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Oct 28, 2010

Olbermann: If the Tea Party wins, America loses

Olbermann: If the Tea Party wins, America loses.
The laws of the country will revert backwards because of its new government.



Now as promised a Special Comment on the madness of the Tea Party and the elections of next Tuesday.

It is as if a group of moderately talented performers has walked on stage at a comedy club on Improv night. Each hears a shout from the audience, consisting of a bizarre but just barely plausible fear or hatred or neurosis or prejudice.

And the entertainment of the evening is for each to take their thin, absurd premise, and build upon it a campaign for governor or congressman or senator. The problem is, of course, when it turns out there is no audience shouting out gags, just a cabal of corporations and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and political insider bloodsuckers like Karl Rove and Dick Armey and the Chicken Little Chorus of Rush Limbaugh and Glenn Beck.

And the instructions are not to improvise a comedy sketch, but to elect a group of unqualified, unstable individuals who will do what they are told, in exchange for money and power, and march this nation as far backward as they can get, backward to Jim Crow, or backward to the breadlines of the '30s, or backward** to hanging union organizers, or backward to the Trusts and the Robber Barons.

Result: the Tea Party. Vote backward, vote Tea Party. And if you are somehow indifferent to what is planned for next Tuesday, it is nothing short of an attempt to use Democracy to end this Democracy, to buy America wholesale and pave over the freedoms and the care we take of one another, which have combined to keep us the envy of the world.

You do not think your freedom is at stake next Tuesday?

The Tea Party-and-Republican candidate for senator from Nevada, Sharron Angle, compared rape to, quoting, "a lemon situation in lemonade." She would deny an abortion even to a teenaged girl who had been raped by her own father.

The Tea Party-and-Republican candidate to be the only Congressman in Delaware, Glen Urquhart, said "there is no problem that abortion can't make worse. I know good friends who are the product of rape."

Mr. Urquhart also does not believe the phrase "separation of church and state" was said by Thomas Jefferson.

Oct 26, 2010

After GOP failure Katrina disaster inspires bans on gun seizures

By Pauline Vu, Stateline.org Staff Writer

In the days after Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans police went door to door and confiscated guns from citizens in an effort to counter chaos and crime in the wrecked city.

But gun advocates saw the seizures as an infringement on constitutional rights and said never again.

The actions of the New Orleans police have inspired 13 states, including Louisiana, to enact laws to keep state and local officials from taking guns during a state of emergency, such as after a natural disaster or terrorist attack. President Bush also signed a bill in October that would penalize states financially for illegally confiscating guns during an emergency.

Missouri Gov. Matt Blunt (R) signed an emergency weapons bill on April 12 to become the 13th state with such a law on the books, joining Alaska, Florida, Idaho, Kentucky, Louisiana, Michigan, Mississippi, New Hampshire, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia. A measure also is on the desk of Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano (D).

Similar bills were introduced in at least 14 other states this year.

“We can never too soon forget the injustice that went on in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, where law-abiding individuals’ firearms were taken away from them just when they needed to protect themselves the most,” said Julie Tanna, a spokeswoman for the National Rifle Association (NRA), a lobbying group that opposes gun control. The NRA successfully sued to get New Orleans’ residents their guns back and has vowed to push for state laws to block confiscations.

While several of the bills have sailed through legislatures with few no votes, law enforcers have raised objections. Critics complain the emergency gun bills are too broad and would hamper state leaders and law enforcement officials during an emergency.

State Rep. Beth Low (D) was one of the bill’s two dissenters in the Missouri House. “There’s a sincere desire to protect our communities and allow them to protect themselves. I don’t think anything’s wrong with that, but I believe there are unintended consequences to this legislation that could be very destructive in an emergency,” she said.

Among the problems Low has with Missouri’s new law: It doesn’t specifically define what an emergency is; it restricts not just the confiscation of weapons and ammunition, but also the transfer and sale of them; and it doesn’t expressly prohibit people from bringing their guns to an emergency shelter.

Charley Wilkison, the political and legislative director for the Combined Law Enforcement Associations of Texas (CLEAT), agrees with that last concern. Although CLEAT backs people’s right to keep guns during an emergency, the group would support an amendment to a Texas bill that would ensure that people cannot bring their guns to emergency shelters, such as the New Orleans Superdome following Katrina.

“Can you imagine a massive gathering of humanity under the most horrible set of circumstances, where you’re hopeless, you’re afraid, you can’t locate members of your family, you don’t know if they’re alive or dead. … Then you add guns to that mix,” he said. “I think we’d be supportive of that being a gun-free environment.”

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) opposed a bill introduced this session because it included civil penalties for officers who improperly confiscate weapons. “It just doesn’t take into consideration the difficult conditions in emergencies that police are placed in, and having to decide who’s the good guy and who’s the bad guy,” said John Bankhead, the GBI’s legislative liaison. The bill failed to pass before crossover day, the last day a bill must pass at least one chamber in the General Assembly to be considered for passage.

But state Rep. Russell Pearce (R), sponsor of the Arizona bill, said other laws already give police the power to confiscate guns from people committing crimes. He said his bill simply ensures that people who aren’t committing crimes are protected from confiscation during an emergency – a time when they may need their weapons the most.

“We’re not a police state. You don’t go and abuse good citizens because of your concern for their safety,” Pearce said. “It’s a shame that we have to write a law to protect basic constitutional rights.”

Comment on this story in the space below by registering with Stateline.org, or e-mail your feedback to our Letters to the editor section at letters@stateline.org.

Contact Pauline Vu at pvu@stateline.org.

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