TheFiringLine Forums

Go Back   TheFiringLine Forums > The Conference Center > General Discussion Forum

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old May 22, 2001, 06:44 AM   #1
dZ
Senior Member
 
Join Date: May 31, 1999
Location: the Fetid Swamp, DC
Posts: 7,565

http://www.enterstageright.com/0501flowers.htm

Flowers are good. Guns are bad

By Dr. Michael S. Brown
web posted May 21, 2001

One year ago, the Million Mom March used free bus rides and free entertainment to lure tens of thousands of people to their anti-gun rally in Washington, D.C. This
Mother's Day saw a greatly scaled back effort, with small rallies held in several cities.

The event staged by the MMM in Seattle on May 12, 2001 provided an interesting insight into the character of the organization at the local level. Billed as a "Safe Kids
Rally", it was held inside a food court building at the foot of the Space Needle. At least a hundred people dropped in to receive free flowers and view parts of the program,
which consisted of an ongoing three-hour stage show and a dozen tables where information was offered by various groups and agencies.

The stage program was striking in its simplicity and emotionalism. The majority of those who appeared were children, singing simple songs and performing skits that
would be appropriate in a grade school. The Moms apparently do not promote deep thinking and have no qualms about exploiting children for political gain.

An adult speaker who appeared to be associated with a teacher's union urged the audience to go into a school, grab a child, any child, and give them a big hug. He did not
say how to avoid being arrested. The most memorable slogan of the day, printed on numerous shirts, was: "Flowers are good. Guns are bad." Some Million Mom
members wore shirts announcing their desire to ban all guns. This of course contradicts the official line that says they don't want to ban guns.

A flyer handed out at the information tables described the Million Moms' 35 full time employees and its office at San Francisco General Hospital. The table workers were
completely unaware that 30 of those employees were recently fired and the organization was thrown out of its free office space for alleged improprieties.

The overall atmosphere of the event bore an uncanny resemblance to the peace movement of the 1960's. Troublesome thoughts about individual rights and self-defense
were ignored as the participants concentrated on producing a mind-numbing wave of peace and love. One observer, recalling his long-ago hippie days, thought the
participants were in a state of mind known as "blissed out". Another was reminded of a technique called "love bombing" practiced by religious cults.

Outside the building, a group of about 80 enthusiastic gun rights activists gathered to protest the aims of the MMM. They debated with people passing by and displayed
signs with hard-hitting slogans about self-defense and the role of government. Women leaving the anti-gun love-fest held up long stemmed flowers like crosses, as if to
ward off uncomfortable thoughts.

Several Seattle police officers were assigned to watch the protestors, but they turned out to be quite well behaved. In keeping with the generally laid back culture of Seattle,
the protesters were free to lay down their signs and enter the building, either to observe the program or refuel at the food court restaurants.

One pro-rights activist played a small trick on the MMM members which may be instructive. He offered a stack of signs to people who were handing out anti-gun
literature at the information tables. The signs, designed to be displayed on the front of a residence, said "Gun Free Home". These are usually offered to anti-gun people as
an insult, since one would have to be an idiot to display such an open invitation to criminals. In this case however, the blissed-out MMM volunteers happily distributed the
signs to bewildered soccer moms.

It might seem that such an incompetent and illogical group could never hope to have an influence on public policy, but there is more to this story. The event was well
covered by at least three Seattle TV stations and two newspapers. The pro-rights demonstrators, despite plenty of signs, banners, balloons and thought provoking speeches
were almost totally ignored. The media instead showed pictures of children making Mother's Day cards and sound bite interviews with well-rehearsed "gun violence"
victims.

One reason for this biased coverage was the brilliant choice of Mona Lee Locke as the guest of honor. The photogenic former local newscaster and wife of Washington
Governor Gary Locke is a media magnet and very influential with her old colleagues at area news outlets. It would have been difficult for them to provide positive
exposure to anyone who opposes her policies.

This was another harsh lesson for supporters of civil rights. Logical arguments are useless against an emotional message specifically tailored for a biased media. It is also
a mistake to dismiss the Million Mom March based on the flower power theme and zombie-like performance of its foot soldiers. There are sharp minds running the show,
at least in Seattle. They know how to manipulate their supporters and the media. Their disingenuous tactics make it hard to discern their real goals, but it's a safe bet that
they won't stop until they get what they want.

Dr. Michael S. Brown is an optometrist in Vancouver, Washington and a board member of Doctors for Sensible Gun Laws
dZ is offline  
Old May 22, 2001, 04:41 PM   #2
OF
Senior Member
 
Join Date: April 11, 2000
Posts: 2,244
The bit about handing out the 'Gun Free Home' signs had me laughing out loud. Priceless.

- gabe
OF is offline  
Old May 22, 2001, 04:52 PM   #3
papercut
Senior Member
 
Join Date: March 11, 2000
Location: Cobb County, Georgia, USA, near the Big Chicken
Posts: 923
Quote:
One pro-rights activist played a small trick on the MMM members which may be instructive. He offered a stack of signs to people who were handing out anti-gun literature at the information tables. The signs, designed to be displayed on the front of a residence, said "Gun Free Home". These are usually offered to anti-gun people as an insult, since one would have to be an idiot to display such an open invitation to criminals. In this case however, the blissed-out MMM volunteers happily distributed the signs to bewildered soccer moms.
BWAHAHAHHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

I love it!
papercut is offline  
Old May 23, 2001, 05:53 AM   #4
Tom B
Senior Member
 
Join Date: February 16, 1999
Location: GA
Posts: 1,832
And last weekend Gov Gray Davis of Kali was going door to door handing out energy efficient light bulbs....Hes doing his part! Way to go Gray!
Tom B is offline  
Old May 23, 2001, 12:56 PM   #5
pax
Staff
 
Join Date: May 16, 2000
Location: Washington state
Posts: 4,626
I think I'll have a tee shirt made up for my 11 year old son before the next MMM protest up here. It will read, "Flowers are good ... that's why I own a Daisy."



pax
pax is offline  
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 04:16 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
This site and contents © 1998-2009 S.W.A.T. Magazine
Page generated in 0.08248 seconds with 7 queries