Wayne LaPierre, the leader of the National Rifle Association of America who served for decades as a fierce protector of the Second Amendment, advocating for firearms owners and manufacturers, is resigning days before his civil trial is set to begin.

The NRA announced Friday in a statement LaPierre is stepping down as executive vice president and chief executive officer, effective January 31.

Andrew Arulanandam, an NRA executive and head of general operations, will become the interim CEO and executive vice president of the organization, the NRA said on its website.

New York Attorney General Letitia James in 2020 filed a lawsuit to dissolve the NRA, claiming the organization violated laws for non-profit groups and took millions for personal use and committed tax fraud. The case is set to go to trial on Monday.

  • @SirEDCaLot
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    15 months ago

    FWIW, I’d generally agree that I hate when people on either side parrot the party line and have no ability to debate their own positions other than spouting talking points.

    However I think the Constitution is an exception to that-- someone can be ‘I support guns because the Constitution’ and be meaning ‘we should follow the Constitution as written and intended by the Framers’ (which I think is a valid and learned POV) rather than ‘I blindly follow whatever the old document says and I don’t think for myself why it’s good or bad’.

    The Constitution is the law of the land, period. You can disagree with it- you can say it’s wrong, that its ideals no longer serve modern society, etc.
    But simply ignoring it or ‘interpreting’ it to mean whatever we want it to mean in that moment is a VERY slippery and dangerous slope. That’s how you get warrantless wiretapping, torture memos, extraordinary rendition, civil asset forfeiture, and a whole host of other awful things.

    If you disagree with the Constitution, there’s a process to change it. But until it gets changed, we MUST follow it as it was written and intended by the Framers.

    If we don’t do that, then we go down a very dark path- free speech only applies to things said in person and paper printed publications (not the Internet as it wasn’t around in the 1700s), the 4th amendment only applies to hardcopy files and not computer files or cloud storage as those are new inventions not envisioned by the Framers, etc etc, It’s really NOT a good direction for us to go.

    • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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      15 months ago

      I’d also like to point out for just because something is a law doesn’t mean it is just or correct. I would also like to point out that just because there’s a process. That does not mean it is adequate or usable.

      While I fall into the camp of people who would be more favorable to actually following the text of the second amendment. And for all the second amendment people to learn basic English grammar. That a comma separates two parts of a connected thought and not two separate thoughts.

      The facts are, guns have only made us less safe. Most other countries in the world can go years, decades even between mass shootings. Even longer between school shootings. We are the only country in the world where such things happen on a nearly daily basis. And that has to do with our sorely outdated and outmoded second amendment.

      • @SirEDCaLot
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        15 months ago

        I agree there’s plenty of unjust laws and unusable processes. But ‘it’s too hard to change the Constitution so we should just ignore it’ is a real bad way to go.

        As for the text of it, you should be aware that if you are a male citizen between 18 and 45 years of age, legally you are part of the United States Militia. Google it.

        As for why we have so much violence, I find it amusing that you look only at guns and not at the many other causes or predictors of societal decay. For example, most civilized nations have some form of socialized health care. Few others have families going bankrupt because someone gets cancer. Most civilized nations have strong social safety nets, and actively work to bring people out of poverty. Most civilized nations treat addicts like patients to be treated rather than animals to be caged. Most civilized nations have decent paths out of addiction and poverty that don’t require you to be already rich to afford them. Most civilized nations have strong worker protections and unions, which combined with a good social safety net, make real upward mobility an achievable goal.

        Evil men will always find the tools they need to dispense their evil.

        • @Eldritch@lemmy.world
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          25 months ago

          I agree there’s plenty of unjust laws and unusable processes. But ‘it’s too hard to change the Constitution so we should just ignore it’ is a real bad way to go.

          You said that not me. I simply said it was inadequate and unworkable. The fact that you would agree with that. That it was inadequate and unworkable. But that being the remedy you suggest to people who disagree with you. Show that you’re likely being disingenuous.

          As for the text of it, you should be aware that if you are a male citizen between 18 and 45 years of age, legally you are part of the United States Militia. Google it.

          I’m aware. Though too old to be included anymore.

          As for why we have so much violence, I find it amusing that you look only at guns and not at the many other causes or predictors of societal decay. For example, most civilized nations have some form of socialized health care.

          You find it funny that I focus on the topic of the thread? I find it funny that you find it funny that that’s what I would focus on. That said, being a staunch lefty someone who hovers somewhere around social libertarian, Marxist etc. I am actually 100% for those things, push for those things and believe that they would help. As well as abolishing private prisons and legalizing most if not all drugs in combination with some basic controls on them. But that wasn’t what we were talking about here.