If you’re trying to call the NRA, prepare to be on hold for awhile. The recorded message on the contact line for the NRA’s lobbying arm told callers Friday, “We are currently experiencing extremely high call volume due to the recent attacks on our Second Amendment rights.”
There is a political battle being waged right now, but despite how some on the conservative right-wing are trying to frame it, the fight is not over the Second Amendment. The president and vice president have both said they believe in the right to bear arms, and none of the gun safety laws proposed by the White House this week infringes on the Second Amendment.
But they do, however, require some changes in American gun culture. Frank Rich writes in New York Magazine, “Resetting American policy on guns is nearly as fundamental change in our culture as the abolition of slavery.”
The proposed assault weapons ban, perhaps the most controversial of all, wouldn’t tread on the Second Amendment any more now than it did when Congress instituted it in 1994, or when machine guns were banned in 1986. As Defense Secretary Leon Panetta said Thursday to troops in Italy, “I don’t know why the hell people have to have an assault weapon.” He added, “Who the hell needs armor-piercing bullets except you guys in battle?”
NRA President David Keene defended high-capacity magazines on Today Thursday, saying that for training and competitions, extended clips “seem more efficient.” A Washington Post/ABC News poll finds 65% of Americans believe those magazines are dangerous enough to society that they should be outlawed. The “efficiency” of changing magazines would be sacrificed to make it more difficult for a mass shooter to kill innocent people.








