Here is a blog opinion piece:
http://www.redstate.com/erick/2010/06/14/yet-again-the-nra-sells-out-to-democrats/ ripping the NRA for a recent position it took. I found the first comment (copied below) under the story exceptionally well-written and thought out. The NRA gets a lot of criticism (sometimes deserved) but it's a gun rights organization and...well I' think 'Freedom is Learned' puts it better then I could:
FreedomIsLearned Monday, June 14th at 11:09PM EDT
Erick, much as I respect your posts on other things, you misunderstand quite a few things about the NRA.
1. The NRA is single-issue. It is not a freedom lobby?it is a gun-rights organization. The right to arms is part of freedom, but the NRA doesn?t make calls on economic or any other kind of freedom. You have to weigh the other issues yourself, as it should be (for a single-issue group). That won?t change, and it shouldn?t. If they did as you desire, they would no longer carry the tremendous weight they carry among, for example, conservative Southern Democrats. We have no renewed AW ban or any other gun control legislation solely because the NRA pwns congress, and they do so because they are single-issue. The rest of the world has to be saved by others.
2. Related to that, I?m sorry to say we Republicans overestimate our party?s support for gun rights. Especially in California, the party routinely asks for gun votes and then delivers nothing?just exactly the complaint of small-government conservatives. We need to be earning those votes, not complaining when someone points out we have no clothes. Case in point:
3. Your objections are incoherent. You prefer GoA because it is ?no compromise,? and then take them to task for opposing John Kasich. Kasich voted for the Clinton AW ban twice, voted for the Hughes amendment, and voted against repealing the AW ban. His F rating was well deserved, and as a single-issue organization the NRA would be derelict if it took any other position than it has. You?re asking them to compromise, but they didn?t.
4. The NRA initially opposed Heller because it was a loser as long as Sandra Day O?Connor was on the bench, and frankly Gura was green and unknown. You may complain they were rather conservative later on, but you didn?t, and the NRA?s meddling with McDonald seems to have been rather ham-handed, but their early complaints about Heller were quite reasonable. Fortunately, we got lucky with the timing, and Alan Gura turned out to be a rock star Second Amendment lawyer.
5. The fact is the GoA is ineffective, because it doesn?t know how to lobby at all. ?No compromise? is a code word for ?politically stupid.? The GoA can take any position it wants, and it doesn?t matter (except to get donations). We lost our rights incrementally, and we?ll get them back the same way. They also don?t *think*?the CA state affiliate nearly managed to get us Constructive Possession of CA ?AWs? thanks to ill-conceived lobbying. That was compromise, the thing they claim not to do. CalNRA pulled that one out of the fire?barely. That kind of thing, plus general ineffectiveness, is why I no longer belong to GoC or GoA.
6. The NRA sometimes appears inconsistent because it plays to win, not feel good. You should recognize this?we backed Scott Brown because he was the best that could win in Mass, not because he was a real conservative. We compromised?because we were playing to win. The NRA often has to play it the other way?here in California, it is very easy to run against the NRA, so often they will not endorce a friendly candidate because it does more harm than good. In the primary just past, they did a couple of ?anybody but X? endorsements in three-way races, which is a good way of penalizing an enemy without giving the other side an easy target.
One of those was ?anybody but Tom Campbell,? which is a case where their single interest happened to align with the broader
conservative cause. But they?re not the gun-rights wing of the Tea Party movement?they were here first and do their one job well, much better than you seem to think. The more I learn about the inside politics of gun rights, the more I understand why they do what they do. They drop the ball sometimes, but they?re the most effective gun-rights organization in America.