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Monday, September 23, 2013

NRA: It's Not The Guns Fault!

Wayne LaPierre is a gun rights advocate and huge bonehead.

In Ohio a man shoots a 12-year old girl in the face.

In Florida, George Zimmerman was accused by his wife Shellie that he threatened her and her father with a firearm.

In Colorado, two state senators were recalled after they supported one of the state's most strictest gun control laws. And even in that state, a young girl gets a lead suit when she surprised her armed friend.

A little girl loses her life in a self-inflicted shooting at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming.

A little boy injures his sister. The father wants the little boy to tell the law that it was just an accident and he didn't have a custom size firearm.

A shooting at Washington, DC shooting at the Navy Yard. That mass shooting ended up killing over 12 people and the gunman was killed by the law enforcement.

A shooting in Chicago injures 12 and a little boy was one of the victims.

And of course, even overseas, there was a mass shooting at a suburban mall in The Republic of Kenya.

And on GOP Sundays, Wayne LaPierre once again uses the narrative, that "more good guys with guns" would prevent violence.

Once again, violence is violence. It's a no win situation for a gun shooting victim. Whether it's pulled by a criminal or a law enforcement officer, it's an injury or death.

The spokesperson for the National Rifle Association has been the most colorful figure of the gun rights movement.

He stands firm in this notion that if there were more guns, then mass shootings would have been prevented.

The controversial statements aren't helpful to those who lost family members in mass shootings.

The National Rifle Association's muscle is the voter with a gun. Democrats and Republicans fear the NRA because of its impact on elections. The NRA can scream they're coming for your guns, and those Elmer Fudds would vote Daffy Duck and Bugs Bunny out of office.


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