Houston, TX – NRA Chief: Boston-Area Residents Were Vulnerable Without Guns

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    NRA President David A. Keene, right, gives first vice president, Jim Porter a hug during the NRA Annual Meeting of Members at the NRA Annual Meeting of Members at the National Rifle Association's 142 Annual Meetings and Exhibits in the George R. Brown Convention Center Saturday, May 4, 2013, in Houston. Wayne LaPierre, the public face of the National Rifle Association implored members Saturday to never give up their weapons in the wake of recent gun control efforts in Congress that he said will "destroy us and every ounce of our freedom." (AP Photo/Houston Chronicle, Johnny Hanson)Houston, TX – Heavy-handed gun laws and a culture disapproving of gun ownership put citizens in a vulnerable position during the door-to-door search for Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev last month, NRA Chief Executive Wayne LaPierre said on Saturday.

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    “How many Bostonians wished they had a gun two weeks ago?” LaPierre asked in a speech at the National Rifle Association’s annual convention in Houston.

    “Residents were imprisoned behind the locked doors of their own home, a terrorist with bombs and guns just outside,” LaPierre said, referring to the police search in the Boston suburb of Watertown.

    Reiterating a theme from earlier speakers, he said law-abiding gun owners were under attack through government moves to control gun ownership, despite the need for self-protection.

    “Lying in wait right now is a terrorist, a deranged school shooter, a kidnapper, a rapist, a murderer, waiting and planning and plotting in every community across our country, lying in wait right now,” LaPierre said.

    “No amount of political schemes, congressional legislation, presidential commissions or media round tables will ever change that inevitable reality.”

    The convention is the first national gathering of members since last year’s high-profile shooting sprees at a theater in Aurora, Colorado, and Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

    It also comes less than a month after the U.S. Senate voted down a measure to expand background checks for gun buyers, a step favored by U.S. President Barack Obama and most Americans.

    An online Reuters/Ipsos poll released in January showed that 86 percent of those surveyed favored expanded background checks of all gun buyers.

    A CBS News/New York Times poll released on Wednesday showed that 88 percent support background checks for all gun buyers and that 59 percent are disappointed or angry about the Senate vote.

    Several demonstrations in support of stricter gun control took place across the street from the convention center.

    MEMBERSHIP JUMPS

    Speakers lambasted Obama, Vice President Joe Biden, U.S. Senator Dianne Feinstein and New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, among others.

    LaPierre announced that the NRA had reached 5 million members, increasing by 1 million since December after the Newtown shooting.

    NRA First Vice President Jim Porter told members that the background-check proposal would have made criminals out of honest gun owners.
    Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal,  former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, Wayne LaPierre, Exec VP, NRA, Chris W. Cox, Exec. Dir. NRA ILA, Senator Tex Cruz, Texas,  speaks (makes a point, whatever) during the leadership forum at the National Rifle Association's annual meeting Friday, May 3, 2013 in Houston. (AP Photo/Steve Ueckert)
    “Selling a gun to a good neighbor, just like you would do today, becomes a felony, and the government takes your guns,” he said.

    Porter, who is expected to be voted in as the NRA’s next president by board members on Monday, highlighted the role of the rank-and-file in the fierce political battle over guns.

    “That family, our family encompasses tens of millions of Americans. We are the vanguard of those citizens. The gun lobby – that’s you,” he said. “With our liberties at stake, we trump the billionaires, the media and the politicians every time.”

    ‘THAT’S A BABY’

    On Friday and Saturday, a group gathered outside the center to read aloud the names of people who had died from gun violence in the United States since the Sandy Hook massacre in December.

    Austin resident Heather Ross said on Saturday morning that she had been there since 7 a.m. on Friday.

    “It’s really intense to read these names because a few of them on there are zero or 1 years old, and that’s hard. That’s a baby,” Ross said.

    “Then when you read one that’s your age, or your sibling’s age, or you read all the names (of people who died) on your mother’s birthday – that’s very impactful and you go through it a little bit slower.”

    A group called Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America gathered signatures and messages on large signs set to be delivered to U.S. Senators Ted Cruz and John Cornyn of Texas.

    They held a photo session on Saturday with some former Harlem Globetrotters and former NBA players and broadcaster Steve “Snapper” Jones to bring attention to children who were shot and killed.

    Another group, Texans for Smart Gun Regulation, organized a protest in front of the convention center Saturday afternoon.

    Occupy the NRA, organized by Aaron Black, an unofficial spokesman for last year’s Occupy Wall Street protesters, held a news conference on Saturday morning to “say yes to guns and no to the NRA.”

    “I’m tired of watching our democracy being hijacked by these guys,” Black said. “It’s time for people to stand in front of this issue and not just send email petitions around.”

    NRA organizers expected 70,000 people at the three-day convention, which ends on Sunday. Saturday’s events also included a sold-out “Stand Up and Fight Rally” featuring conservative TV and radio personality Glenn Beck.


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    7 Comments
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    murray059
    murray059
    10 years ago

    Exactly correct. so called gun control laws only hamper law abiding citizens from rightly defending themselves while meanwhile do nothing to impede the bad guys with guns. This should be common sense.

    10 years ago

    Having Glen Beck and Sarah Palin as your keynote speakers says it all. These meshugaim have transcended the common bond of a bunch of hunting enthusiasts to the much higher level of mindless right wing politicla hacks.

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    10 years ago

    Well, Beck and Palin are also a few years out of date. Ted Nuget is not exactly on the cutting edge of pop culture either. All in all, we are seeing the defenders of a fading rural, white lifestyle. It will take years, maybe a decade or two, but these cats are on the way out. Not much can stop the push of the demographics.

    As a practical matter, why isn’t the NRA reaching out to the growing parts of the population? The Hispanics, Asians and others?

    Oh, well they would probably have a hard time with that.

    They are doomed.

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    10 years ago

    By the way, I know two people in Boston who wanted legal assault rifles. The two nuts who planted the bombs.

    I am not attacking rural whites. I am one. I am pointing out the demographics are shifting. That is not an attack. That is the fact.