http://www.townhall.com/columnists/michellemalkin/mm20040211.shtml
New York City
hates gun owners
Michelle Malkin (archive)
February 11, 2004 |
New York City Mayor Michael "Nanny" Bloomberg, he of the smooth
hands and Nurse Ratched smirk, made international headlines with his selective
war on smokers. Now, Bloomberg and the city's ruling class are preparing to
"cure" the Big Apple of another politically incorrect constituency:
ordinary gun owners. Last week, Democrat City Councilwoman Gale Brewer introduced a resolution
calling on the Republican National Committee "to repudiate the
irresponsible and dangerous policies of the National Rifle Association,"
i.e., supporting the constitutional right of individuals to bear arms and defend
their lives, family and property. Resolution 11 also proclaims that the city
council "objects to the presence of the National Rifle Association at the
2004 Republican National Convention" (to be held in New York City in
August) and demands that the RNC "denounce the intolerant and inflammatory
comments made by members of the NRA leadership that are offensive to many
communities that bring to the City the diversity that ensures its
vibrancy." Taking her marching orders from the anti-gun lobby, Brewer is making a
brouhaha over the individual opinions of NRA board members on everything from
assimilation to urban crime to the Clinton-Reno raid on Waco. The supposedly
damning quotes -- Florida-based board member Marion Hammer notes that
"owning a gun is not a crime"; national board member Jeff Cooper
argues that Americans "ought to choose assimilation over diversity";
provocateur/rocker Ted Nugent says he will wear the Confederate flag
"forever" -- have been compiled on a Web site sponsored by the
increasingly desperate Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. So what does Republican In Name Only Mayor Bloomberg think of all this? He
told New York magazine that all of the NRA leaders' comments were
"reprehensible." In an interview with New York radio station WLIB on
Tuesday, he basically gave rank-and-file gun owners the bird. Reacting to the
announcement by two leading national gun rights organizations, the Citizens
Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (CCRKBA) and the Second Amendment
Foundation, that they have cancelled plans to hold their 20th annual conference
in New York City as a result of the mayor's condemnation, Bloomberg scoffed:
"They're worried about the Second Amendment rather than the First."
(The First Amendment apparently not applying to those who advocate the Second.) Nanny Bloomberg continued: "I am against people carrying guns. Guns kill
people. One of the great scourges we have in the city is that too many people
are carrying guns." So will the gun-phobic mayor be revoking the concealed-carry permits of the
city's rich and famous any time soon? Licensed gun-toters in New York City
include record executive Tommy Mottola, liberal actors Steven Seagal and Robert
De Niro, talk show bigwigs Howard Stern and Don Imus, and gazillionaires
Winthrop Rockefeller and Donald Trump. While these well-connected gun owners are free to walk the streets without
fear, nestled in their gated communities and surrounded by bodyguards, it is
average citizens who suffer the most from the gun-control paternalism of the
elite. Remember Lester Campbell, the 80-year-old man from the Bronx who fought
back with his unlicensed .38-caliber handgun when a mugger beat him and stole
his $262 Social Security check last year? The assailant fled; the city charged
Campbell with two misdemeanor counts of criminal possession of a weapon. What about Jose Acosta, the 69-year-old bodega clerk jailed for using his
.22-caliber unregistered handgun to kill an armed thug who attempted to rob his
Harlem grocery store? Punished for protecting his life and livelihood, this
hard-working, law-abiding legal immigrant from the Dominican Republic is among
untold victims of a system that subjects businesses and individuals to
Byzantine, insurmountable gun-permit regulations while criminals romp. Mohamed Dramy, another bodega worker, followed Bloomberg's utopian vision. He
was totally helpless, with no weapon in sight, when a gang of thieves broke into
his Harlem deli grocery last year. The end result? He was gunned down in cold
blood and died behind his checkout counter. The message from New York City to Second Amendment supporters is clear: Drop
dead. Isn't it time for gun-owning entrepreneurs, tourists and voters to fire back
-- and take their business elsewhere?
©2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.