Camouflage Candidates


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gunsmith
November 18, 2003, 05:10 AM
snipped:
from http://www.newsmax.com
Democrats Tout Second Amendment, but Voting Records Show Hostility
Robert B. Bluey, CNSNews.com
Monday, Nov. 17, 2003
A year before the 2004 presidential election, major Democrat candidates have moderated their rhetoric on firearms, trying not to alienate voters who own guns, while also carefully reassuring liberal voters of their continued support for gun control.
However, CNSNews.com's extensive review of the candidates' votes and statements on firearms policy shows that those with congressional experience have anything but a moderate voting record.

In the 2000 race, former Vice President Al Gore lost three battleground states - Arkansas, his home state of Tennessee and West Virginia, each by 6 or fewer percentage points - in part because he was unable to shed the anti-gun image he developed during the Democrats' primary contest.

U.S. Sen. John Kerry of Massachusetts, who has voted with gun-control proponents 100 percent of the time, views sportsmen as an important constituency. Just last month, with a shotgun in hand, Kerry had reporters follow him on a pheasant hunt in Iowa.

The Democrats' front-runner, Howard Dean, has no congressional track record to explain. Instead, he has stressed his endorsements from the National Rifle Association, while serving as Vermont's governor, in a concerted attempt to reach out to pro-gun Democrats.

Even Dean appears to be trying to have it both ways with his campaign rhetoric, according to groups that defend the Second Amendment and rate politicians on the issue.

The other leading contenders, including retired Gen. Wesley Clark, U.S. Rep. Dick Gephardt of Missouri and U.S. Sen. Joe Lieberman of Connecticut, fit into a similar pattern, according to pro-gun groups.

The Democrats' rhetoric mirrors a strategy outlined last month by the Democratic Leadership Council and Americans for Gun Safety. The groups touted a survey that showed a Democrat who endorsed the Second Amendment and supported reasonable gun control would defeat a pro-gun Republican.

Gun-rights advocates aren't buying the strategy of these "camouflage candidates," as they are sometimes called.

'Revisionist History'
http://www.newsmax.com/archives/articles/2003/11/17/110407.shtml

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Don Galt
November 18, 2003, 06:58 PM
Hell, if Dean would come out with a proposal for national vermont carry, and take back his endorsement of the AWB renewal, I'd consider voting for him.

Moparmike
November 19, 2003, 04:52 AM
Well, I cant seem to find it on the net, but Mark "I am pro-hunter" Pryor had a sticker in the shape of Arkansas, with a camoflage background and "Pryor" going up diagonally from bottom left to upper right.

Number one on camoflage candidates. He even campaigned on the issue, and we couldnt get enough votes for Hutchinson because he couldnt keep his pants zipped. (or so I hear that was the issue all the crotchety old-folks in Benton County were so uppity about...)

gunsmith
November 20, 2003, 04:41 AM
or whatever her name is has not commented on this thread.
hmmph!

MicroBalrog
November 20, 2003, 04:49 PM
Newsmax. Nuff said.

Andrew Rothman
November 20, 2003, 05:27 PM
Triplicate thread:

http://www.thehighroad.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=50621

http://www.thehighroad.org/showthread.php?s=&threadid=50344

Come on, guys, look before you leap!

Betty
November 20, 2003, 05:34 PM
Closing duplicate thread.

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