”I think the ad is spot-on,” Pratt said. “It points to the
hypocrisy that we see so much from our ruling class, and it underscores
the need that we’ve been pointing to that if we’re going to get serious
about protecting our children, we’re going to do away with the ‘gun-free
zone’ requirements in federal law, which have created a magnet for
these mass murders.”
When asked about discussing the president’s
children, Pratt added, “This is a democracy. This is a country where we
are all equal before the law, and to have special privileges for others
that wouldn’t necessarily extend to us common people goes down a little
hard.”
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Melody Barnes, the former director of the White House
Domestic Policy Council, said the country should brace for more ads like
the NRA spot.
“And that’s what’s going to infiltrate the debate,” Barnes said.
“Those are the kinds of visits members of Congress are going to get, and
that’s why people have been scared to take on this issue even after
tragedy after tragedy in our communities around the country, and the
American people have to be prepared for that and make a decision what
kind of country do we want to live in and the message that they want to
convey to their policymakers about the kinds of laws and the kinds of
policies that we’re going to have.”
Sasha and Malia Obama attend Washington’s posh private Sidwell Friends School.
”Their whole goal is to ratchet up the rhetoric,” Rep. Tammy
Duckworth (D-Ill.) said on CNN’s “Starting Point” about the NRA ad. She
added, “Let’s stay calm. Let’s look at the function of these weapons… we
need to ban those weapons that have the functionality that can kill a
whole bunch of folks in just a few seconds.”
David Frum blasted the ad in a blog post.
“…the NRA’s sneering references to the president’s family are beyond
the pale,” Frum wrote. “As the makers of the NRA ad should know, and
probably do know, the First Family has come under years of racially
coded attack for their ‘uppityism,’ as Rush Limbaugh phrased it. This
latest attack ad looks to many like only one more attempt to enflame an
ancient American wound.”
Frum, a former speechwriter for President George W. Bush, added,
“Generally speaking, a president’s family should not be subject to
political criticism. That rule was honorably upheld in the case of the
Bush daughters, who grew into fine young people, and the rule should be
same for the Obama daughters - especially if it’s true, as has been
widely reported, that this first family has faced a unique degree of
threat.”
Twitter reaction also took off after the video dropped.
CNN’s Piers Morgan, who has taken heat from gun advocates for his position on gun control, ripped the video in a tweet.
“This new @NRA ad is just disgusting,” he tweeted, linking to the clip.
Kathleen McKinley, a conservative blogger for places including the
Houston Chronicle, bashed the use of Obama’s children in the ad.
“Here’s an idea. How about the NRA and Obama NOT use children at all to promote their agenda?” she tweeted.
“This is not an SNL skit. This is a real NRA Ad,” tweeted actor Zach Braff, linking to the clip.
“Trying to figure out what NRA is thinking with web ad targeting Obama girls. Who thinks that’s appropriate? #mitchellreports,” offered MSNBC’s Andrea Mitchell.
Ron Fournier of National Journal group called the ad “low” in a tweet.
In a follow-up tweet, he added, “”Has the NRA Finally Gone Too Far?”
My take: Hell, yes.” Fournier included a link to a post that further
took the NRA to task. “The ad is indisputably misleading, and is
arguably a dangerous appeal to the base instincts of gun-rights
activists,” he wrote.
“@thedailybeast: NRA Ad Targets Obama Daughters http://thebea.st/U0y119 . Tasteless, mean spirited and totally out of bounds. Agree?” tweeted Democratic strategist and commentator Donna Brazile.
John Dickerson of CBS News said on “CBS This Morning” that the video
“makes a larger argument. It’s not just about guns,” he said. “It’s
going into… negative views about the president. It uses all the
emotional — presses all the emotional buttons for those people who don’t
like the president and the NRA is making this about hypocrisy, not
about safety.”
- candlegal
on Jan. 16, 2013 at 12:14 PM