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Henry Greenfield said:I cannot overemphasize what a mess Letitia James, NY AG has made of this. You have a big fish in your barrel, what does she do, she tries to drown it. Someone needs to start talking some sense into Democrats. You want to split the country even more? You want to make it so Texas never becomes blue? Then go for it Letitia, you have done it again.
Look at the ‘optics’. Black woman ‘persecuting’ white men. You can do the white privilege argument all you want, you can hate the 2nd amendment, you can be anti this or anti that, but if you don’t all play by the same rules, you do nothing positive.
Did anyone in James office even think what would have been the obvious move by the NRA? To simply leave town, never come back, never have a convention in NY or NYC, lose the revenue, lose the oversight lose any chance at getting the NRA to reform and change? Hello, anyone there in the NY AG office?
Or are you hell bent on dividing the country further because THE NRA IS NOT GOING TO GO AWAY. Knock knock Letitia, we just almost had a revolution with probably 90% NRA members attacking the US capitol and your solution is to drive the NRA out of New York which they have been in for 150 years!
Henry Greenfield makes a good point: doing this was an idiot move by Letitia James, New York Attorney General — she’s guaranteed that the NRA board would double down and keep La Pierre in charge; they didn’t just leave him in charge, they gave him more authority.
Many, maybe most, NRA members have known for years that La Pierre is corrupt, as was Ackeman-McGueen, the ad agency that ran the place for years and turned La Pierre from a mediocre manager to a firebrand figurehead rolling in money and luxury while making decisions based not on defending the Second Amendment but on keeping the cash flowing. Now, thanks to a self-righteous ideologue wielding the power of government for a personal crusade, the NRA will be more rabid and less responsive to its members than before.
If someone was trying to divide the country and make armed resistance more likely, it would be hard to have come up with a better plan. It’s just too bad that she’ll be sheltered from the consequences of her self-righteousness.
As for the NRA, bankruptcy should shield it from some of the stupidity of this ideologue, and in Texas is will be safe from more of that stupidity.
Quote of the day is from Letitia James: "The NRA's claimed financial status has finally met its moral status: bankrupt."


Welp.
The bankruptcy gambit didn't work.
Now let's see if they can literally be driven into bankruptcy.
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/552948-judge-dismisses-nra-bankruptcy-filing?
Maybe a decade ago, that would have worked. NRA cannot be fixed. The place is full of rot....That's just ideological vendetta stuff. If you want to do something practical, find a way to help get rid of Wayne La Pierre and his cronies who spent the last thirty years turning the NRA into a fund-raising organization to turn themselves into millionaires!
^Agreed.
It needs to be burned to the ground to allow a new organization with gun safety as their core objective to be created.
That's just ideological vendetta stuff. If you want to do something practical, find a way to help get rid of Wayne La Pierre and his cronies who spent the last thirty years turning the NRA into a fund-raising organization to turn themselves into millionaires!
Those days have passed.Gun safety is their core objective -- it just doesn't get as much press...
...The NRA has 76 people on their Board of Directors. A few years back, some of those Directors tried to cleanup the rot. Those Directors were forced out and after they were forced out, they went public with the details of the corruption.
National Rifle Association President Oliver North has been ousted after an alleged extortion scheme within the group’s highest-ranking officials came to light on Friday. In a statement, North told the organization he was “informed” he would not be nominated for reelection. North’s term ends Monday.
The NRA’s chief executive, Wayne LaPierre, wrote a letter to the board Thursday accusing North of plotting to remove him from the group by threatening to release to the board “damaging” information about LaPierre. He claimed North, a former Marine Corps lieutenant colonel perhaps best known for his role in the Iran-contra affair, was pressuring him to resign over alleged financial transgressions.
Oliver L. North announced on Saturday that he would not serve a second term as the National Rifle Association’s president, deciding to step down as the organization grappled with a bitter dispute over its future and its worst leadership crisis in decades.
He made the announcement as the N.R.A. faced a challenge from the New York attorney general, Letitia James, who had opened an investigation into the gun group’s tax-exempt status.
On Friday, Ms. James’s office sent letters instructing the N.R.A. and affiliated entities, including its charitable foundation, to preserve relevant financial records. Some of the N.R.A.’s related businesses also received subpoenas, according to people with knowledge of the inquiry. Both the attorney general’s office and a lawyer for the N.R.A. confirmed the investigation.
Oliver North, the retired Marine who was pushed out as president of the National Rifle Association in a dispute within the gun-rights group, said in court documents filed Thursday that he was thwarted when he tried to raise alarm bells about alleged misspending and denied that he tried to oust the organization’s longtime top executive.
The documents detail concerns North said he raised over several months and the efforts he said he took to try to have NRA spending audited and reviewed by an outside, independent entity. He said the red flags began to emerge this past spring when he heard that NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre had received tens of thousands of dollars in clothing, private jet travel and other perks from the group’s longtime marketing firm, Ackerman McQueen; he also has questioned money being paid to the law firm that has represented NRA in its fight against that firm.
To think that the core business of the NRA over the last 15 years has been gun safety is just disingenuous.
Their business is to sell guns. To everyone. And lots of them. Including assault weapons.
And if gun safety was the core objective...the stats form the US tell the rest of the world that they suck at this work too.
Charge them. Jail them. Bankrupt them and destroy them. And let a real gun safety organization that will advocate for sensible gun laws take over the training programs.
I began to use the NRA as a case study when serious allegations about its mismanagement emerged in 2019. The gun group’s wobbly finances and other woes make it the epitome of a poorly run nonprofit, because it violates four key legal and management principles.
