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Mike Vanderboegh: Bloomberg Money Cannot buy Compliance
Mike Bloomberg thought he was on a roll. In the wake of
Sandy Hook, his money managed to buy unconstitutional legislation in
Connecticut, Colorado, Maryland and New York. In the election just
past, his money staved off defeat for two governors who did his bidding,
although as Wellington said about Waterloo, it was "the nearest run
thing you ever saw." Most importantly -- and the latest jewel in his
anti-firearm crown -- his money and that of Bill Gates, Paul Allen and
other like-minded elitists "bought the mob" (in the parlance of the
Founders) with the success of I-594 in Washington state.
Yes, Bloomberg was on a roll. The so-called "mainstream"
gun rights organizations, from the NRA to Alan Gottlieb's Second
Amendment Foundation and all the smaller spin-offs in the affected
states, had no answer to Bloomberg's millions and refused to put their
own rivalries and jealousies aside to find one. This is hardly a
surprise, since almost all of these groups have always been more about
raising money to "fight gun control" than actually FIGHTING
gun control. Each has been more obsessed with their own reputation in
the collectivist-dominated press and their obsession to "win friends and
influence people" in the middle. So, following their long-established
patterns and refusals to think and act outside the boxes they placed
themselves in, they lost. They lost in Connecticut, they lost in
Maryland, they lost in New York, they lost in Colorado and now they have
lost in Washington state.
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1 comment:
Those are just battles, not the final war!
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