ThinkProgress Logo

Security

NRA Members Approve Of Concealed Carry Restriction At Annual Convention

ThinkProgress is reporting from the NRA Convention. This is our fourth dispatch. See our previous posts here, here, and here.

The NRA is holding its annual meetings this weekend at the Charlotte Convention Center in Charlotte, NC. Violence Policy Center executive director Josh Sugarmann noted this sign at the convention warning its members not to bring concealed carry weapons onto its property:

2010-05-14-NRASignII

ThinkProgress spoke to a number of attendees and asked if they were bothered by the convention center’s policy. Nearly everyone agreed that there needed to be some sort of restriction, suggesting NRA members who attended the conference understand the need for sensible safety regulations. “I think that’s probably a pretty good policy,” one NRA member said. Some other reactions:

– TP: You don’t have a problem with not bringing firearms here?

NRA MEMBER1: Not really. It’s up to the individual place of business. It’s their right to do as they choose. It’s my right to choose not to come in if I choose not to do so.

– NRA MEMBER2: I understand it. I think most people carry a gun for self defense. In a place like this, I’ve seen enough police presence around here I don’t think that there would be much of a problem.

– NRA MEMBER3: Whether I truly agree with it or not, no I don’t, because again I say it’s an infringement on my rights. But I understand, like you said, they have to have a facility to hold this convention. This is a rule they have so we’re willing to abide by it.

Watch the video:

The NRA lobby is pushing hard to loosen concealed carry restrictions, urging states such as Tennessee and Georgia to allow gun-holders to carry their guns into bars.

Politics

Saudi-funded Fox News contributor Newt Gingrich attacks Harvard for Saudi funding.

On Fox News this morning, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich said President Obama “should withdraw” Elena Kagan’s Supreme Court nomination. While calling her an “anti-military” nominee for upholding Harvard’s policy of prohibiting employers who discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation, Gingrich got side-tracked for a moment and engaged in a Harvard-bashing critique:

On the one hand, Harvard accepts money from Saudis. Saudi Arabia, by the way, executes homosexuals. Saudi Arabia represses women. Saudi Arabia does not allow Christians or Jews to practice their religion, but Saudi money is fine.

Watch it:

As ThinkProgress has repeatedly documented, Fox is funded by a wealth of Saudi money. Saudi oil tycoon Prince Alwaleed bin Talal owns a 7 percent stake in Fox News’ parent company News Corp, making him the largest shareholder outside the family of CEO Rupert Murdoch. Alwaleed has boasted in the past about forcing Fox News to change its content. Gingrich, of course, has been a paid Fox News contributor for over a decade.

Update

Laura Bush endorsed Kagan’s nomination on Fox News. “I think it’s great,” she said. “I’m really glad that there will be three [women] if she’s confirmed. I like to have women on the Supreme Court.”


Update

,Pennsylvania Sen. Arlen Specter told CNN that he hasn’t made up his mind on Kagan yet. “I want to listen to her; I want to confer with my clients,” he said.


[

Climate Progress

NASA: Easily the hottest April — and hottest Jan-April — in temperature record

Plus a new record 12-month global temperature, as predicted

For an update, see NASA: First half of 2010 breaks the thermometer “” despite “recent minimum of solar irradiance.”

To get daily email updates of the latest news and analysis on climate science, solution, and politics, click here.

It was the hottest April on record in the NASA dataset.  More significantly, following fast on the heels of the hottest March and hottest Jan-Feb-March on record, it’s also the hottest Jan-Feb-March-April on record [click on figure to enlarge].

Read more

Yglesias

Reality Vs Theory

Apparently the Tory-LibDem coalition violates a lot of our theoretic understanding of the coalition-formation process. I see two factors in play here. One is that our understanding of this subject comes from countries that habitually feature coalition governments, of which the UK is not one. The other is that the ideological identification of the Liberal Democrats is contested and a bit problematic. They appear to most outside observers to be a center-left party that’s in many ways to the left of Labour, but their traditional location is as a centrist party to the right of Labour and many Labour supporters also see it that way.

Politics

Gingrich: ‘Of Course’ Gov. Barbour Should Encourage Tourists To Visit Oil Contaminated Gulf Beaches

Weeks after the massive BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, Newt Gingrich still continued his “Drill Here, Drill Now” mantra, writing that “human progress is not without risk” and that “[o]ffshore drilling is no exception.” But given the fact that the oil leak at BP’s Deepwater Horizon rig continues unabated, pouring more than 200,000 gallons of oil into the Gulf every day and is “already far larger” than the Exxon Valdez crash, Gingrich is holding firm.

At the NRA’s annual conference in Charlotte, NC, yesterday, ThinkProgress asked Gingrich if he still accepts this level of risk to continue offshore drilling:

TP: So given the scale of the oil spill in the gulf, do you still think that it represents an acceptable risk to continue offshore drilling?

GINGRICH: Yes. … One oil spill since 1969 with 4,000 wells. If the Coast Guard had a reasonable research program, we’d be much further down the road to solving this kind of thing.

ThinkProgess also asked the former GOP House Speaker if he agrees with Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour’s (R) recent campaign to encourage tourists to visit gulf beaches despite oil and dead sea animals washing ashore. While Gingrich hesitated for a moment, he replied, “Of course.” Watch the interview:

While it’s unclear which “4,000 wells” Gingrich was referring to, his claim that there has only been one spill since 1969 is not accurate, as the Wonk Room’s Brad Johnson has noted:

Between 1992 and 1998 there were 319 failures of blowout preventers found in US offshore drilling, an average of 45 a year. [MMS, 1999] Between 1992 and 2006 there were at least 39 blowouts off the US coastline, 38 of them in the Gulf of Mexico. [MMS, 7/07] From 2007 to 2009 there were 19 blowouts, all in the Gulf of Mexico. [MMS]

Moreover, the largest accidental oil spill in history was a Gulf of Mexico exploratory rig blowout in 1979 and other major offshore spills have occurred elsewhere around the world. In “one of Australia’s worst oil disasters,” a PTTEP oil rig blew out in the Montara deepwater oil field on August 21, 2009.

Update

This morning, Newt Gingrich sat for a softball interview with Fox News’ Chris Wallace to discuss his new book. Wallace never asked Gingrich — the originator of the “drill here, drill now, pay less” slogan — about the oil spill.


Update

,Alabama Gov. Bob Riley (R) has been arguing that his state’s beaches have never been so clean.

Yglesias

Jack Bauer Republicans

Article - Sarlin Bauer Pantano

Here’s a frightening piece from Benjy Sarlin in the Daily Beast:

Call them the Jack Bauer Republicans.

Two Iraq veterans who left the military after surviving charges of crimes against detainees are running credible campaigns for Congress. And far from minimizing the incidents, both candidates have put the accusations front and center in their campaigns, attracting rock-star adulation from conservatives nationwide in the process. But critics, including human-rights activists, veterans, and now even defeated primary opponents, warn that their records should disqualify them from office.

Love of violence and brutality is deeply ingrained in the conservative worldview, which I think is what you can see here.

Climate Progress

As oil continues to gush into the Gulf, Mississippi offers $75 gas cards to tourists.

Downplaying the BP disaster, Gov. Barbour encourages tourists to ‘enjoy the beach’ as dead dolphins wash ashore

Mississippi Gov. Haley Barbour (R) has been an outlier amongst Gulf Coast governors, downplaying the BP oil spill instead of working to mitigate the disaster and rethinking the wisdom of offshore drilling.  TP has the story in this twin repost.

Read more

Climate Progress

We invest in research, but what about teaching?

Improving science education requires rethinking academic priorities

Since President Obama’s announcement of the Educate to Innovate program in November 2009, an encouraging number of technology and media companies, non-profit organizations and government agencies have been working in concert to strengthen the nation’s approach to science education. But the reality is that the lion’s share of transformation must come from within: from school systems, in the case of K-12 education, and from the academy, in the case of higher education.

A position paper recently issued by the Nature Publishing Group (NPG) illustrates this point in the context of higher education.  Vikram Savkar, Senior VP & Publishing Director for Education Markets at NPG has the story in this repost.

Read more

Newer

Switch to Mobile
ThinkProgress Signup Overlay Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress Skip and Continue to ThinkProgress

Sign Up