up during their stay at the library.
(So much for our pre-emption law.) We'll save the strategy until after it is
deployed; we wouldn't want to spoil the fun and surprises for Glendale's city
manager.
A representative of FIJA-Arizona
attended and passed out pamphlets in support of our education process regarding
appropriate use of a jury should we find ourselves on one. Very good
stuff. Visit their website.
A call was made by Alan Korwin and attorney
Mike Anthony for help writing legislation that favors firearms ownership and
usage, and a drafting committee raised its hand. More on that project will
likely take place in future meetings.
Ken Rineer of GOA and Charles Heller of JPFO
offered their thoughts on why to support these organizations and how to go about
supporting Liberty through activism.
Clay Douglas provided free copies of his
monthly magazine, Free American. He and his wife drove all the way out from New
Mexico to attend. Go to http://www.FreeAmerican.com
to see what they've been up to for the last 7 years. I just subscribed to the
magazine myself.
Alan passed out his Liberty
Poll. If you haven't yet read this great work, read it. He and a few
like-minded liberty lovers collaborated on a list of questions to pose to
political candidates and to media types. Great stuff.
And I provided copies of 31
Questions for Anti-gunners, for use as anyone sees fit.
Again, the next TUG-AZ meeting will be held on
October 18th and 7pm, same
place. If you'd like to receive future emailings about future TUG-AZ events,
you can sign up on our Arizona
state email list.
As for setting up an event like this in other
states, go for it. All we did was JUST DO IT, and so can you.
|