"Americans for Gun Safety" - Another faux gun group bites the dust.
By Chad Baus
In 2000, Monster.com billionaire Andrew McKelvey committed more than $12
million toward the creation of the "Americans for Gun Safety." McKelvey had
always donated to Handgun Control Inc., but eventually decided that the gun
control movement's best chance of success was going to come about by
fooling Americans into thinking they were actually pro-gun.
"I told them that Handgun Control was the wrong name. I thought what they
were doing was great but I thought it could be done differently," McKelvey once
told Reuters News Service.[1] (Handgun Control Inc. did eventually take
McKelvey's advice, and changed its name to The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun
Violence.)
McKelvey's AGS lasted just a few years, having failed in its mission to
disguise its gun control agenda in poll-tested language.
But other gun control outfits decided to try McKelvey's strategy.
The anti-gun Joyce Foundation, which once counted Barack Obama among its
board of directors, began funding the "Freedom States Alliance," a network of
state level gun-control groups which promoted a blog under the equally
misleading name "Gun Guys."[2] The once active blog has gone from several posts
a week to having not had even one post since August 5, 2010, and FSA itself has
also disappeared.[3]
Now, much like the now-defunct AGS and FSA, as well as the inactive GunGuys
blog, it appears yet another faux gun group has disappeared into the ether.
In 2005, John Lott posted a story (sourcing another weblog) about a new
anti-gun gun group masquerading as a pro-gun rights group. From the article:
"By creating this made up group called The American Hunters and Shooters
Association (AHSA), who will inevitably be used in future Democrat led anti gun
campaigns in the near future as so called 'expert' witnesses or a 'sane' voice
of sportsmen - just so the anti gun democrats can grandstand for gun control
non-issues via their willing accomplices in the press. I'd imagine the closer
we get to the '08' presidential election the more (AHSA) will be in the
news."
In our own coverage at the time, we wrote that [in spite of the fact that] the cat was out
of the bag on the phony gun group, it was clear that the mainstream "news" media
would work to perpetuate the [false] image that AHSA is a pro-gun rights group. And that
is exactly what happened.
AHSA was formally introduced to the public in 2006 at a press conference at
the annual conference of the Outdoor Writers Association of America.[4]
The first thing executive director Bob Ricker told reporters was that his
group planned to compete with the National Rifle Association, noting that
"America has 80 million gun owners, but the NRA only has 4 million members."[5]
(Only 4 million members. Remember that criticism as you read on.)
At least one "hopeful" writer who attended the press conference that year
pitched the contest as a David v. Goliath battle, noting that the group was
starting out with {"only") one half million dollars.[6]
The National Rifle Association, Buckeye Firearms Association and other
pro-gun writers quickly investigated the groups' leaders and stated goals, and
came to a quick conclusion - AHSA was yet another anti-gun wolf in sheep's
clothing, with a leadership chock full of people with anti-gun
pedigrees.
The group set about to gain media attention wherever they could find it. In
2007, AHSA President Ray Schoenke was invited to speak at a summit sponsored by
yet another misleadingly named gun control group, New York Mayor Bloomberg's
"Mayors Against Illegal Guns." Schoenke declared an alliance between AHSA and
MAIG in seeking to expose confidential law enforcement data on firearms
traces.[7] He later published an op-ed in The Seattle Times titled
"Real hunters and shooters need to stand up to the NRA."[8] That fall, Schoenke
was quoted in USA Today saying "The NRA's extreme positions have hurt
the hunting movement."[9]
But it was in 2008 that AHSA became a true media darling, when it endorsed Barak Obama for President. Every time a pro-gun group tried to warn about the
former Senator's radical anti-gun past, there was an AHSA spokesperson cooing
back via a willing media that all was well.
The group became of use to Obama again in 2009, when it endorsed Sonya
Sotomayor for U.S. Supreme Court.
"Based on the available case history, it appears that Sotomayor honors
precedent. Now that D.C. v Heller is precedent, gun-owners should feel
secure that their rights are safe,"[10] intoned Ray Schoenke, attempting to
pacify gun owners into submission.
Of course, we all know the rest of the story - Sotomayor was confirmed, and
promptly sided with the minority in McDonald v. City of Chicago,
throwing the precedent Schoenke assured us she believed in right out the
window.[11]
AHSA continued to post their FaceBook page several times per week (despite
being a national group, they have just over 200 "friends." BFA, a state-wide gun
rights group, has over 8000), send Twitter feeds (they have 62 followers, BFA
has 1553) and add occasional posts to their website blog.
And then, in a year when their favorite political party needed help in the
effort to hold on to their majority, and the organization essentially
disappeared. Without explanation or fanfare, all ASHA activity appears to have
ceased last February. (Not to be any less transparent for what they were, the
last post on both websites was a regurgitation of a Valentines Day 2010
Chicago Tribune op-ed praising Obama for being - you guessed it -
pro-gun.[12])
No additional posts have been made to ASHA website, Twitter or FaceBook page
since then. What's more, the AHSA website, www.huntersandshooters.org, has
been offline since early October, and emails to the organization bounce.
Research on Internal Revenue Service filings by "American Hunters and
Shooters Association Foundation, Inc.", a 501(c)(3) non-profit, may provide an
explanation.
In 2006, AHSA recorded just $50 (!) as coming from membership dues, yet the
group spent $88,634 more than it received in that first year.[13] In 2007, the
foundation reported just $5 (!!) in membership dues.[14] And in 2008, the year
of Obama's presidential candidacy and the last year reports are available, the
foundation reported $0 in membership dues (!!!). They ended the year with just
over $42,000 in the bank - having depleted a quarter of a million dollar surplus
from 2007.[15]
The fact that AHSA disappeared in an election year of this magnitude suggests
that they are gone for good.
Buckeye Firearms Association would like to be the first to wish them a
not-so-fond farewell.
Chad D. Baus is the Buckeye Firearms Association Vice Chairman.