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| General General firearm-related talk that does not fit into any of the other forums. |
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http://www.pafoa.org/forum/forum-ann...arrisburg.html NineseveN You made some good points, some excellent points and some are not correct in the regard to groups you mentioned. We could also go back and forth with little points or nuances of this one does that or this doesn’t do that or what not, what would really be the point? So I wanted to clarify your post since I am involved in with helping out 2 of 3 of these groups first hand, in my opinion your generalization about all three being the same is not true and is not accurate from my involvement but like you its only my opinion and we are all entitled to ours. We can also can both choose to disagree on the subject. Of the three groups you mentioned they have entirely different make and purposes with in confines of the charters and stated purposes, or operations. One group is non profit and prohibited from endorsing candidates or giving political contributions (unless taxes are paid). It is made up of many member clubs with appointed delegates representing their clubs that drives the direction of this organization. It’s composed of many different committees and only one of them is involved in legislative affairs that affect all of their individual member clubs interest (hunting, fishing, conservation, not just gun control,). It has regular scheduled meeting open to the public that anyone could attend. It has banded together with other PA based organizations to invite people to attend their press conferences in Harrisburg to make the difference, and worked to and pass pro gun bills introduced at those conferences. The other two groups are political and can both endorse candidates for political office. That is where the similarity stops. One group is always hitting up its members for fund raising and I believe what you said is accurate as how they operate with their political stance and actions on gun control, its professional full time PA lobbyists is probably is paid more than the other two groups entire combined budgets are. With all of that money, creating political backing still its mismanaged, as big as it is still no where near as effective as the other two are with only individual volunteers and very limited budget are. One group was created because the other one was not doing it stated purpose or worse yet comprising everyone rights and not representing lots of their member’s opinions or views as you correctly identified. This group has spent many years developing strategies to be effective politically and it encourages active participation from its members. It volunteers attend guns shows, sportsmen’s events and political events trying to educate people on the problems associated with gun ownership that you correctly identified in your post (probably while you were unaware of the problems). Educating gun owners and politicians to problems with negative effects of gun laws is one of its primary purposes. FYI politicians running for public offices in most cases is nothing more than a popularity contest and once they get elected are no smarter than anyone else about rights or the constitution they are just elect able. So if you do not take the time to educate them, guess what happens, someone else tells them what they think the people who elected them want them to do, just to get re-elected. Here is where these small two groups of individual volunteers work together and really make a difference. This group has a vastly more detailed and extensive questionnaire that it ask of all candidates running for public offices in PA and follows them up with personal interviews and unlike the other one has a real rating / grading system that has basis in facts or past votes. When people get elected, this group tries to educate them on numerous gun related issues with facts and figures. A very sad thing is most people include elected ones get their beliefs or form their opinions on firearms from watching tv movies or mass media indoctrinations. This group of dedicated individual volunteers work polling booths, walk districts for candidates, stuff envelopes and use their private mailing list, typical print and distribute over 200,000 copies of their voter guides to sportsmen all of this to make the difference in outcome of elections. Many state office elections are decided by less than 400 votes (a single gun club). Gun owners can not win elections granted but with individuals help they can sway or decide the outcome in close elections. Some one is going to fill. What I am suggesting NineseveN is that you take your time to personal investigate the two that you listed that actual want the individuals input, attend their open meetings, talk with their board of directors. With your writing skills you could be a real asset to other dedicated like minded individuals in those groups that want to change things for the better. I also hope NineseveN you along with the rest of PAFOA members try to attend the Harrisburg legislator lobbying day on Oct 23, 2007 to see first hand how individuals can make a difference. Go read the info on event here. http://www.pafoa.org/forum/forum-ann...arrisburg.html This offer is also extend to everyone reading this post and should be explored by all of you wanting to make a difference for the future of PA. Really we all have a choice, to be part of problem, part of the solution or part of the landscape. I choose to be part of the solution, how about the rest of you. Note also if you come up with some bright idea and they support it you better expect to be the guy that has to run with the ball. Thanks again Dan for PAFOA website and to all moderators |
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I fully understand the differences between the three I mentioned, but I said nothing about endorsing, that wasn't the point. All of those groups depend on access in some way, shape or form. The access may be with different people, at different levels or from different angles (coalitions, bill writing and submission, committees, access/invitation to political events etc…), but they all depend on it (some more than others). It doesn't matter to me whether they use/need this access to get bills submitted and pushed or whether they use it to gain credibility with the suits in Harrisburg, the net effect is the same, they can't very well use that model and burn their bridges at the same time.
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See, that's where I think many are just being naïve for the sake of believing what they want to believe. Politicians do not come into the system without their own thoughts, no one tells them what to think, no one educates a politician. Their advisors and staff brief them on what is politically expedient for them to portray, nothing more, nothing less. For example, you will never, ever, "educate" a politician worth their election potential to turn from pro-choice to pro-life, not now, not ever. His or her advisors might test the political winds and advise that it's politically expedient to tone down (or ramp up) their rhetoric on the position, or to refrain from mentioning or engaging in the discussion of the topic itself (or dominate the headlines and sound bytes ranting and raving about it), but they won't change their stripes; animals in that jungle rarely, if ever do – and if they do, it's certainly not because someone educated them. What you can expose them to is how the laws are affecting their constituents, and in doing so, they may take action on their behalf, but only if they're already receptive to your plight in the first place. You could sit every convincing gun rights expert in the world down with Ted Kennedy for a 5 day summit and he would still come out as anti-gun as he was going in. You could chain Ron Paul up in the VPC's board room for a year and he'd come walking out of there still more pro-gun than just about any politician at his level. Now, those politicians that seem middle of the road might be able to be influenced to some degree, but there aren't all that many of them at those levels of government. The days of public servants giving themselves over to the whim of the people are mythical at best, and at worst, nothing more than a fond reminiscence of a time and a phenomena which no longer exists. The major parties have made a great success of polarizing people based on the color of their pom-poms that what they do on single issues is largely irrelevant in the grand scheme of things. The only thing a politician cares about is power, and unless you have the ability to take that power away (and can demonstrate it), they're just going to pay you lip service when you raise an issue. But you're right, in the end, at least on the viability of educating politicians, we can agree to disagree.
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I have never made but one prayer to God, a very short one: "O Lord make my enemies ridiculous." And God granted it. ~Voltaire Near Death Experiments - Survival According to Darwinism |
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