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Article Archive
Guns and Rudy - The Whole Story
Submitted by cbaus on Tue, 06/05/2007 - 00:10....'I only hope that [Bill Clinton] is right, and that Congress is finally ready to recognize that the vast majority of Americans want more gun control. It makes sense. It is time. And we can no longer let special interests dominate this vitally important issue.' - Rudy Giuliani, 1997
By Michael Gaynor
Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani has dressed up as a woman on several occasions, but he never had a sex change operation. He was posing, in order to please an audience. Posing is something Rudy does. He poses as a person who hates abortion, in an effort to make his pro-abortion position more palatable to pro-lifers. He poses as a Second Amendment supporter while suing the gun industry, to please those displeased with the Second Amendement right to bear arms.
As the only pro-abortion advocate in the large field of Republican presidential hopefuls, announced (ten) and unannounced (at least two), former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani should be expected to top the polls now. However, a recent poll showed Rudy as the great favorite of gun owners. What does that signify? That gun owners know what everyone knows--that Rudy was New York City's Mayor on September 11, 2001 and opposes terror and crime...AND DON'T KNOW WHAT HIS ATTITUDE TOWARD THE SECOND AMENDMENT AND GUNS WAS WHEN HE WAS MAYOR.
Abraham Lincoln was a wise man. Among his astute observations:
(1) "Important principles may and must be inflexible."
Police chiefs argue against gun ban; judges rely on anti-gun info from Supremes
Submitted by cbaus on Tue, 06/05/2007 - 00:05.By Chad D. Baus
The Elyria Chronicle-Telegram reported last week that police chiefs from Lorain County are trying to persuade the 10 judges who work at the Lorain County Justice Center to lift a ban on officers carrying their firearms inside the courthouse.
When the county judges (many of whom are now no longer serving at the courthouse) made the decision three years ago to enforce the ban, the newspaper reports they were relying on misleading information provided to them by the Ohio Supreme Court to make their security decisions.
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