26 February 2013

If Wayne LaPierre isn't a gun nut, what is he?

The current New Republic has a small item on NRA spokesman Wayne LaPierre that opens with a jolting quote from a former NRA president. Warren Cassidy told reporter Julia Joffe that LaPierre had no "gun interest" that he knew of, while a former media-relations person with the Association said that he'd "run like hell" if LaPierre had ever joined his buddies on a hunting trip. The implication is that LaPierre is not particularly interested in shooting guns. Instead, he is a lobbyist by vocation, entering the business directly from college, where he'd been a political-science major. According to Joffe, LaPierre reflects the viewpoint that has prevailed within the NRA since the so-called "Revolt in Cincinnati" of 1977, when a clique of what she calls "young radicals" took over the venerable sportsmen's group. A Washington Post piece from last month elaborates on this youthful radicalism. Taking the radicals' leader, Neal Knox, as representative, the Post reporters see them as essentially paranoid, driven above all by a fear of gun confiscation as the prelude to tyranny in America. Since the 1960s, the NRA had defended the interests of gun manufacturers and dealers from post-assassination calls for tighter regulations of gun sales. The radicals transformed the Association into a "populist" movement of gun owners, but if gunplay was never a big thing for LaPierre, as his erstwhile colleagues now claim was the case, at least at the start of his NRA career, what was in it for him, apart from the money? He may not have been very worried about the government taking his weapons away, but we can infer a concern for others' weapons founded on a core distrust of the state. He's the man, after all, who made "jackbooted thugs" a catchphrase back in the Nineties. While that attitude may have been shared by many NRA members before 1977 -- and one NRA supporter responding to the post article complains that gun-control activists had started stereotyping members as far-right fanatics back in the Sixties -- it doesn't seem to have been an institutional bias until the Cincinnati revolt made it a safe haven for an ideologue like LaPierre. Ideology has driven an often-ignored wedge between the NRA as a lobby and gun owners as a group, with half of the latter, according to a poll cited by Joffe, claiming that the Association doesn't represent their views, though most still regard it favorably -- presumably in the abstract. That same poll says that 22% of respondents who don't own guns nevertheless feel that the NRA represents their views, so LaPierre, if described accurately in Joffe's article, isn't alone in caring less about having guns himself than in guns' presumed value as a deterrent to criminals or the government. Whatever the truth about LaPierre, those 22% may fairly be described as cowards so long as they expect the NRA, figuratively or literally, to fight their battles for them. Fear of government certainly isn't the only complicating factor in the gun-control debate, but it even more certainly makes any reasonable solution more difficult to enact. If that's what LaPierre stands for above all, his work at the NRA has been a disservice to responsible gun owners in particular and the country in general.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

The ironic thing is, if this government ever actually acts to confiscate guns and become the tyranny that right-wing paranoids love to rant about, it will be directly because of the gun nuts.

If a government allows itself to be threatened by gun-toting thugs and does nothing to defend itself, it will be perceived as weak.

Samuel Wilson said...

It'd depend on who runs the government. You might just as easily imagine a GOP regime deciding to break with NRA orthodoxy if public violence again takes on the leftist tinge it had back in the Seventies -- if more victims are cops, bosses, Republicans, etc. In such a situation even some of today's gun nuts might prove themselves hypocrites, depending on who's actually resisting the system with guns.

Anonymous said...

Given that most amoklaufs seem to take place in areas that tend to be "conservative", I'd say that's already the case, insofar as cops and rethugnicans being the victims.

My point being that no government sees itself as the "bad guy", therefore any government that feels the threat of a possible coup is going to take measures to protect itself. Right-wing extremists who allow their paranoia take control are likely to pose just such a threat.

hobbyfan said...

Sam, you asked the question, I'll give you an answer.

Wayne LaPierre, as portrayed by the media in the wake of Sandy Hook, is a defiant, unrepentant imbecile who thinks guns in some form are the only answer. Nobody had heard much from this clod until Sandy Hook, and now, we can't get him off the media radar fast enough.

And here I thought the NRA only existed to help hunters..........