When Olympic athletes speak out in favor of "progressive" causes, they make front page news in the United States. But when a multiple gold medal winner at multiple Olympics speaks in favor of the Second Amendment and self defense, it was the foreign press that covered the issue. Multiple gold medal winner Kim Rhode spoke out on 5 August in Rio de Janeiro. From the independent.co.uk:
Ms Rhode said she was “becoming more vocal” about her opposition to what she sees as restrictive new gun control measures, including in the context of recent terror attacks. “When you look at these events... they’ve been occurring in some of the strictest gun law countries in the world,” she said.From the Guardian.com:
“You have Paris, you have San Bernardino, which was actually in a gun free zone… in that five minutes or 10 minutes or 20 minutes in some cases that it takes for [police] to get there, how do you want to stand there? I would rather have my second amendment right.”
Rhode, who has won three Olympic gold medals, the last of which came in the 2012 London Games, believes her sport has been “stigmatized” in recent years. She lamented the loss of the world of her parents, where children read “dime novels” about Teddy Roosevelt and Annie Oakley and guns were celebrated as a part of culture.Kim Rhode's statements in favor of self defense, freedom, and American culture were ignored by the dominant media in the United States. While Rhodes comments at a press conference in Rio de Janeiro met with silence from the New York Times, the Washington Post, AP, or the LA Times, the foreign press printed lenghthy articles.
Japan Times spent column inches explaining the demented death threats that shooting atheletes receive from anti-gun and anti-hunting extremists. From japantimes.com:
Several shooters have received death threats, requiring extra security.To their credit, NPR did a story before the Olympic games, and USA Today briefly mentioned Kim Rhodes statements in a related story about teammate Ginny Thrasher. Thrasher won a gold medal and set an Olympic record in 10 meter air rifle.
Trap shooter Corey Cogdell-Unrein needed extra protection after someone posted hunting videos on her Facebook page without her knowledge.
A two-time Olympian, she grew up in Alaska, where the family hunted for its food, and still hunts. Despite saying she didn’t agree with the content of the videos, Cogdell-Unrein received numerous death threats before the 2012 Olympics.
After the London Games, where she won bronze, thousands of people signed a petition to strip her of the medal.
©2016 by Dean Weingarten: Permission to share is granted when this notice and link are included.
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