This Month, I am sharing an article written by a few fabulous Marine
Officers. I promised to write about Information this month. I think this
article is a great read for those of us that dare to call ourselves
leaders.
More next month on Information.
This will be the only article this month. It is an important read. I
know you will enjoy it. If the article makes you uncomfortable, well,
leaders have to be comfortable with being uncomfortable.
Semper Fi,
John Boggs
The NRA Has Entered the Province of Cowards
As Marines, we fought to defend the U.S.
and its freedoms. The NRA's new video campaign is dedicated to a
xenophobic policy of violent hatred and intolerance undermining freedom.
CRAIG TUCKER
KYLEANNE HUNTER
JOE PLENZLER
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY LYNE LUCIEN/THE DAILY BEAST
Over the past few weeks, the National Rifle Association has deployed
several hyperbolic, incoherent, irresponsible, and divisive videos
demonizing half of the American population in their efforts to recruit
new members—beginning with Dana Loesch, followed by Greg Stenchfield,
and most recently by U.S. Navy veteran Dom Raso.
Such fear-based incitements to hate and violence are the province of
cowards. These ads are official NRA TV products sponsored by Ruger and
Kimber, both firearms manufacturers.
The NRA, founded by Union officers after the Civil War, was
established as an organization dedicated to civilian marksmanship, gun
safety, and Second Amendment rights.
However, this recent video campaign is a crescendo of increasingly
partisan rhetoric on the part of the NRA, demonstrating that they are
now dedicated to a xenophobic policy of violent hatred and intolerance
that increases polarization and discord within American society.
In tone and content, the videos are eerily reminiscent of the thugs
and bullies that have historically executed violence in support of
authoritarian regimes.
These NRA ads are a clear and sophisticated effort that use well
established propaganda tricks to appeal to scarcity, fear, and the
basest of human emotions. For instance, the unnamed "they" at the
beginning of Loesch's video establishes a cognitive frame for the viewer
to insert their own personal boogeyman.
Moreover, the videos conflate the American public's right to
peacefully assemble, protest, and criticize their government with the
violent criminal behavior of a small number of rioters.
The NRA props up the Second Amendment by undermining and vilifying
the protections afforded in the First, and paints everyone who may
disagree with the current administration, our country's justice system,
or the NRA's partisan political position with a very dark and unjust
broad brush.
The NRA ads depict a dystopian, violent present whose danger can only
be met by heavily armed citizens, when in fact a recent 2016 FBI report
shows violent crime in the US to be at a 20-year low despite the more than 33,000 gun-related fatalities in our nation every year.
Additionally, the NRA's use of stock riot footage misrepresents the character of the anti-administration protests. The data
on the protests since the inauguration show that less than 0.5% of all
protests have resulted in any property damage, and even fewer have
resulted in physical injury.
To the NRA, we ask Qui Bono—to whose benefit? This fear-mongering certainly does not benefit the American people.
The truth is that the NRA is engaging in shameless fear tactics to
increase membership so they can put more money into the pockets of
politicians in Washington so firearms manufactures can increase sales
resulting in profits and returns to shareholders.
They are selling a false narrative that there is only one right way to be a patriot.
This divisive rhetoric is amplified by their deafening silence on the killing of Phillando Castile, a law-abiding gun owner.
They are preying on a fearful public, and this is unethical.
While we would expect Loesch and Stinchfield to engage in such paid
partisan hyperbole, we are embarrassed that a fellow veteran like Dom
Raso would stoop to partisan fear-mongering and denigrate himself in the
same manner.
We expect more from our veterans.
You see, while we have spent the past 16 years fighting real wars in
Iraq and Afghanistan, extreme partisans on both sides of the political
spectrum have been intent on waging a culture war at home.
It is time for this to stop.
During our combined 56 years in the United States Marine Corps, we
served with Americans from every conceivable political, ideological,
ethnic, religious, and socioeconomic background—including foreigners who
joined our military and helped fight our wars so they could earn a shot
at U.S. citizenship.
Our experiences serving in every clime and place have taught us to be
grateful for our ever evolving experiment in democracy, and have also
shown us that there is no one right way to be Americans.
Indeed, true patriotism is not partisan, and the love of country and
exercise of Constitutional rights is not the purview of any one group.
Each of us who volunteer to serve swore an oath to defend the
Constitution and all of its amendments for every American—even those we
may disagree with.
While we deplore the riotous violence of a few—completely overblown
by the NRA—we respect the rights of the people to peacefully assemble
and protest. We also respect peaceful civil disobedience. These rights
are the cornerstone of our democracy, codified as the First Amendment to
ensure that we can disagree, protest, and express our views without
resorting to the violence of the past.
We also reject the most recent phenomena of labeling anything
disagreeable as false or fake news. We believe everyone is entitled to
their opinions, but nobody is entitled to their own facts.
We renounce the false choice presented by the NRA that Americans need to pick a team between the First and Second Amendments.
We believe that the use of intimidation, fear-mongering, and threats
of violence to crush the people's right to peaceful assembly, redress
grievances, and maintain a free press is the first step in the march
towards authoritarianism.
We believe that ALL of our civil liberties are worth defending for
ALL Americans—including protection from the use of excessive lethal
force by those sworn to protect and serve our communities.
We reject extremism in all of its forms—both emanating from the right and the left.
We believe that the way forward to bring our Nation together does not
come from a clenched fist, rather it comes from an extended hand and a
commitment by sane, common-sense, and courageous people to meet in the
center and work toward the common good.
We believe that veterans, given the military's cultural emphasis on
service, nation before self, and teamwork can be useful in encouraging
respectful civil discourse to solve our nation's toughest problems.
We strongly believe in the sentiment first expressed by Edmund Burke,
that the only thing necessary for evil to triumph is for good men and
women to do nothing.
We believe that the majority of NRA members deplore the hate and
fear-based tactics of the NRA leadership yet their dues and donations
continue to resource the NRA's incitements to hate and violence.
The silence of these good men and women is deafening.
What will you do?
Craig Tucker is a retired Marine Corps Colonel
and decorated 25-year combat veteran. His combat command of RCT-7 in
Iraq spanned 14 months and included the first and second Battles of
Fallujah, numerous smaller actions and a Purple Heart for wounds
received in combat action north of Husaybah Iraq.
Kyleanne Hunter is an 11-year Marine Corps
combat veteran and decorated AH-1W Cobra helicopter gunship pilot. She
served combat tours in both Iraq and Afghanistan, as well as a tour as
the Marine Corps' Liaison Officer to the House of Representatives. She
is a former NRA member.
Joe Plenzler is a retired Marine Corps
lieutenant colonel and decorated 20-year combat veteran of Iraq and
Afghanistan. He served from 2010 to 2015 as the spokesman,
speechwriter, and staff group director for the 34th, 35th, and 36th
Commandants of the Marine Corps. He is a former NRA member.
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