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Take, for instance, Friday’s NRA Celebration of
American Values Leadership Forum. Nearly 8,000 NRA members filed into the
spacious Kentucky Exposition Center to hear a legendary line-up of speakers cut
through the political hot air of this presidential election season and highlight
the constitutional underpinnings upon which the NRA was built. The list included
NRA President John Sigler, NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre, Kentucky
Lt. Gov. Daniel Mongiardo, Lt. Col. Oliver North, former Arkansas Governor Mike
Huckabee, Texas Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchinson, former U.N. Ambassador John Bolton,
U.S. Navy SEAL Marcus Luttrell, Sgt. 1st Class Greg Stube, former Deputy Chief
of Staff Karl Rove, former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney, Kentucky Sen.
Mitch McConnell, Oklahoma Rep. Dan Boren and Arizona Sen. John McCain.
But no one was quite prepared for the highly
personal and proudly patriotic words that followed. Lt. Col. Oliver North
recalled being on the front lines in Iraq during the initial invasion to topple
Saddam Hussein when he witnessed a U.S. soldier carrying a wounded Iraqi from
the front line. As the man carried the wounded Iraqi, North overheard a European
reporter call the soldier a fool for doing so. The soldier’s shouted reply was,
“This is what we do! We’re Americans!”
| But it was, perhaps,
two servicemen wounded in the War on Terror
who had the greatest audience impact—for their bravery and also
their humility. “I’ve been shot, stabbed and I’ve buried about
45 of my best friends, and I wouldn’t change a thing,” said
Marcus Luttrell, a U.S. Navy SEAL and the author of Lone
Survivor. “You can’t negotiate with an enemy who’s trying to cut
your ear off.” He told the story of his fight
against the Taliban and his eventual release to a
thoroughly riveted audience. “We bled on the flag to keep it
red,” said Luttrell, “but we’re just patriots, not heroes.”
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| AUCTIONS
NRA auctions provide fun and
social vehicles by which NRA members can contribute financially to
preserve their Second Amendment rights. More than 1,000 people attended
The NRA Foundation Banquet in the Kentucky International Convention
Center. Sponsored by Sportsman’s Warehouse, Brunton and Gerber Legendary
Blades, the event included live and silent auctions for such items as
safaris and hunts, a Remington Model 11-87 semi-automatic shotgun, a Ten
Point Pro Fusion crossbow, an Elvie Jackson wood turning and a golf
package for four.
Another 750 attended the
Sportsmen’s Luncheon and Auction sponsored by Bass Pro Shops, bidding on
exotic hunts, advanced firearm training, an autographed Tom Selleck
picture with accompanying Quigley rifle, a Weatherby Mark XXII in .17
HMR and a Trijicon TR20 3-9x40 mm riflescope. Winners included auction
participants and The NRA Foundation, which took in $215,000 on the two
events.
The Second Annual NRA-ILA
Dinner and Auction was held Friday night. The gala featured a dinner and
live and silent auctions. On the block were one-of-a-kind firearms such
as Browning Citori serial number 1,000,000, side-by-sides from
Connecticut Shotgun Manufacturing, a top-quality Kreighoff double rifle
and hunts ranging from Alaska to Africa.
A special thanks is due
to Midway USA’s Larry and Brenda Potterfield who, along with Beam
Global/Future Brands and Anheuser-Busch, underwrote the cost of the
event, allowing NRA-ILA to retain 100 percent of the proceeds for the
upcoming elections. NRA-ILA also recognized Frank and Pete Brownell of
Brownells, Inc. and Sinclair International, for their lead gifts toward
NRA’s upcoming nonpartisan voter registration outreach efforts. By the
time the last gavel banged, NRA-ILA netted more than $500,000 for the
crucial battles ahead.
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Later, Special Forces Sgt. 1st Class Greg Stube
explained how he and other Green Berets fought thousands of Taliban for days
before he was badly wounded. Stube’s life was saved by the heroics of his fellow
soldiers and the battle was won. Ever humble, Stube recalled that while he lay
wounded for a year at an Army hospital, his wife lived out of a suitcase while
raising his infant son. “A soldier is only half the story,” said Stube. “It’s
not easy to sit at home and wait for a phone call.”
Near the end of the forum, Sen. John McCain took
the stage. “I’ve opposed efforts to ban guns,” said McCain. “The Second
Amendment is unique. To argue anything else is to reject a clear meaning from
our founding fathers.” McCain promised to put justices on the Supreme Court who
believe the U.S. Constitution says what it means and means what it says. He
thereby solidified the day’s message on American values with a call to action to
defend them this November.
Inspiration was followed by festivity at the
Friday evening, free outdoor concert at Fourth Street Live, hosted by NRA and
sponsored by Gander Mountain. Here, NRA members were treated to a toe-tapping
set of country music from some of today’s top female acts, including Sara Johns,
Cowboy Crush and Jennifer O’Neil. NRA’s favorite funny man, T. Bubba Bechtol,
provided his distinct brand of comic relief.
GETTING DOWN TO BUSINESS
Saturday was even busier than Friday, starting
with the Prayer Breakfast. David Blanton, well-known television producer and
personality from Realtree Outdoors, delivered a powerful message about how he
became too wrapped up in his career, in being a “famous hunter.” Then, he said,
at a moose hunt in 1995, God spoke to his heart.
“The reception was incredible,” said Blanton.
“Afterward, folks came forward wanting to share their stories with me . . . I am
truly blessed to see firsthand how many are touched by God.” By 10 a.m., it was
time to get down to the business at hand. In his Executive Vice President’s
message, Wayne LaPierre warned that our Second Amendment is facing a “perfect
storm”—that anti-freedom forces are pressing forward with their “elite conceit,”
that American citizens do not have the right to defend themselves. NRA-ILA
Executive Director Chris Cox explained how NRA keeps politicians honest about
their record on gun rights. “It’s gun owners like you who help us keep
politicians on the right side of the Second Amendment—or out in the cold,” he
noted. NRA President John Sigler recalled his travels during the past year, his
first as NRA president, meeting gun owners from every walk of life, each of whom
enjoy the shooting sports in their own way, but all of whom share one common
denominator. “You are all stakeholders in the Right To Keep And Bear Arms,” he
exhorted the crowd, “and you belong in the NRA. When any gun owner’s rights are
diminished, every gun owner’s rights are endangered.”
Saturday also featured a special press conference
at which Remington introduced the new face of Remington Country. Legendary Green
Bay Packer quarterback Brett Favre, after a 17-year career destined to earn him
a spot in Canton, has agreed to represent Remington in national advertising
campaigns, retail promotions and special events such as industry trade shows and
consumer sweepstakes hunts. His focus will be on hunter safety, wildlife
conservation and youth programs. (For further information on winning a
sweepstakes quail hunt with Favre, visit www.remington.com. To view an online
exclusive interview with the three-time NFL MVP or highlights of the 2008 NRA
Annual Meetings & Exhibits, go to www.nrapublications.org.)
| PRESENTATIONS
Presentations
and awards are yet another highlight at the Annual Meetings, offering a
way for NRA to honor those who have gone above and beyond. At the
Corporate Executives’ Luncheon, held at the home of Bill Samuels, Jr.,
president of Maker’s Mark, Senator Phil Gramm and NRA Executive Vice
President Wayne LaPierre thanked over 100 corporate executives for
lending their support to NRA and helping defend the Second Amendment.
J.D. Williams and Ugo Beretta were presented with NRA awards for
distinguished corporate leadership in the advancement of America’s
firearm and shooting heritage.
At the Saturday night
Celebration of American Values Banquet, the Harlon B. Carter Award for
Legislative Achievement was presented to Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.
“Aren’t we lucky to have the NRA to defend our rights?” asked Jindal,
who as a U.S. Congressman helped pass federal legislation outlawing gun
confiscation during or after natural disasters. “Because NRA has a great
team standing up for us every day!”
This year also marked the
48th anniversary of the NRA’s National Gun Collectors Awards Program.
Awards were
presented in recognition of the various NRA affiliated gun collector
clubs that gather at the Annual Meetings to display their collections
for the public. With 24 affiliated clubs represented at this year’s
event, the prestigious NRA Gun Collectors Committee Trophy was presented
to the American Thompson Association for their exhibit entitled “Dr.
Calvin Goddard: CSI St. Valentine’s Day Massacre.” The exhibit featured
two Model 1921 Thompson Submachine guns that have been forensically
linked to the slugs and empty .45 ACP casings found at the garage
located at 2122 N. Clark Street in Chicago on February 14, 1929.
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FEASTING ON PATRIOTISM
Of
course, nothing shows the patriotic nature of the NRA, its leaders and its
members like the annual Saturday night
banquet,
and this 137th celebration of freedom was no exception.
From the National Anthem, performed by Kelly
Ford, to the colors presented by the Society of the Sons of the American
Revolution, to the video tribute to Charlton Heston and the closing remarks, the
banquet exuded red, white and blue.
Keynote speaker Glenn Beck, a new NRA Life member
and popular radio talk show host, was on the receiving end of several ovations
with his witty, yet poignant, remarks about life in today’s world. “Where the
hell are the real Americans?” Beck asked at the conclusion of a critique about
lawmakers, politicians and Washington, D.C., insiders. “I can tell you where
they are—lots of them are in this room!”
Beck, whose love for America shines through in
his appearances, drew emotional responses from the crowd when he declared,
“America is a special place. This land has a golden door. We want to do the hard
work now so our children don’t have to.”
He drew them in yet again when he threw down the
challenge, “Are we a country that can’t get it done—a country afraid to stand on
our own two feet? Or are we the country that changed the world—that first gave
humans the real taste of freedom!?”
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SESSIONS & SEMINARS
NRA’s special sessions and seminars are always a huge draw. The ILA
Grassroots Workshop brought together a passionate group of pro-gun
patriots intent on learning what they could do to help elect pro-gun
lawmakers to office. And the Grassroots staff, with help from NRA’s
national officers, delivered with topics ranging from efforts to reform
BATFE, micro-stamping legislation, thwarting a bill to end gun shows,
D.C. v. Heller, efforts to allow Right To Carry in National Parks and
discussions on grassroots strategies for communicating views to
lawmakers and winning at the ballot box.
Attendees at the National Firearms Law Seminar heard officials
from FBI NICS and ATF, Kentucky Supreme Court Deputy Chief Justice Will
T. Scott, Lt. Col. Oliver North and Stephen Halbrook.
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The “NRA and the Media”
seminar was moderated by NRA Board member Susan Howard. The panel
included NRA Past President Sandra Froman, The Washington Times
political analyst Ralph Z. Hallow, NRA Board member and attorney, Cleta
Mitchell, NRA Second Vice President David A. Keene and retired Lt. Col.
Oliver North.
Martin Morgan, research
director of the National D-Day Museum and author of Down to Earth: The
507th Parachute Infantry Regiment in Normandy, was the guest speaker at
American Rifleman’s session on World War II history and the guns of
D-Day.
Spill-over crowds were
also in attendance at three Refuse To Be A Victim seminars; Craig
Boddington’s “African Experience;” Blackhawk’s Tom Marx’s presentation
on “Methods of Concealed Carry;” the “Handloading Today” seminar; Bill
Winke’s “Guaranteed Whitetail Tactics” and the “United We Stand”
seminar, featuring musician and NRA Board member Ted Nugent.
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IT’S
A WRAP
For
those who wanted to take home a memento of the occasion, there were a variety of
meeting collectibles for sale at the NRA Store. There were also abundant
opportunities to purchase celebrity-signed books by such notables as former
Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, Ted Nugent, Lt. Col. Oliver North, Glenn Beck,
Marcus Luttrell, Grover G. Norquist and Stephen Halbrook—providing you were
willing to brave the long lines.
So how successful were the 137th Annual Meetings
& Exhibits from the standpoint of those in attendance?
“This has been a blast, unforgettable,” said
Bobby Loftis of the entire event. The NRA- certified firearm instructor from
Kentucky was accompanied by his friend, Susan Lewis, and her teenage son,
Andrew. “I help out with our local Friends of NRA, and now we come here and
actually get to meet (past NRA president) Sandy Froman and (NRA director) Ollie
North. This is a great place to bring youngsters.”
On the vendor side, exhibitor Justin Moon, CEO of
Kahr Arms, was also pleased with the outcome. “This is a great opportunity to
meet our customers and people we want to be our customers,” he said. “One thing
about NRA members—they give feedback. And we listen. That’s how we are able to
make the products that make them happy, that’s how we stay in business.”
Clearly the 2008 NRA Annual Meetings, with its
Celebration of American Values, was an emotional highpoint for NRA members in
their quest to preserve their Second Amendment rights. Those who attended left
re-energized for the work ahead.
ON TO PHOENIX
The 2009 Annual Meetings & Exhibits will be held
May 14-17, 2009 in Phoenix, Arizona. Housing is now open. For more information,
logon to
www.nraam.org.
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PRIVATE BREAKFAST WITH WAYNE
A
very special group of donors were invited to listen to NRA EVP Wayne
LaPierre’s personal, and often humorous, anecdotes at a private
breakfast in an informal setting. Held at the residence of Owsley Brown
Frazier, honorees included members of the 2008 NRA Annual Meetings
Louisville Advancement Advisory Group.
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THE HERITAGE SOCIETY
NRA President John Sigler
unveils a print signed by NRA Publications Art Director Harry Jaecks.
The first 1,000 Ambassador-level members inducted into The Heritage
Society will receive a signed, numbered print. Forty new Ambassador
members were inducted into The Heritage Society at the event held at
Keenland in Louisville, Ky.
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