"I refuse to get into a battle of wits with an unarmed man"
Well she's dead meat now..........
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Refer me to your source for that data. Another contemptible excuse for shirking personal responsibility while others bear the burden.
At this moment, NRA is financing two separate court cases headed for the Supremes involving blatant suppression of the 2nd A. in NY. What do you suppose the legal expenses will be for just those two cases, not to mention those in other parts of the country? Expenses, of course, for the state of NY won't be a problem--tax payers provide unlimited funding for them.
The biggest case of all, however, is just getting started--the attempt by Conn. in support of the Sandy Hook fanatics (less the one who just committed suicide--wonderful news!) to overturn the law protecting gun manufacturers against frivolous suits for criminal misuse of their products. If that law is overturned, most major gunmakers in the country will be driven into bankruptcy by such suits as this one.Comment
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Well CH I guess we'd have to come an agreement over the meaning of "plenty". The NRA subscribes to the "not one step backwards!" philosophy. I think it should be harder for guns to flow from lawful possession to criminals and anti-social types. So far as I can tell, this is not a NRA priority.Last edited by togor; 03-27-2019, 06:45.Comment
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[QUOTE=Dick Hosmer;510552]
100 round magazines are not necessary outside of the military - I wouldn't even want the police to have them. I have no problem with the magazine that came standard on the prototype (M16) which was what, 30 rounds? That is plenty large enough for any type of range fun.
They come in pretty handy if you want to ruin a barrel.Comment
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Sources for what exactly? That the NRA gets contributions from industry and from its own fund-raising activities? Go ahead and climb out on that limb for all I care.Comment
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[QUOTE=Sako;554035]death from a thousand cuts,,,,,
100 round magazines are not necessary outside of the military - I wouldn't even want the police to have them. I have no problem with the magazine that came standard on the prototype (M16) which was what, 30 rounds? That is plenty large enough for any type of range fun.
They come in pretty handy if you want to ruin a barrel.Comment
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I can answer that--
1. Because with money, more is better
2. Mobilization potential is the real benefit of having a membership, and encouraging donations cultivates a feeling that people have skin in the game, making them more likely to answer the call, to vote for candidate X or call Congressman Y.
I nonetheless think that the policy of "not one step backwards!" is not a long term formula for success, because by excluding even the possibility that moderate reforms exist and may be appropriate for changing times, by painting anyone who disagrees as an anti-gun extremist, you then enlarge the enemy camp. Meanwhile the old fashioned virtues like responsibility fade from youth culture and can't compete with the thrill of FPS video games. I also think that basic firearms ignorance hurts the anti-gunners, because many of their arguments are facile. If they ever get their sh*t together on that front, then watch out.Last edited by togor; 03-27-2019, 01:36.Comment
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You asked why the NRA continually fund raises and I gave two logical reasons. I then stated rational reasons for disagreeing with the NRA's philosophy. You may not agree or like hearing it, but to react as you do sorta goes to why most gun owners aren't NRA members. Not bashing the NRA, but I am explaining why I think their appeal is limited.Last edited by togor; 03-27-2019, 05:49.Comment
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He's not going to answer you. As I have pointed out before, he's a narcissist, and believes reality has to conform to his imagination -- so he doesn't need sources or evidence.Comment
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I. Funding Summary
Membership dues totaling $175,577,863 contributed the largest percentage (50.5%) of the
NRA’s total revenue of $347,968,789 in 2013, the most recent year for which data are available.
The next biggest sources were $96.4 million from private contributions and grants (27.7%),
$27.61 million from unrelated business income (7.9%), and $24.5 million from advertising
income (7%).4
[See Appendix A for charts of all income sources reported by the NRA on its IRS
990 forms.]
Since 2004, fundraising revenue from contributions has grown twice as fast as income from
membership dues. The $96.4 million of contributions in 2013 represented a 108.2% increase
over the $46.3 million in contributions in 2004. This difference can be attributed to a shift in
fundraising strategy starting in 2005, when the NRA put more focus on soliciting donations from
individuals and corporations (including 22 gun manufacturers). As a result, the NRA’s finances
became more entwined with the success of the gun industry.Last edited by Roadkingtrax; 03-27-2019, 09:02."The first gun that was fired at Fort Sumter sounded the death-knell of slavery. They who fired it were the greatest practical abolitionists this nation has produced." ~BG D. UllmanComment

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