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Standing
Guard
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WAYNE LaPIERRE
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Making sure that law--always
considered a critical "first step" by the anti gun rights
radicals--sunsets is the most important goal in our singular
mission to preserve the rights of peaceable
Americans.
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f
you own a Remington 700 or Winchester Model 70 bolt action centerfire
rifle, or a Remington 870 or Mossberg Model 500 pump shotgun, or
Franchi or Benelli autoloading shotgun, or even a Marlin 1895, or
1866 Yellowboy replica lever gun, the Clinton gun ban is as much
about your guns and your future right to own any firearm as it is
about so-called "semi-automatic assault rifles."
That law puts control of your guns and your
freedom squarely in the hands of the likes of U.S. Senator Dianne
Feinstein, D-Calif. In her plan for us, control of our future gun
ownership is in the form of a list that she trots out to soothe some
gun owners into thinking they are safe. She wants people who don't
own what she defines as a "semi-automatic assault weapon" to believe
she is selective in her view of firearms prohibition. She wants you
to think it's the other guy she's after.
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Ask our
English-speaking cousins in England and Australia about
lists; about trusting promises.
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But the list is about us all.
It is a list of long guns compiled 10 years ago
from the pages of Gun Digest by Feinstein and Charles Schumer,
D-NY--a roster of bolt actions, single actions, lever actions,
single shots and semi-autos. These are guns Feinstein and her
ban-the-gun axis say you may keep.
Feinstein claims there are 670 guns on that list,
but it actually includes many variations of the same design and boils
down to about 51 specific models.
And of course, there are lots of guns missing from
her list. And there is, as yet, no Feinstein approved list of
handguns.
Ask our English-speaking cousins in England and
Australia about lists; about trusting promises.
Twenty years ago when England started banning
registered semi-auto and pump long guns from the homes of licensed
gun owners, the government published lists of guns people could keep
and guns people were forced to sell to government "buybacks." Most
recently, when they banned possession of registered handguns, the
Brit government published more lists of pistols and revolvers people
were permitted to keep and firearms that would be "controlled" by
government--controlled all the way to the shredders and
smelters.
During the recent debate over Feinstein's attempt
to save the Clinton gun ban from automatically "sunsetting" Sept. 13,
Feinstein again held up her list of approved guns to reassure
American gun owners that they had nothing to fear.
Nothing to fear?
Feinstein and her cohorts are always using the
same phrases about their plans for our future. "Common sense first
step" is one that comes to mind. That doesn't mean the only step; it
means there are more to follow.
When Feinstein referred to her list of "good
guns," the gun ban crowd in Congress was asking firearms owners to
trust their future to the promise of Dianne Feinstein that our guns
are safe in her hands. Yet she really believes that the rights of all
Americans--rights practiced by 60 million of us--exist at her
pleasure.
This is the same DianneFeinstein who told the
Associated Press in 1993, "Banning guns addresses a fundamental right
of all Americans to feel safe."
This is the same Dianne Feinstein who said on cbs
"60 Minutes," fresh from seeing her Clinton gun ban enacted in 1994,
"If I could have gotten 51 votes in the Senate of the United States
for an outright ban, picking up every one of them . . . 'Mr. and Mrs.
America, turn 'em all in,' I would have done it."
That's her end game. Her list of "good guns" is as
much a part of her goal as her list of what she considers to be "bad"
guns.
As long as the Clinton gun ban is on the books,
which guns are banned and which guns are temporarily safe is simply a
matter of adding and deleting words from columns. And making sure
that law--always considered a critical "first step" by the
anti-gun rights radicals--sunsets is the most important goal in
our singular mission to preserve the rights of peaceable
Americans.
When you hear a friend say that this is about
"assault weapons," ask them what kind of guns they own. Most likely
their guns are on Feinstein's list.
Tell your friends never to forget her angry words,
"Mr. and Mrs. America, turn 'em all in."
There is only one force in America that stands
between that vision and continued freedom. As an nra member, that
force is you.
In the coming months we must work
together--one-on-one--convincing friends and neighbors that the
Clinton gun ban is not about somebody else, it's about each of us and
all of us.

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