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Armed Citizen

Cashier Theresa Stuckey sold a woman groceries, and the next thing she knew the woman was outside pleading for her life. "She was screaming, 'Help, he's trying to kill me!' She was rolling on the ground, trying to get out of the way, but he kept stabbing her.”  Terrified onlookers yelled at the man and honked their horns. Ignoring the crowd, the rampaging man poured gasoline on the woman and attempted to set her ablaze, but a passerby entered the scene armed with more than a car horn. According to a witness, the Good Samaritan drew a gun and, "He told the man, 'Stop, or I'm going to shoot! And if you run, I'm going to kill you:" Police say the heroic man held the suspect until they arrived, however, he left before anyone got his name. The victim was listed in good condition at the hospital. (The Clarion-Ledger, Jackson, MS, 03/05/07)

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When James Wiggins' dog began barking, he peered out a window and spotted two men approaching, clad in black ski masks, dark clothing and toting a handgun. Wiggins fled to his bedroom, retrieved his firearm and braced for an attempted invasion of his home. According to police, the masked men forced open the back door and Wiggins opened fire on them. Both suspects were taken to the hospital with gunshot wounds. (WRAL-TV5, Raleigh, NC, 03/10/07)

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Police say two brave brothers with concealed-carry permits quashed an apparent road-rage incident. It began when a man was rear-ended and started yelling at the occupants of the other car. The argument escalated until he began shooting a gun into the air. At that point, passersby Paul and William Webber saw the man and quickly did a U-turn. The Webbers unholstered their guns, demanded the man put his hands in the air and held him for police. "If you see people doing wrong and especially putting lives at danger,” said William Webber, 23, "it's pretty clear what you have to do.” Memphis police Sgt. Robert Tutt called the brothers' actions, "Very responsible, very restrained.” (The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, TN, 03/07/07)

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A concealed-carry permit holder from Florida is fortunate thanks to reciprocity laws. Police say he was walking his dog during a trip to Missouri when two men inquired about the pet. Then one of the men pulled what looked like a pistol and demanded the man's jewelry and cash. The suspect's pistol turned out to be a BB gun, but the victim had a real gun. "I definitely thought he was going to shoot me, so I pulled out my gun and started firing,” he said. The suspects fled; one was apprehended. (St. Louis Post-Dispatch, St. Louis, MO, 03/14/07)

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Something didn't add up about the two men claiming to be policemen, and Jason Daniels wouldn't answer the door. Police say Daniels' suspicions proved valid when the suspects broke into the home and tied him up. They began ransacking the home, and Daniels took the opportunity to free himself and grab a 9 mm pistol from a cabinet. According to the police report, "When the suspects returned, they found Mr. Daniels armed and in a shooting stance.” One of the suspects attempted to draw a revolver, and Daniels shot him. The injured suspect died and the other was apprehended. (Associated Press, Ashland, KY, 03/08/07)

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Joshua Nicholson and his roommate were allowing Sarah Enkler and her two children to stay with them while she fled an abusive husband. Late one evening, Nicholson was jolted awake by the sound of someone breaking in through his back door. Police say he retrieved his .380-caliber pistol and walked down the hallway. When Nicholson saw the suspect entering the home, he fired a shot, causing the man to flee. The suspected invader - Enkler's husband - was arrested after seeking treatment for a gunshot wound. (The Morning News, Springdale, AR, 03/27/07)

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Standing Guard


Wayne LaPierre"The right to ban arms."

That March 14, 2007, New York Times headline trumpeted an editorial excoriating the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia for declaring Washington D.Cs 31-year-old ban on handguns in the home as unconstitutional under the Second Amendment.

The Times ranted that the decision "would imperil needed gun controls in place ... ." But if the ruling imperils anything it is the tyranny such laws impose.

In writing for the majority in the 58 page ruling in Parker v. District of Columbia, Senior Judge Laurence H. Silberman was unambiguous: "We conclude that the Second Amendment protects an individual right to keep and bear arms.

"In determining whether the Second Amendment's guarantee is an individual one, or some sort of collective right, the most important word is the one the drafters chose to describe the holders of the right-'the people: That term is found in the First, Second, Fourth, Ninth, and Tenth Amendments.

"It has never been doubted that these provisions were designed to protect the interests of individuals against government intrusion, interference or usurpation." (emphasis added)

Juxtapose that with The Times' assertion about the government's "Right to Ban Arms." How about a government "right" to close down newspapers? A government "right" to deny the vote because of race? What about denying rights for those practicing religion? All of those actions were taken by oppressive government and were stopped when protections of the people were ratified by the U.s. Constitution and applied. But the enemies of freedom do not care about that.

In its brief filed in support of the D.C. gun/self-defense ban, the Brady Campaign's lawyers cited a pre-American Revolution royal edict as an example of precedence for gun control: "In the mid-eighteenth century, for example, Maryland prohibited the ownership of guns by Catholics ... ." (emphasis added)

Yet that was the very reason the American colonists fought and died to throw off the yoke of the English Crown.

Reacting to the Parker decision, the Brady Campaign screeched that the ruling was "depriving D.C. citizens of a strict handgun law enacted thirty years ago."

The truth is that D.C. residents-good, honest, hard working families and individuals-were deprived of their right to be safe in their homes.

The Times got one thing right: the law the court struck down barred "residents from keeping handguns in their homes." (emphasis added)

This law was never about armed predators. It was about criminalizing any prudent preparations for protecting one's family and home. D.Cs law punished the innocent and encouraged armed assault, rape and murder. It created thousands of victims. Since the ban, D.C. has consistently led the nation in criminal violence.

The Court of Appeals also nullified D.Cs self-defense prohibition that made keeping any long gun functional and in the proximity of ammunition a criminal act. Unfortunately, the court left the city's registration law unscathed. In truth, registration as "crime control" is a fraud. It cannot be applied to criminals-only to the law-abiding.

Haynes v. U.S., the seminal January 1968 Supreme Court opinion on crime and firearm registration, ruled: "We hold that a proper claim of the constitutional privilege against self-incrimination provides a full defense to prosecutions either for failure to register a firearm ... or for possession of an unregistered firearm ... ."

So the District's draconian registration law only applied to those citizens who could lawfully own guns prior to 1976. When the D.C. City Council enacted the ban, a Washington Star headline said it all: "GUN LAW UPHELD, BUT NO SEARCHES YET." Matter of factly, the Star spoke about house-to-house searches and sweeps by police, using firearm registration lists as a start for confiscation.

I will always remember that headline and the words a friend and gun rights advocate in Australia said recently: "If they know who you are and what guns you have, there is no resisting. Never, ever let them register your guns!"

D.C. is a shameful example of that insanity on our shores. It is even more insane in light of what is happening in the rest of the nation. The same day I read the "Right to ban guns" headline in The Times another headline stood in bold counterpoint. It said, "New Orleans Residents Arming Themselves."

Katrina. New Orleans. For American gun owners, those words conjure the nightmare of government agents disarming residents, then utterly failing to protect them, and leaving good people to the mercy of predatory criminal violence.

Americans are not stupid. They will not willingly become the victims the New York Times would like them to be. Instead, in huge numbers, they are affirming the right of armed self-defense-a right inherent in their overwhelming support of the Second Amendment. This is a time when legislatures across the nation-by wide margins-are enacting "no-retreat" laws, "Castle Doctrine laws," and 48 states now affirm Right-to-Carry.

Perhaps soon our hard-fought efforts to secure a fair judiciary-one that interprets the Bill of Rights as it was intended by the Founders-will bear the fruit of true liberty.

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The President's Column

The President's ColumnIn this, my first column, I want you to know that the first priority of my presidency will be to concentrate on expanding our membership by focusing on our roots and reaching out to our brothers and sisters in uniform.

From the beginning, the National Rifle Association of America has shared a kinship, and a unity of passion and purpose, with the members of the U.s. military.

We were founded by Union Army officers who were alarmed and outraged by the widespread lack of shooting ability among America's citizen-soldiers.

In their wisdom, they recognized that in the defense of freedom, the skill of marksmanship is one of the duties of citizenship.

It is now time to emphasize those roots, renew our natural alliance with the front line defenders of American freedom, and re-invest our cause with the urgency and sense of profound purpose that our liberty demands, particularly at this crossroads of history.

Like many of you, I joined the NRA while serving in the military. I remember how difficult it was to find an NRA club to join, and a safe place to shoot, far from home.

During my travels around the country, I frequently talk with active-duty military members who are away from home, just as I was, many of whom are strangers in the towns in which they find themselves stationed. I also meet young military members who have returned to a country that is politically divided, and who feel that their services may not be fully appreciated by those of us here at home.

For those military members with such concerns, I have a message from all of us: "We honor you, we stand behind you, we pray for you, and we are forever indebted to you for your service and your sacrifice."

As for them finding a place to shoot and a club to join, I call on you to take the time and trouble to share with our military personnel the clubs and range facilities that we sometimes take for granted.

If everyone of us, individually and as club representatives, reaches out to the young men and women of our armed services who might wish to enjoy leisure time and the camaraderie of fellow shooters in an off-base setting, we can accomplish several important goals. Here's how:

When your club has an "open house" or an NRA Day, invite the servicemen and women who live in your community to come out for a day of fun and shooting.

Encourage servicemen and women to join your club, perhaps offering a reduced membership for active-duty personnel.

Encourage military formations to form their own clubs, offering them the use of your clubhouse and your range(s) for their meetings or events.

Create an "Adopt-a-Unit" program in which your club adopts a local active duty Guard or Reserve unit, especially those overseas or about to deploy, to ensure they understand that you and your club are ready, willing and able to help them in any way you can.

Spread the word to National Guard and Reserve units that they are welcome to use your facilities for training and social events.

Host a "Military Appreciation Day" at your club or range, and invite active duty Guard and Reserve personnel and their families to enjoy a day at the range as your guests.

If you own or lease hunting land, invite servicemen and women to hunt your land.

Buy an NRA membership for a serviceman/woman, especially one who is returning to civilian life after service overseas.

If each of us does our duty here at home, we can protect the same freedoms they fight for by encouraging participation in the shooting sports; by giving Second Amendment freedom more constituents and stakeholders; and by growing the membership of our clubs, our state associations and our NRA family.

By the time I leave this office, I want the men and women of America's armed forces to recognize the NRA as ranking first among their supporters. I want every NRA member to extend a helping hand to every serviceman and woman in need. In short, I want to reinvent and reinvigorate the shared passion and unity of purpose that has always bound America's armed forces with the NRA.

America, and those who serve her, can benefit from NRA as they can benefit from no one else. By helping them, we also safeguard our country and our cause.

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