Brady Campaigns slipping relevancy underscored by
NRA convention
Op-Ed By Alan Gottlieb and Dave Workman
Adhering to a pattern of behavior that has developed over the years,
a tiny contingent of gun prohibitionists paraded outside of the
Charlotte Convention Center while the National Rifle Association was
hosting its record-breaking members meeting, but they remained only
long enough to get some camera time with local news crews.
Paul Helmke, president of the Brady
Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, came to that North Carolina city
in order to grab some face time and get his name in the local
newspapers. Where the NRA can pull more than 70,000 members, the
Brady bunch could barely muster two dozen protesters to parade
around for perhaps an hour, probably less, and then leave satisfied
that the 5 oclock news would carry their images.
For several years, right up to the
devastating 1994 mid-term elections that turned dozens of
Congressional anti-gunners out of office, the Brady Campaign and
other gun control groups enjoyed media and public support. But when
gun rights organizations began fighting back with facts, and
developed a strategy of education through legal journals, their
influence began to wane. That influence continued to erode as time
tested their rhetoric and found it not simply wanting, but totally
preposterous.
Their dire predictions in state after state
that concealed carry reform and state preemption statutes would
spawn Wild West gunfights at fender benders, bloody shootouts in
restaurants and cocktail lounges, and skyrocketing murder rates in
which perpetrators would be citizens who were licensed to carry all
were false. Influential people, including prosecutors and county
sheriffs, recognized this and went on the record to say so.
These days, Bradys Helmke is reduced to
spouting platitudes on the steps of the Supreme Court, verbally
bashing important civil rights cases like District of Columbia v.
Heller and the Second Amendment Foundations pending McDonald v. City
of Chicago.
His organization has desperately resorted
to attacking Starbucks Coffee to gin up support while pandering
paranoia; an effort that anti-gunners have developed into an art
form, albeit a lousy one.
They have attacked the most anti-gun
president in the nations history, giving Barack Obama an F grade
because he is not anti-gun enough to suit their extremist
philosophy.
The Brady Campaign has not managed to push
through a single piece of federal legislation in more than 15 years.
Their attempt to sue the gun industry into bankruptcy using anti-gun
mayors as their puppet proxies failed on legal merit and in the
court of public opinion.
If it werent for the fact that pro-gun
rights groups are so active, the Brady bunch would not even have
events to attend. In short, gun prohibitionists have become
irrelevant, and in their desperation for attention, they appear to
be in a state of denial, reaching out to a shrinking audience that
still believes in public safety through demagoguery and surrender to
the criminal element.
Just like some politicians, Helmke and the
Brady Campaign do not know when it is time to retire.
Alan Gottlieb is the Founder of Second
Amendment Foundation. Dave Workman is senior editor of Gun Week.
They are co-authors of Assault on Weapons: The Campaign to Eliminate
Your Guns.