Los Angeles Times

Putting ‘R’ in NRA

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Re “How NRA became linked to GOP,” March 3

As a 1960s teenager, I joined the National Rifle Assn. solely to enter marksmansh­ip tournament­s. Some 30 years later, I saw an NRA ad that depicted a Revolution-era soldier bearing the U.S. flag, beneath which a boldface caption exclaimed, “In God We Trust!”

Why would a gun rights organizati­on promote itself by conflating patriotism with religion? The gratuitous nod to Christiani­ty betrayed the NRA’s shameless move to align itself with the GOP; no other party so fervidly touts its candidates as the most patriotic and devoted to the Christian faith.

Long a political independen­t, I never again renewed my NRA membership. As conservati­ve columnist Jonah Goldberg once observed, the NRA’s marketing has much more to do with “smash-mouth cultural resentment­s” than with gun policy. Dennis Alston Atwater, Calif.

The article on the NRA’s alignment with the Republican Party was informativ­e, but it ignored one factor.

The NRA is a conservati­ve organizati­on. The GOP still holds the Constituti­on as sacrosanct. The Democratic Party is filled with candidates who consider the Constituti­on an obstacle to their ambitions, not the bulwark of our country.

In light of this, NRA members have no alternativ­e. Larry Marak Burbank

Receiving an “F” grade from the NRA should be a badge of honor. Google each and every members of Congress and vote accordingl­y.

And, thanks to Delta Air Lines and all of the businesses that are starting to stand up to the NRA. This time it does feel different.

Oh, and let us not forget to thank the wonderful kids from Florida — because of them our future looks bright. Carol Levin Woodland Hills

 ?? Scott McIntyre Washington Post ?? ANTI-NRA signs are passed out during a voter registrati­on rally in Florida on Friday.
Scott McIntyre Washington Post ANTI-NRA signs are passed out during a voter registrati­on rally in Florida on Friday.

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