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Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:00:44 PM EDT
[#1]
need an account to access it
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:00:50 PM EDT
[#2]
Sure as hell not this one!!!
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:03:48 PM EDT
[#3]
Must not be the National Rifle Association. Could be the Non-Republican Assholes.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:05:20 PM EDT
[#4]
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:06:53 PM EDT
[#5]

Quoted:
Must not be the National Rifle Association. Could be the Non-Republican Assholes.



Of course it's the National Rifle Association.

It's plum full of tweeds. i.e., hunters. Most of them don't understand the 2nd A. has nothing to do with hunting. But the NRA gets it's big numbers from that group.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:08:14 PM EDT
[#6]
Sure, there are plenty of them, probably well over 100,000.  The NRA does not give a logic or intelligence test befor allowing membership.  These are likely the same people who believe the antis would just go away if we would just allow them to ban semis.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:16:16 PM EDT
[#7]
Idiots !  Perhaps they need to read some history !
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:18:05 PM EDT
[#8]
spineless pussies.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:19:01 PM EDT
[#9]
Fuck 'em.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:19:39 PM EDT
[#10]
Text for those that can't get it.  (Thank you news.google.com!)

Posted on Wed, Oct. 20, 2004

Some hunters disenchanted with NRA

BY BRENT FRAZEE

Knight Ridder Newspapers

KANSAS CITY, Mo. - (KRT) - You won't find Mike Hayden's name in the National Rifle Association's membership rolls.

Oh, it was there years ago. When he was growing up in western Kansas, where hunting is almost a way of life, he was an enthusiastic supporter of the powerful gun-rights organization.

But today, he is part of a growing group of hunters who have become disenchanted with the NRA and its controversial ways.

"I just don't think the NRA represents the best interests of hunters, with the extreme positions it takes," said Hayden, who is secretary of the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks. "It does some good, but it also does some things that are counterproductive; some things that hurt the image of the average hunter.

"I decided that I didn't want to be part of an organization like that anymore."

Hayden certainly isn't alone. As the NRA becomes more aggressive in its role to fight gun control, it is coming under increased fire - even from its largest group of supporters, hunters.

Take a look at some of the issues in the last year alone that have generated a barrage of shots:

_Some hunters worry about their image as the NRA continues to support private ownership of a wide range of assault weapons, even those which critics say have no sporting use.

_The NRA has sharply criticized state and federal game and fish agencies, saying they have unknowingly contributed to the decline in hunting by creating needless red tape in the form of overbearing regulations.

_The organization has blasted the Clinton Administration for its so-called "Roadless Initiative," which closed roads on millions of acres of federal land. The NRA said that move has closed many areas to drive-up hunting and added to access problems. It supports the Bush Administration's plan to open those roads again.

_The NRA has rebuffed efforts by organizations such as the Sierra Club to become allies in a program designed to improve wildlife habitat.

Kayne Robinson, president of the NRA, downplays those incidents and the criticism they have generated. He said the NRA still is the champion of hunting sports and is about to become more so.

The creation of a new program, "Free Hunters" - which will place a priority on solving some of the problems that have led to a decline in hunter numbers - has already attracted 20,000 members in its first two months of existence, he said.

He added that almost 3 million of the NRA's overall 4 million-plus members are hunters and that there has been no mass exodus of disenchanted sportsmen.

"They realize the NRA is still their biggest ally," Robinson said.

But some hunters aren't so sure.

"To many, any opposition of the National Rifle Association is like spitting on the American flag," Joel Vance wrote in an article in the summer edition of the Outdoor Guide. "I beg to differ."

Like Hayden, Vance is among those who aren't afraid to admit that there's a "former" in front of their status as NRA members.

"I belonged to the NRA years ago, when it concentrated on gun and hunter safety, an admirable goal," he said. "Now it is so focused on shooting down anything that smacks of gun control that it has lost me.

"In my opinion, it has become so strident in its views that it often does more harm than good."

Vance, who lives in Russellville, Mo., would like to see the NRA soften its approach and develop a more cooperative nature - an approach that, he says, would better represent the hunters in the organization.

"There are many hunters, me among them, who are turned off by the nastiness of the NRA," Vance wrote in the Outdoor Guide. ". . . The NRA is very effective with its 4 million members, but think of how much more impact it could have with the 200 million or so Americans who don't hunt if it adopted a more friendly approach, even to those who don't share its views.

"The attitude that `If you ain't for us, you're agin us,' is stupid, self-serving, and in the long run, self-destructive."

Rick Dykstra, a hunter and former police officer who now lives in Milford, Kan., also has philosophical differences with the NRA.

He praises the organization's work in protecting hunting and other sporting guns. But he thinks it goes too far when it supports some other small arms.

"I'm all for hunters rights," Dykstra said. "But when you look at the Second Amendment, I don't think our founding fathers had any way of predicting where firearms would be today.

"I can see protecting our hunting guns and handguns. But a 50-caliber sniper rifle? I don't see why anybody needs a gun like that.

"I think if the NRA would soften its stance, more people like me would join."

Pat Wray, a 20-year member of the NRA and a board member for the Outdoor Writers Association of America, is another hunter who is disenchanted with the pro-gun organization.

After the NRA rebuffed offers to join in an alliance with the Sierra Club to protect wildlife habitat - a move that Robinson said was generated by the environmental group's support of anti-gun politicians - Wray criticized the organization for its narrow scope.

"The NRA talks about how much it does for hunting, but in many ways, that's misleading," said Wray, a longtime hunter and freelance writer from Corvallis, Ore. "They support politicians simply on the way they vote on gun rights.

"But sometimes, those people are the same ones who care very little about the environment and wildlife. They are the ones who are the least supportive of protecting hunting habitat from roads, logging and mining."

Still, Wray remains an NRA member and isn't about to withdraw.

"They are the primary, if not the only, voice protecting the Second Amendment," he said. "I don't agree with everything they do, but they have their good points."

Many hunters who are NRA members say those criticisms of the pro-gun organization represent the minority, not the majority, view. They insist that the NRA is still an effective champion of their cause.

Harold Volle considers himself one of the average hunters the organization is dedicated to protecting.

Volle, 68, who lives in Cairo, Mo., about 35 miles north of Columbia, has hunted for most of his life. But it wasn't until 25 years ago that he realized how important the NRA was to his future.

"At the time, there was a lot of talk about gun control," he said. "The talk was mostly about handguns and assault weapons.

"But it scared me. If they can take away one type of gun, they could eventually take away our hunting guns.

"I had seen what the NRA could do with their lobbying to stop gun control. I figured they were one of the best friends a hunter could have, so I decided to get behind them.

"I've never regretted it. If it weren't for the NRA, I'm not sure we'd have hunting in the future."

Supporters and critics of the NRA agree on one thing: The organization has never been timid in its approach.

Many remember the NRA convention in which then-NRA president Charlton Heston held up a gun and announced to a cheering crowd, "From my cold, dead hands."

Others recall the day that his successor, Robinson, in supporting George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential election, said, "If we win, we'll have a president where we can work out of (his) office."

And still others recall the mid-1990s, when an NRA fund-raising letter labeled federal law-enforcement agents as "jackbooted thugs," an incident that caused some, including President George Bush Sr., to resign from the NRA.

If such rhetoric was designed to grab the attention of the public, it apparently has worked. The NRA is one of the most visible - and respected or hated, depending on your perspective - organizations in the nation.

It started in 1871 with the primary goal of promoting and encouraging rifle shooting. But it quickly broadened its scope.

Alarmed by the proliferation of gun-control bills in Congress and state legislatures, the NRA entered the political realm. And with funding provided by its huge base, it became one of the nation's most powerful lobbying forces.

Its message: Don't mess with the Second Amendment - the 27 words that read "A well-regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed."

"We don't tilt at windmills," Robinson said. "We take on issues that are important.

"And we're pretty good at what we do. If you look at some of the things that have been proposed in the last 25 years and some of the things we've stopped, you can see what we've done for hunters and other law-abiding gun owners."

The NRA now is turning its eyes to another priority: rescuing hunting. And it has identified an unlikely opponent: the game and fish agencies that manage that sport.

"There are many fine people in state and federal government who have dedicated their lives to promoting and preserving hunting," Robinson said. "But today, there are government agents, who unwittingly or not, are active participants in the slow death of hunting.

"We must no longer tread on eggshells around agencies and officials who are clearly hostile to hunting."

Robinson went on to criticize the red tape that hunters face today - the complicated regulations, the hunter-safety courses that are too time-consuming, and the different zones and boundaries.

"If you want to hunt today, you'd better bring a lawyer with you," Robinson said. "You'll need him to figure out all the regulations."

Robinson blames those regulations in part for the decline in today's hunter numbers, which have fallen from 17.4 million in 1980 to less than 13 million last year.

The NRA plans to work with state and federal agencies and the legislatures to bring "common sense," as Robinson put it, to many of those hunting management plans.

But Hayden thinks Robinson and the NRA are taking aim on the wrong target. He insists the states are the leaders in promoting hunting, not the problem.

"It's true that we now have mandatory hunter education and more complex regulations," Hayden said. "But look at the tradeoff. Look at what we've done with that funding. We have some fabulous hunting now.

"If we're going to manage the resource properly and provide hunting opportunity, we need those regulations."

Hayden paused and added, "In an ever-urbanizing society, the world the NRA reminisces about - the world of 50 years ago - is gone. There are whole new challenges. Things are more complex.

"I think the state agencies are responding to those challenges. We're the ones who are on the front line in the fight to save hunting."

John Hoskins, director of the Missouri Department of Conservation, also thinks the regulations are necessary.

"We have within our own agency looked at our regulations and wish that they could be simpler," he said. "And whenever possible, we have simplified things.

"But looking at the big picture, if hunting is to continue into the future, it must be managed. And with management comes regulations.

"The tradeoff is better hunting, and in the case of hunter education, safer hunting."

One of the major goals of the NRA's new hunting program is to help the average guy - the hunter who might only have a couple of weekends to get out and enjoy his sport.

"We want to be a voice for the guy who is being driven from the sport today," Robinson said. "We want to speak for Joe Lunchbucket, the guy who works down at the Texaco station and maybe doesn't have a lot of time to hunt and can't afford to hire an expensive guide.

"The problem that is the most acute is access. Hunters like this need a place to go. And increasingly, they're seeing the gates closed."

Robinson was especially critical of the Clinton Administration's move to end maintenance and construction of roads on almost 60 million acres of national forest land. Although large parts of that land remained open to hunting, Robinson claimed that it effectively choked off access to the average hunter.

"A guy who only has a weekend to go hunting needs places that are accessible," he said.

But some hunters take issue with Robinson's views. Making the areas more remote, they say, creates better hunting, not worse.

They cite studies by Trout Unlimited, a conservation group, that show the best hunting and fishing in Idaho and Oregon - as measured by the quality and quantity of big game and fish taken - came in the roadless areas.

"Most of the legions of people insisting on a `driveway' right to hunt simply have more invested in their beer belies than their boots," said an editorial in the Lewiston (Idaho) Tribune in June.

Nowhere has the split over the NRA's actions been more evident than at the Outdoor Writers Association of America (OWAA) annual meeting in Spokane, Wash., this summer.

The nation's outdoors writers have a history of being largely sympathetic to the NRA. Many of those writers are hunters and gun owners themselves. But an incident at the meeting created a rift in the organization, which is made up of 2,027 writers and other members of the outdoors media, and left the NRA embroiled in controversy.

It started when a representative of the Sierra Club, a national environmental group, announced plans for a Natural Allies program, in which organizations would join to protect wildlife habitat, which indirectly would benefit hunters. Robinson rebuffed the effort, saying it was a veiled attempt to "hoodwink hunters into voting for gun-ban candidates."

"It's pretty hard to hunt without guns," he said at the meeting.

Robinson justified his statements by citing the Sierra Club's support of politicians who have failing grades in gun-rights issues.

The OWAA's board of directors voted to rebuke Robinson, sending a letter voicing the organization's disappointment with his actions in criticizing a fellow supporting member in a mealtime setting. That created a split among members and led to a petition in support of Robinson.

Almost 60 individuals and 14 supporting members have resigned from OWAA over the incident. And many more have voiced their disapproval.

But many others took the opportunity to criticize the NRA.

"The NRA continues to blindly advocate `Vote your gun.' So narrow. So sad," wrote Rich Landers, outdoors editor of the Spokesman-Review of Spokane, Wash.

__

NRA: THE PROS AND CONS

Pros

1. Long-time leader in the fight to own hunting guns and other small arms.

2. One of the first organizations to establish hunter education courses; still has leadership role in teaching youth about hunting safety.

3. Founded the award-winning Eddie Eagle program that teaches school children about firearms safety.

Cons

1. Some hunters say the NRA goes too far in its fight against gun control; that its extreme positions are counterproductive to average sportsmen.

2. Some criticize the NRA for its aggressive approach. By showing a willingness to work with other organizations, they say, the NRA would gain more support from the public.

3. Some hunters are disenchanted with the NRA over its criticism of long-time allies of the hunting sport such as game and fish agencies.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:19:42 PM EDT
[#11]
John Kerry and Michael Moore are both lifetime members of the NRA. I am sure that there are a few other dimwitted assholes who are NRA members too.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:23:03 PM EDT
[#12]
now that I had a chance to read that:

it pisses me off that there are hunters out there who think the NRA is doing them harm.
1) AWB renewals that were in Congress would have banned a LOT of hunting rifles and shotguns had they passed
2) Wayne LaPierre was just debating Rebecca Peters who wants to ban hunting weapons too
3) NRA is not solely a pro-hunting organization, some of those assholes who are saying that crap should think about some other people besides themselves. Not everyone in the NRA is a hunter.

We need to stay unified, damnit!
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:27:42 PM EDT
[#13]
I wonder if the NRA still honors Michael Moore's membership or if they somehow kicked him out.  I would have sent him his money back.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:27:49 PM EDT
[#14]

Rick Dykstra, a hunter and former police officer who now lives in Milford, Kan., also has philosophical differences with the NRA.

He praises the organization's work in protecting hunting and other sporting guns. But he thinks it goes too far when it supports some other small arms.

"I'm all for hunters rights," Dykstra said. "But when you look at the Second Amendment, I don't think our founding fathers had any way of predicting where firearms would be today.

"I can see protecting our hunting guns and handguns. But a 50-caliber sniper rifle? I don't see why anybody needs a gun like that.

"I think if the NRA would soften its stance, more people like me would join."


The common argument.  

How would people react if the 1st was treated in the same way.  'The founding fathers never could have imagined electronic communication, so it's not subject to 1st ammendment protection.'  They'd flip out, and rightly so!
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:29:32 PM EDT
[#15]

Vance, who is a tool;lives in Russellville, Mo., would like to see the NRA soften its approach and develop a more cooperative nature - an approach that, he says, would better represent the hunters in the organization.
     



Fixed it.



.....................again
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:36:29 PM EDT
[#16]
This crap is pathetic and only serves to divide and conquer us.  There is no compromise with rabid anit-gunners.  They want it all and any attempt to work with them only plays into their hands.  The NRA has to take the extreme opposite position.  Personally, I have no use for hunting.  But I respect hunter's rights and expect them to give equal respect to my sport shooting rights no matter what firearm I choose to use.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:39:40 PM EDT
[#17]
Typical liberal slant, they find 3 people out of three million members who are upset and spotlight those people.

Just like our local paper. They want 10 "undecideds" to monitor through the presidential campaign.
Guess what, none of the undecideds have endorsed Bush.

It would be interesting to see how much the tweeds send to the NRA every year versus the Black Rifle" crowd.

Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:40:58 PM EDT
[#18]

Quoted:
spineless pussies.



And the GOA considers the NRA a bunch of wimpy pushovers.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:41:42 PM EDT
[#19]
what a bunch of clueless fucks!



this is the problem with the NRA and all those Skeet/trap/clays/target/hunter/duck/etc elietist shitheads.

the fucking anti's will stop at nothing and they fully know that the way to the 'whole pie' is one piece at a time.

this topic really burns my ass!

IMNSHO, the NRA should be point blank blunt with all it's members about this fact.


We're all in the 2nd ammendment "house"... keep removing "bricks" and the whole fucking house is coming down!
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:43:16 PM EDT
[#20]
Jackasses. They don't think Kerry will come for their "hunting" rifles. But he will when the next John Muhammed uses a Remington 700. Then you can kiss daddy's .30-06 SNIPER rifle goodbye, all they have to do is change the damn name. And you can't have that evil military style scattergun either, oh no.

I can't stand people like this. They don't NEED to hunt any more than I NEED an "assault weapon" but I always stick up for hunters rights at the polls and elsewhere. But then you get these people who are willing to sell out the rest of us.
Link Posted: 10/21/2004 7:51:58 PM EDT
[#21]
The writer (and/or the assigning editor) already had a conclusion in mind before work even started on that story.
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