In 1999, on the heels of the Columbine, Colorado, school shooting that would mark the beginning of a new era, the National Rifle Association hesitated. The gun rights group was scheduled to hold its annual convention in nearby Denver, just days after two Columbine High School Students seniors killed 13 people. According to NPR, the powerful gun lobby group debated canceling the event before ultimately deciding to proceed.
The NRA leadership chose then to put the organization’s interests above the country’s. That decision is playing out yet again. An 18-year-old slaughtered 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, Tuesday, and this weekend, before their families will likely be able to bury them, the NRA will convene its annual meeting in Houston. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and former President Donald Trump are scheduled to speak.
“Our deepest sympathies are with the families and victims involved in this horrific and evil crime,” the NRA said in a Wednesday statement. “As we gather in Houston, we will reflect on these events, pray for the victims, recognize our patriotic members and pledge to redouble our commitment to making our schools secure.”
The feigned helplessness on display is sickening. It asks Americans to believe that prayer and more guns in our schools are the only tools available to end this epidemic. If only there were something the NRA, as the oldest and most powerful of a growing number of gun lobby groups, could do to help prevent such tragedies. If only there were some way the NRA, with its millions of dollars in membership donations and ties to the vast majority of congressional Republicans, could influence America’s gun debate in a way that would make our children safer. If only the NRA, with its instant name recognition and branches in every state, could compel states to make it harder to obtain the guns that mow down innocent people daily.
Instead, the NRA and groups like it have spent their time and money advocating policies that allow such tragedies to continue, in our schools, in our churches and synagogues, in our grocery stores. The NRA doesn’t care about the motives behind these attacks, whether the perpetrator was a bullied teen, or a white supremacist, or a homophobic extremist. What matters to the NRA is that donations keep flowing into its coffers. What matters to the NRA is that the average member continues to see any attempt to ban the weapons of war that the Uvalde shooter was able to legally purchase as an attack on his own hunting rifle. What matters to the NRA is that guns keep getting into the hands of shooters.
The NRA and groups like it have spent their time and money advocating policies that allow such tragedies to continue, in our schools, in our churches and synagogues, in our grocery stores.
No group that has been as battered and laid as low as the NRA should compel the sort of fealty from Republicans will be displaying this weekend. And yet, there will likely be no “Nixon goes to China” moment where a member of the faithful speaks out against the horrors that have been committed daily, nothing that will drown out hosannas for the Second Amendment.
Despite the NRA owing millions of dollars in back taxes, despite its failed attempt at declaring bankruptcy and being named as a defendant in a lawsuit that threatens to dissolve the organization altogether, the NRA’s endorsement still matters to the Republican base. Thus, that endorsement matters to the craven politicians who beg for the NRA’s imprimatur every election cycle. And in their supplication, they offer up the lives of other people’s children, mothers, grandparents as offerings, a token of their commitment to the “freedom” that gives license to kill.








