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-   -   New York attorney general sues to dissolve NRA (https://www.subsim.com/radioroom/showthread.php?t=246238)

Jimbuna 08-06-20 12:45 PM

New York attorney general sues to dissolve NRA
 
Quote:

New York's attorney general has announced a lawsuit aimed at dissolving the powerful National Rifle Association over alleged financial mismanagement.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-53684033
This has the potential to turn pretty ugly very quickly.

Catfish 08-06-20 01:12 PM

^ depends.. freedom is one thing, but when it comes to money :O:

Well you are of course right, but even if i am not anti-gun i guess i do not quite understand this US gun culture thing.

Mr Quatro 08-06-20 01:23 PM

Trump says, "Texas would good a good place for the NRA to relocate to"

Skybird 08-06-20 01:51 PM

I once was anti-gun, turne dinto pro-gun, but under regulations. From this hueg distance hwoever it seems to me the NRA is no longer the association serving the purpsoe it was founded for by its claism back then, but is one oif the most in fluential potlicla,lobby groups in the US. A polticla actor, in other words, that projects political influence for which it is not democratically legitimised. But in principle it is a political party, almost. Onbly because it does not run in elecitosn makes its emmbers voting for the pofficial party.


Additionally, every form of economic lobby-forming in politics should be banned and pursued. In modern understandinf of demcratco states, polticla power and influence is to be held only bny legitmised candidates that qualified durting elections and by the votes of the peoplke. Economic and other lobbies have no legitimation by votes from the people. They corrupt the system and claim political power that they are not legitimised to have. By that they also bypass and bend elections results, and existing legislation.

Onkel Neal 08-06-20 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mr Quatro (Post 2687666)
Trump says, "Texas would good a good place for the NRA to relocate to"

No, we don't need them.

I sympathies with the NRA's stance on protecting 2A but they are a huge organization that has its own interests as priority 1.

em2nought 08-06-20 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Onkel Neal (Post 2687698)
No, we don't need them.

I sympathies with the NRA's stance on protecting 2A but they are a huge organization that has its own interests as priority 1.


The NRA should come to Florida, we look a bit like a pistol anyway. I fear if a teacher ever has their pupils draw Florida some will end up suspended for drawing a gun. :D



https://newcentrist.files.wordpress....pg?w=652&h=734

August 08-06-20 08:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jimbuna (Post 2687658)
This has the potential to turn pretty ugly very quickly.


Everything to you foreigners has the potential to turn ugly very quickly. :)

Buddahaid 08-06-20 10:16 PM

It's ugly at birth.

vienna 08-07-20 02:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Onkel Neal (Post 2687698)
No, we don't need them.

I sympathies with the NRA's stance on protecting 2A but they are a huge organization that has its own interests as priority 1.


The NRA has functioned as mainly a laundry for funneling conservative funds towards candidates, causes, and political entities related to non-gun aspects in an effort to skirt the restrictions of campaign finance laws; the NRA's usefulness as such a medium has been highly diluted by the rise of PACs, so the organization has been suffering both financially and as a political influencer; the PACs can make more funds available to candidates/entities/issues than the NRA since they are not as restricted by campaign finance laws or reporting requirements and lobbying law restrictions; add to this the more, if you'll for give the expression, liberal interpretations of the standards (i.e., corporations are people) related to PACs in recent court decisions and it is easy to see why more conservative donations and dollars are going elsewhere than the NRA; in the past no one, liberal or conservative, in the judicial system would have contemplated a move such as holding the NRA to account, but the power has shifted away from NRA and there probably won't be much as much broad support to defend the NRA as there would have been previously...

The NRA claims a membership of 5+ million members, although several researched investigations indicate the claim may be exaggerated by as much as 1 million non-existent members. The actual clout of the NRA in relation to the actual number of gun owners is also staggering: roughly 25% of the US population owns guns or roughly 80+ million people; the NRA claimed membership of 5 million is only about 6% of the total, so their other claim as being the representatives of the 'majority' of gun owners is pretty weak given that about 94% of gun owners seem not to be in the NRA fold...

The ability of the NRA to exert as much political clout as in previous times is also in question since a good many of the laws they opposed have, in fact, been passed over their objections, and not just by the actions of governing bodies (state legislatures, local governments, etc.), but, also, by direct action by voters in the form of initiatives and referendums; the NRA just doesn't have the same gravitas it used to possess...

The issues with NRA malfeasance in its managerial/financial leadership is nothing new; rumors and reports of excesses and possibly criminal financial activity have been around for years, but nobody dared to make direct accusations; this Politico article of almost exactly a year ago described the weakening of the NRA, its internal problems, and the efforts of other gun rights groups to capitalize on the NRA's woes and decline:


Rival gun groups look to fill the NRA's void --

https://www.politico.com/story/2019/...bbyist-1466701


Quote:

As the National Rifle Association flounders, some upstart pro-gun groups see an opportunity to become the nation’s most influential gun rights organization.

The groups say they’re attracting new members and raking in donations. They’re hiring additional staff to work on grassroots advocacy and lobbying. One is going so far as to discuss at a conference in September how to fill the void left by the NRA, which has struggled to address internal squabbles and accusations of financial mismanagement.

“There are a lot of NRA members that don’t like the infighting, don’t like all the lawsuits, don’t like some of the spending that’s been talked about in the press,” said Alan Gottlieb, founder of the pro-gun Second Amendment Foundation. “A lot of them — they want to defend gun rights, they’re not going to stop defending gun rights, they’re just looking at other places to do it.”

Several of the organizations vying to unseat the NRA as the nation’s top gun advocate are considered more aggressive advocates of the Second Amendment and include the Gun Owners of America and the National Association for Gun Rights, as well as the more moderate Second Amendment Foundation. Their moves come as Congress and President Donald Trump are discussing new gun restrictions after mass shootings in El Paso and Dayton, as well as an upcoming presidential election for which turning out gun owners will be a top priority for Trump’s campaign.

“As an organization, we don’t use Gucci-loafered lobbyists in Washington, D.C. in $200,000 wardrobes to grease the palms of weak-kneed politicians to vote right,” said Dudley Brown, president of the National Association for Gun Rights, referencing the NRA chief executive’s purported lavish spending. “Instead, we activate our members to do that lobbying for us and for them. That’s the power in a grassroots lobby and NRA lost that a long time ago.”
Again, the NRA situation is nothing new; what is new is the NRA is now open to attack not only by gun control advocates, but, increasingly, gun rights advocates who were once the bread and butter of the NRA...





<O>

Jimbuna 08-07-20 04:47 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by August (Post 2687726)
Everything to you foreigners has the potential to turn ugly very quickly. :)

From one foreigner to another...you may well have a point :03:

@Aktung. I'm pleased you chose to delete your post above.

Platapus 08-07-20 06:56 AM

If the NRA has been playing fast and loose with their 501(c) (3) status it can get them into a lot of trouble.



It should be noted that there are other gun organizations that make the NRA look reasonable. GOA is downright scary in comparison.


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