Carlos S. Ramirez on May 2nd, 2008 @ 12:03 pm
We’re just following their example:

Hat tip to co-author Grant Keener for this one.
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Wayne LaPierre on May 1st, 2008 @ 9:00 pm
Animal rights extremists are trying to invade classrooms in Washington, D.C.
With the passage of the "Animal Protection Amendment Act," they'd be able to go into schools and indoctrinate children with their bizarre notion of “humane education.”
The bill would require the D.C. Department of Education provide such instruction. It would also get rid of the phrase "animal owner" in the District of Columbia. No longer would you own a dog or a cat. Now you'd be their "animal guardian."
It's easy to dismiss these attempts at indoctrination as silly. But the animal rights extremists are serious. They want to change the way you think, the words you use, and the way you live to fit into their agenda. And they won't stop until they get their way.
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ACRU on April 29th, 2008 @ 9:21 pm
SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS INDIANA VOTER ID LAW
WASHINGTON - The Supreme Court ruled today 6-3 in favor of the Indiana Voter ID law which requires registered voters to present a valid form of identification when they go to the polls.
Since early voting is already in progress in Indiana for their primary, this law is much needed in the state's efforts to eliminate voter fraud.
In an amicus brief submitted by The American Civil Rights Union on this case, General Counsel Peter Ferrara explains that, "No one has been denied the right to vote by the Indiana Voter ID Law. The record clearly establishes without challenge that 99% of the Voting Age Population in Indiana already has the required ID, in the form of driver's licenses, passports, or other identification."
The ACRU supports the Indiana law because it protects, rather than infringes, the rights of legitimate voters, by helping to ensure that their votes are not watered down by illegal voters.
The full report can be found
here.
###
You can read ACRU's amicus brief by going
here
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Wayne LaPierre on April 28th, 2008 @ 9:00 pm
Barack Obama just cannot make his comments about "bitter" small-town Americans who "cling to" guns or religion go away. And now the Wall Street Journal's Arthur Brooks makes a fact-based case for just how wrong Obama's comments are.
According to
the story, gun owners are happier in general than non-gun owning Americans. They earn more money and spend less time feeling "outraged" over the actions of others.
Based on the tens of thousands of gun owners I've met, I'd say these statistics sound pretty accurate. If gun owners are angry, it's not because we feel let down that the government hasn't taken good care of us. It's because we feel the government won't let us take care of ourselves!
But gun owners are angry about things like the D.C. Gun Ban, the attempts to ban semi-automatic firearms and .50 caliber rifles, legislation to track our ammunition purchases and to end private transfers of firearms, and all the other gun-control legislation that's designed to crack down on us instead of violent criminals.
The presidential candidates would serve themselves well by reading Brooks' Wall Street Journal article. What they learn about gun owners might surprise them.
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ACRU on April 28th, 2008 @ 8:21 pm
By a vote of 6-3, the US Supreme Court has upheld the Indiana Voter ID Law, which required voters there to establish who they are and that they are legal residents of Indiana before they vote. Similar laws have been passed in several other states. The ACLU has been fighting such laws in many jurisdictions, because the ACLU believes in open borders for illegal aliens, who can get drivers licenses and even register to vote, absent such laws.
* * * *
The facts but not the legal conclusions for this article come from an article by Greg Stohr on Bloomberg.com on 28 April, 2008.
Today (28 April) the Supreme Court ruled that Indiana's law requiring voters to show photo IDs in order to vote, is constitutional. There is a serious factual error in the original story, however.
Justice Stevens, who normally votes with the "liberal" side of the Court, voted to uphold the law and wrote the main opinion. The Bloomberg article says that his personal decision avoided "a 5-4 split... along ideological lines" as in Bush v. Gore concerning the 2000 election. Actually, the vote on the Court in Bush v. Gore was 7-2 that the Florida Supreme Court had violated the First Amendment in that election.
Many members of the mainstream media, in order to favor the Gore position, said that it was "a 5-4 decision" to make it look both closed and more ideological. That error is, unfortunately, repeated by Bloomberg.
In the lead Opinion, Justice Stevens writes that the possibility of voter fraud is "very real" and that states have " a valid interest in protecting the integrity and reliability of the electoral process." Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kennedy joined in Stevens' Opinion. Justices Scalia, Thomas and Alito agreed with the result, but would have granted states even more leeway in acting against voter fraud.
Justices Ginsburg, Souter and Breyer filed two Dissents, one by Souter and the other by Breyer. They argued that the Indiana law "imposes an unreasonable and irrelevant burden." This is the ACLU argument made in this and several other cases. This argument is now dead.
The real interest of the ACLU seems to be maintaining drivers' licenses, and the right to vote (through the Motor-Voter Law) for illegal aliens in the US. The Indiana law, and similar laws in Georgia and elsewhere, will cut down on the number of illegal aliens who vote, and who drive.
Justice Scalia in his Concurrence chided Justice Stevens for his main Opinion, for leaving the door open for more litigation against state voter ID laws, based on facts rather than the basic theory that states are responsible for state election laws.
Source for original story on the Net:
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a6YsoNXb356s&refer=home
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Wayne LaPierre on April 24th, 2008 @ 9:00 pm
The news out of Philadelphia seems to be changing every day. Mayor Michael Nutter signs gun-control bills and tells the local police to enforce them. The NRA receives a temporary restraining order blocking implementation of the law, but at the same time the district attorney says she won't enforce them. But Nutter says he's going to try to convince her to prosecute people who violate these ordinances.
What do Philadelphians think about this? If columnist
Christine Flowers of the Philadelphia Daily News is any indication, they're probably disgusted by the shameless political theater put on by their elected officials. She writes of the mayor and council:
"... acting like defiant and belligerent children when we don't get our way isn't going to solve [violent crime] problems. It's just going to confirm what the people in northeastern and western and central Pennsylvania already think of us: that we're a lawless city."
As she points out, the City Council's actions only make people think of Philly as a lawless city, a place where politicians don't care about the rule of law or the Constitution. And if the leaders don't care to follow the law, how can they expect the residents to follow the law?
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Wayne LaPierre on April 22nd, 2008 @ 9:00 pm
The press is finally starting to notice Barack Obama's problem with gun owners.
Politico notes that Obama served on the board of directors for the Joyce Foundation, which has given millions of dollars to gun-control groups. In fact, Politico's Kenneth Vogel reports that Obama thought about taking over as head of the Joyce Foundation, but decided to focus on politics instead.
The Joyce Foundation gave $21 million to anti-gun groups while the senator served on the board, yet now the head of the Joyce Foundation is trying to claim the group doesn't just fund gun-banners.
Ellen Alberding told Politico, "We're not promoting a particular solution. We're promoting really smart people to think about problems and come up with ideas on how to solve them." That's baloney. From the Violence Policy Center to Ohioans Against Gun Violence, the Wisconsin Anti-Violence Education Fund, the Illinois Council Against Handgun Violence and many others, the Joyce Foundation gives its money to groups that have never supported gun ownership. When was the last time any of those groups came out in support of a pro-Second Amendment law? The answer is never.
The shameless attempts to disguise Obama's record on the Second Amendment has caused the candidate to make the claim that he doesn't know enough about the D.C. Gun Ban case to offer an opinion. It's forced other Democrats to distance themselves from Obama, because they represent pro-Second Amendment constituencies. And now the Joyce Foundation can't even come clean about their point of view ... all because Obama and his supporters can't let Americans find out just what he thinks about your right to keep and bear arms.
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ACRU on April 22nd, 2008 @ 10:48 am
The facts for this article, but not the legal conclusions, come from an article on Fox News on April 18.
"In God We Trust" is the official Motto of the United States. It appears on coins and bills produced by the Treasury. It is also the motto of Florida, where it is also under attack by the ACLU. The first appearance of that slogan in public is in the fourth stanza of "The Star-Spangled Banner," which has also been officially adopted, as the National Anthem.
In many state and federal courts, the ACLU has launched attacks on the use of this motto in public. All such attacks, in the US Supreme Court and elsewhere, have failed. The latest failure is in Indiana. That state decided to permit residents, by their own choice, to have license plates which bear this motto. These were offered for the same price that regular Indiana license plates are provided to residents of that state.
Marion Superior Court Judge Gary L. Miller issued a summary judgment against the ACLU on its challenge to these license plates on 10 April. In his decision, the Judge said: "Courts are not to second-guess the Indiana General Assembly when it comes to calculations of this sort...." The Plaintiff, who was the stalking horse for the ACLU in the case, had challenged the fact that his Environmental Trust plate from Indiana had an extra charge associated with it, whereas, the motto plate did not.
The Legal Director of the ACLU said they were "disappointed" and would appeal to the Indiana Court of Appeals.
The bottom line is that the ACLU attacks every instance where the word "God" appears in public, as if passing strangers would be turned into fundamentalist Christians from simply seeing that word. The US Supreme Court has long since ruled that the National Motto is constitutional, which is why cases like this are allegedly based on other criteria, such as the fact that the use of this plate is free, as well as voluntary.
The antagonism of the ACLU to any reference to the religious heritage of America is deep and long-standing. It is hoped that the Court in this case will impose major fees and costs on the ACLU and its attorneys for bringing a frivolous action in this case.
Source for this article on the Internet:
http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,351721,00.html
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