Adrees Latif/Reuters
Women embrace after observing a moment of silence nearby Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut December 21. Reactions to the NRA's refusal to put any blame for the tragedy on easy access to guns has caused sharp reaction in the grief-stricken town. âWe are all still grieving. This is the wrong time to discuss their goal of putting more guns on the street,â says one resident.
Gun-loving Wayne LaPierre took fire from all directions Friday â" left, right and center.
The National Rifle Association chiefâs defiant response to the massacre in Newtown outraged firearms foes, city mayors, police chiefs â" and even some prominent Republicans.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN THE DAILY NEWS ONLINE PETITION TO BAN ASSAULT WEAPONS
âI donât even know where to begin,â Former Republican National Committee Chairman Michael Steele said on MSNBC. âAs a supporter of the Second Amendment and a supporter of the NRA, I just found it very haunting and very disturbing that we are a country talking about arming our teachers and principals in classrooms.â
An aide to a top Senate Republican called LaPierreâs speech âdumbâ and âbizarre.â
NRA'S TOP GUN LOBBYIST WAYNE LAPIERRE IS THE SECOND AMENDMENT'S MAN WITH A GOLDEN TONGUE
Instead of lampooning the media, LaPierre should âhave focused on the children youâre defendingâ not âthe people youâre mad at,â said the staffer who asked not to be identified.
Among those most insulted by LaPierreâs diatribe â" in which he called for armed guards at schools and railed against the media â" were the still-mourning residents of Newtown.
NATION JOINS FOR MOMENT OF SILENCE TO HONOR SANDY HOOK VICTIMS
âHow dare they?â fumed Elizabeth Murphy, 42, who lives int the town. âWe are all still grieving. This is the wrong time to discuss their goal of putting more guns on the street . . . The bodies havenât even all been buried yet.â
The speech appalled Rep. Chris Murphy (D-Conn.), who represents Newtown in Congress. He took to Twitter to express his fury.
FULL TEXT OF NRA CEO WAYNE LAPIERRE'S REMARKS
âWalking out of another (Newtown) funeral and was handed the NRA transcript. The most revolting, tone deaf statement Iâve ever seen,â tweeted Murphy, who will be sworn in as the stateâs next senator in January.
LaPierreâs remarks inflamed Democrats and irked Republicans across the nation.
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said he believes LaPierreâs proposals make no sense.
âI donât necessarily think having an armed guard outside every classroom is conducive to a positive learning environment,â said Christie, who is known as a moderate on social issues.
âYou donât want to make this an armed camp for kids. I donât think thatâs a positive example for children. We should be able to figure out other ways to enhance safety.â
PHOTOS: REMEMBERING THE SANDY HOOK VICTIMS
Sen. Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) also objected to LaPierreâs plan â" sort of.
âItâs fixing the wrong problem, because the problem is cultural,â Coburn said.
Sen. John Cornyn (R-Texas), who next month will become the second ranking Senate Republican, suggested LaPierre may have reacted too emotionally to critics.
âI always think making decisions when youâre angry or scared leads to worse decisions,â said Cornyn.
But not all Republicans were up in arms over the NRAâs proposal.
Sen. Orrin Hatch praised LaPierre as âa very honorable" man and lauded his proposal to dispatch armed guards to all of the nationâs schools.
âA lot of people think thatâs a good idea,â said Hatch (R-Utah).
Hatch acknowledged that gun control advocates are wrong âto work up the emotions of the people of the country,â but insisted that he doesnât blame the NRA.
âThey get upset because theyâre always the punching bag,â Hatch said.
Not surprisingly, Mayor Bloomberg, one of the nationâs most prominent anti-gun crusaders, held a vastly different view.
Hizzoner blasted LaPierreâs polarizing speech as âa shameful evasion of the crisis facing our country.â
âInstead of offering solutions to a problem they have helped create, they offered a paranoid, dystopian vision of a more dangerous and violent America where everyone is armed and no place is safe,â Bloomberg said.
Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter dismissed LaPierreâs armed guards-in-schools idea as âinsane.â
LaPierre âhad clearly watched too many old Westerns,â Nutter said.
NYPD Commissioner Raymond Kelly expressed shock that LaPierre went on the attack rather than offering measures to toughen gun control laws.
âObviously, I donât think thatâs necessarily what the world was expecting from the NRA,â Kelly said.
âI thought they were going to make some meaningful recommendations as to how we can strengthen gun control.â
Some liberal lawmakers mocked LaPierre.
âThe predicted Mayan Apocalypse apparently materialized today in the form of the NRAâs vision for America,â California state Senate leader Darrell Steinberg (D-Sacramento) said in a statement.
In grief-torn Newtown, several residents and others in town to honor the dead ripped LaPierreâs chest-thumping speech as insensitive and insulting.
âThey are without conscience and they are cruel,â said Barnett Parker, 68. âThey are unable to take ownership. It makes me crazy. It makes me freaking nuts.â
jkemp@nydailynews.com
No comments:
Post a Comment