Remember New Orleans ...
WHEN THE GUNS WERE
CONFISCATED FROM LAW ABIDING CITIZENS????
'Remember New Orleans'
10-27-5
National Rifle Association Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre has
a new rallying cry to spotlight the importance of every American's
right to keep and bear arms: "Remember New Orleans.
"In a speech earlier this week to the New York chapter of the
Sportsmen's Association for Firearms Education, LaPierre painted a
compelling picture of New Orleans residents left defenseless by
Hurricane Katrina - as one-third of the city's police force deserted
their
posts and abandoned the streets to roving bands of looters and
thugs.
Here is a partial transcript of LaPierre's rousing address:
"Picture your beloved hometown, the neighborhood where you live. Hold
that image in your head. Now imagine that a massive natural disaster
has transformed your beloved neighborhood into a putrid soup of
splinters, muck and corpses. A massive natural disaster has pounded and
ground your town into an ugly gravy of dead, toxic garbage. . .
"There's no power to run a single thing that makes a sound. There's no
water to bring in hydration or carry away waste. All life is stagnant
around you - and dying. "You can't call anyone. No one can
call you. Phone lines and cell towers are down. 911 is gone. Police,
fire, ambulance - the safety net of normal life - is completely gone.
Think about what that would feel like. There's no one but
you. "The shadows of armed looters and thugs begin combing
the streets with hard eyes and hungry looks. They take what they want.
They rape who they want. They kill at will. Every exit is
impassable, so leaving is impossible. But staying is unimaginable. Life
has been reduced to merely breathing, devoid of the barest essentials.
Your throat throbs for water. Your gut aches for food. And both hungers
are eclipsed by the inevitable fight for survival against those who
would take your home, your wife and your life.
"It's a hellish nightmare of hopelessness, helpless terror - bigger
than your brain can almost imagine . . . . "
You hear nothing but the buzz of mosquitoes, occasional shouts for help
- and gunshots and looting in the dark.
"But you have a firearm."
At dawn, a few neighbors emerge from their houses. Some of them also
have guns. And you get together with them and you agree to take a stand
- just as good people have done since civilization was formed.
"Until civilization returns, you band together to protect those who
can't protect themselves. You realize suddenly that you're part of the
militia in the truest historic sense of the word. You've got a lot of
single mothers with kids on your street. . . . Everyone's doors and
windows are wide open - they've been destroyed."
"So you tell the single mothers: 'If you have any trouble, just scream.
We'll hear you. We'll be there.'"
You spray paint sheets of plywood with big red letters - 'We are home.
We have guns. We will shoot.' "And you know, because even
the New York Times carried a picture of it - that's exactly what they
did in neighborhood after neighborhood all over the Gulf states. Not in
some foreign country - here in the U.S.A. Roving gangs see your sign,
they see your guns and what do they do? They stay away.
"Those guns and nothing else during that time gave the hopeless hope .
. . In the midst of all that misery you're struck at that moment by the
beauty and the salvation of second amendment freedom in the United
States of America . . ."
The armed authorities finally arrive. The blame a broken levee for your
predicament. But then, something you couldn't imagine happening,
happens. They destroy the one thing that was standing there between you
and anarchy - the second amendment.
"They start confiscating firearms from the law abiding. Swat-style
teams start swarming block-by-block as if on a war footing. They're
tense, they're jumpy and they're trained for urban warfare . . ."
Keep in mind, these military folks, these police folks - they were on
our side. They didn't want to carry out this order that was given by
the police chief of New Orleans . . . In fact, they were outraged over
what they'd been ordered to do.
"A reporters asked one of them - 'You mean [you might have to] shoot an
American?' And the soldier said 'yes.' "But the Americans
he was talking about shooting, they weren't criminals. They were brave
people who were simply left behind when the hurricane hit in one of the
most corrupt cities in the United States of America.
"New Orleans was the first city in American history to disarm peaceable
American citizens door-to-door at gunpoint. And I'll tell you this as
we sit here today - it must be the last . . . "With your
help, the National Rifle Association is going to make sure it never
happens again. We're going to go state-by-state and change every state
law that has some type of emergency powers statute that allows
authorities to regulate or confiscate guns from law abiding citizens
when an emergency is declared . . . "
The example of New Orleans is going to become to worst fear of those
who want to ban guns in the good old U.S.A. Never again can the
anti-gunners claim that honest citizens don't need firearms because the
police and the government are going to be there to protect you ."
And we've got a good slogan that you're going to hear from one end of
the country to the other. And that slogan is: Remember New
Orleans . . .
"The next time anyone says to you: 'Are you just afraid or paranoid?'
Look them straight in the eye and say: Remember New
Orleans.
"If they ask you, 'Why does anyone need to own a gun?': Remember New
Orleans.
"If they say to you, 'Why does anyone need a high-capacity magazine?'"
Look them straight in the eye and say: Remember New
Orleans.
What's wrong with a 15 day waiting period? Remember New
Orleans.
What makes you think the government would ever confiscate your gun?
Remember New Orleans.
Is the second amendment relevant in the 21st Century? Remember New
Orleans.
That's our battle cry and let's never, ever let them forget it.