If the National Rifle Association needed to convince Americans, including staunch Republicans, that it was an extremist and perhaps truly unstable outfit, it could not have done better than it did by releasing an outrageous TV ad questioning why Obama's kids get security at school and others don't.
Even rank-and-file right wingers are putting as much distance as they can manage between themselves and the NRA. Here's how Joe Scarborough reacted:
What's wrong with these people, Mika? What's wrong with these
people? You have, you have children that had no say in the decision on
whether their father is going to step forward to be President of the
United States, to run for President, one of the most bone-crushing
sacrificing things any husband or wife can do to their family, and the
second they make that decision, their children and their entire family
have targets on their backs. And the NRA is putting something out like
-- what's wrong with these people? Putting out apps that four-year-olds
can play on the anniversary of the Newtown murders, and now putting out
an ad talking about the President's daughters?
[...]
They need new leadership is what they need. Their leadership has
dragged them over the cliff. They are now a fringe organization with
millions of mainstream Americans gun, you know, hunting, guys and women
that love to hunt, and believe that they have the right to protect their
families, and what the NRA once was it no longer is. This extremism is
so frightening and just, over, over, over the line."
David Frum chimed in with this:
[T]he NRA's sneering references to the president's family are beyond
the pale. As the makers of the NRA ad should know, and probably do know,
the First Family has come under years of racially coded attack for
their "uppityism," as Rush Limbaugh phrased it. This latest attack ad
looks to many like only one more attempt to inflame an ancient American
wound.
Generally speaking, a president's family should not be subject to
political criticism. That rule was honorably upheld in the case of the
Bush daughters, who grew into fine young people, and the rule should be
same for the Obama daughters - especially if it's true, as has been
widely reported, that this first family has faced a unique degree of
threat.
The bastards at the helm of the NRA might actually have done themselves in this time. It's now a rogue, extremist and dangerous outfit. Watch to see how long it takes before the NRA comes under new management.
2 comments:
Nice title, what is this a reprint from 1935?
It sure is.
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