Posted on 02/29/2012 6:21:16 AM PST by marktwain
Normally when a representative for the National Rifle Association (NRA) visits the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC), were talking about NRA Executive Vice President and CEO Wayne LaPierre, and hes there to promote a range of bizarre conspiracy theories concerning gun confiscation and the Obama Administration. Over the years, Wayne and the NRA have learned that theres no better fundraising tool than good ol fearmongering. This year, however, a far more interesting and revealing moment occurred at CPAC when NRA President David Keene presented Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli with the Defender of Freedom Award on behalf of the NRA and the American Conservative Union (for which Keene served as Chairman from 1984-2011).
To put it lightly, Ken Cuccinelli has been a controversial figure since entering Virginia politics in 2002. In the words of the Washington Post, Mr. Cuccinelli has profited from an affability and quick wit that have tended to mask his extremist views. As a lawmaker in Richmond, he has displayed contempt for non-English speakers; for those who care about global warming; and for the First Amendment. Many of his fellow Republicans regard him as occupying the far-right fringe of the party, the ultimate small tenter."
The NRAs president saw things quite differently when he honored Cuccinelli on February 9th, however. Before bestowing him with a document signed by Founding Fathers James Madison and James Monroe, David Keene called Cuccinelli a man of faith a man healthily suspicious of government in all circumstances a man who has never turned his back on his values, has never turned his back on his beliefs, and has never refused to stand up when principle demanded that he do so. He has never, in fact, varied from the beliefs that motivate him and motivated our Founders, said Keene. Keene also praised Cuccinelli for filing a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of Obamacare (i.e., the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010). The NRA president made absolutely no mention of the Second Amendment or Cuccinellis record on the gun issue.
Curiously, neither did Cuccinelli. After thanking the NRA for the award, Cuccinelli launched into a bizarre tirade on a host of issues thatat first glancehave nothing to do with the NRAs mission or political agenda.
First, Cuccinelli suggested that the Constitution shouldnt have been ratified, remarking, James Monroe voted against the U.S. Constitution because he didnt think it was cautious enough with respect to federal power. Seems like he had a crystal ball, one might think. But thats the role of states when the federal government oversteps its boundaries. And the worst example of course is the health care bill [the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act signed by the president on March 23, 2010. And about 34 minutes later, give or take, we filed suit in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia Seventeen blocks to the east, 235 years to the day, before we filed that suit, and before the president signed that bill, Patrick Henry gave his Give Me Liberty, Or Give Me Death speech And that seemed very appropriate, given that that legislation represents one of the greatest legislative invasions of liberty in the lifetime of anyone in this room. And that suit we filed is not about health care. Its about liberty We know that it has to be stopped. Certainly the Founders would think so.
Turning to the topic of the environment, Cuccinelli said, [W]e sued the EPA [Environmental Protection Agency]which I have taken to calling the Employment Prevention Agency, because they are so good at thatfor their greenhouse gas endangerment finding Virginia and Texas will argue on behalf of 16 states that they broke the law .. And when the EPA said that the CO2 that you are exhaling right nowlets all annoy [EPA Administrator] Lisa Jackson together [exhales loudly]. Hi, Lisa. When they passed that regulation in violation of the law they brought on enormous consequences, many of which they hadnt calculated and which they said they hadnt calculated. Those are the economic consequences. The only science behind that regulation is political science.
Finally, Cuccinelli directed his wrath at organized labor: You all are familiar with the National Labor Relations Boards assault on South Carolina and Boeing. Make no mistake about it, that is an assault on the right to work the right to hold a job without being coerced into joining a union We have never seen such an across-the-board assault on the rule of law by any administration in the lifetime of anyone in this room. It has never happened. The Constitution gets not no respect. States gets no respect. The courts get no respect. Federal law itself that they find inconvenient gets no respect. And when we dont have enough politicians in Washington who adhere to the constitution and the rule of law, state attorneys general become the last line of defense.
Not a single word about guns
One might be amazed at how blatant this whole episode was, but the truth is that Cuccinellis extreme views on a host of non-gun-related issues are in lockstep with members of the NRA leadership. A recent examination of the NRA by the Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence revealed that the organization is largely lead by individuals with a vested interest in conservative politicsincluding social and economic issues. Whether its fighting the advance of LGBT rights, engaging in immigrant bashing, or supporting the 1%, the NRA never met a progressive cause it wasnt prepared to gun down.
While superficially bipartisan, the NRA is closely aligned with the most extreme elements in the Republican Party and has brought a number of the GOPs most influential operatives into positions of power within their organization. The GOP and NRA are now locked in a symbiotic relationship where Republican legislators advance the NRAs extreme agenda while the NRA musters its hardcore supporters to serve as attack dogs for a wide-ranging conservative agenda. Honoring Cuccinellia charismatic pied-piper of the far-right wing movementmakes that job that much easier.
Obtaining the consent of the governed is such a bother.
Over the years, Wayne and the NRA have learned that theres no better fundraising tool than good ol fearmongering.
This from a professional hoplophobe? A pathological fear of inanimate objects isn't normal. Not to mention that the Coalition to Stop Gun Violence has been known to do a bit of fear mongering.
OH, and what about the Democrats and the MSM’s symbiotic relationship... that’s OK?
As are the CGSV and the Democrat/Communist Party/Soros/Joyce Foundation/UN axis.
I like the former symbiosis better than the latter.
Whether its fighting the advance of LGBT rights...
Where are "LGBT rights" in the Constitution?
And the Democrats and unions as well! Unions will pump in nearly 1/2 Billion $ for the Demwits this political season! NRA are paupers compared to that figure!
Their name, “Coalition to Stop Gun Violence,” is both interesting and distrubing. Violence, after all, can be either good or bad, depending entirely on what it’s used for. If a man uses a gun to facilitate rape, robbery, or murder, that violence is pure evil. OTOH, if a woman uses a gun to stop a robbery, rape, or murder by killing the perp, she’s done a tremendous public service; that violence is an affirmative good. By just condemning “gun violence,” the Coalition says the good of violently stopping crime with the aid of firearms is just as bad a committing crimes with one. That attitude of moral equivalence itself is pure evil and one of the greatest causes of all the scourges our present society faces.
I guess that is why the NRA endosed Harry Reid. Has been tough for me to forgive that incredibly short-sighted maneuver.
During the last several presidential campaigns, posters at Democrat Underground spread rumors of Bush/McCain having a secret plan to bring back the draft. Nevermind it’s actually Dems who have submitted legislation to really do it.
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