USA Today warns that Second Amendment supporters can become Nazis
From the Second Amendment Foundation's Investigative Journalism Project
by Lee Williams
USA Today’s “extremism” reporter Will Carless has extremists on the brain. He’s written about extremist cops, extremist podcasts, extremist militia groups, extremist videos, extremist Facebook groups and now, extremist gun show recruiters.
Before he joined Gannett’s flagship newspaper about a year ago, Carless was the extremist guy at the Center for Investigative reporting (CIR), a small nonprofit located in the San Francisco Bay area. You may have never heard of CIR, but you’ve probably heard of their donors. They include George Soros’ Open Society Foundation, The Wellspring Philanthropic Fund, which donates millions to left-of-center advocacy groups, and other similarly aligned groups. Carless’ work has also appeared in the Trace – the propaganda arm of former New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg’s anti-gun empire.
Carless’ latest USA Today story, “Down the barrel of a gun: How Second Amendment activism can be a gateway to extremist ideologies,” is, in a word, extreme.
The logic he uses to support his story is simple — incredibly flawed, but simple. Since there are vendors at gun shows hocking Nazi paraphernalia, III% patches and controversial books, Carless would have you believe they’re recruiting for the right-wing extremist movement, and anyone who supports gun rights is ripe for their recruitment. Carless hatched this crazy theory after visiting a gun show.
“Gun shows like this have long been part of the connective tissue between mainstream conservatism and the American extremist movement,” Carless wrote. “The vast majority of gun owners are law-abiding citizens, but experts and former members of the extremist far-right said a passion for gun rights often serves as a gateway to radicalization — one eagerly exploited by recruiters and leaders in the movement.”
In other words, if you support our God-given right to self-defense as codified in the Second Amendment, expect to be sporting a swastika armband and goosestepping to SS marching songs by the end of the day.
Carless cites Igor Volsky, executive director of Guns Down America, as his primary expert. “Gun culture and gun rhetoric is, itself, bathed — saturated — in extremist conspiracy theories,” Volsky is quoted as saying in the story. “What all of these conspiracy theories have in common, what this rhetoric really emphasizes, is the fear that a powerful government is going to come in and disarm you and impose their values onto you.”
Given the current administration, I’m not sure I’d dismiss the fear that a powerful government is going to disarm me as a conspiracy theory. It’s Joe Biden’s stated goal. It’s still there on his campaign website for all to see: “assault weapon” bans, confiscation under the guise of mandatory buy-backs, regulation by the NFA, standard-capacity magazine bans, one-gun-per-month rationing, and the closing of so-called loopholes.
The White House now acknowledges that they believe the most severe threat from domestic terrorist comes from the far right, Carless points out.
“What do you expect the Biden White House to say?” asked Alan M. Gottlieb, founder and executive vice president of the Second Amendment Foundation. “They are the far left that, as Biden himself has said, wants to ban 9mm handguns and semi-auto rifles.”
The rest of Carless’ story describes his one-man sojourn through the gun show aisles. His reportage is like a trip back through time — to the mid-1990s to be precise.
He dredges up The Anarchist Cookbook and The Turner Diaries, which some vendor evidently still had in print. The former, Carless said, “describes how to make homemade bombs.” Yes, it certainly does, but there are far more worrisome plans and racist novels available on the internet, all of which are still protected by the First Amendment, at least for now.
“Nestled in the middle of the show at the Atlanta Expo Center, a man proudly displayed Nazi memorabilia: medals, swastika patches and a model of a German amphibious vehicle occupied by toy Nazi soldiers. People crowded around his table, asking questions about buying and selling Nazi stuff,” he wrote.
I’ve seen a few gun-show vendors selling Nazi memorabilia, but I’ve never seen a crowd at their tables. Most people, myself included, just walk on by.
No one at the gun show was willing to talk to Carless, which is not a surprise. He spoke to a few people but they refused to give him their names. That was probably for the best. He’s biased, just like all the rest of the legacy media, and his entire premise was wrong. Are there extremists who own guns? Sure, nearly half the country owns guns so there are bound to be a few. But implying that the vast majority of law-abiding gun owners are somehow likely to fall under their spell is wrong. It’s fake news. It’s about what I’d expect to see from USA Today, given their ongoing partnership with the Trace and the extreme leftwing politics of those in charge.
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From the perspective of those paying for his "journalism" he's not wrong. They have defined "extremism" down so far you're an extremist for wanting due process and presumption of innocence for anyone accused of a crime by leftists or the government (though I repeat myself). Free speech rights? SELF DEFENSE? You're basically already Hitler. They are literally shaking right now.
Regarding buying and selling Nazi memorabilia... have you SEEN the price on guns with Nazi proofmarks? They're through the roof.
A Jewish FFL once put it into perspective for me. I'd asked him how, as a Jew, he could trade in Nazi guns? (He had about 5 tables full of WWII and earlier guns, most with that swastika and eagle stamp). In one of the thickest Yiddish accents I've ever heard, he said, "Because dey're dead, and I've god deir guns!"
I'm looking for one myself, now. Because they're dead and I can get one of their guns.