• The 7 Most Heinous Things "Gay Wayne" LaPierre Said As NRA Leader

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    Here Are the 7 Most Heinous Things Wayne LaPierre Said As NRA Leader
    Wayne LaPierre has resigned as longtime chief of the NRA. Here’s a look
    back at some of the deranged things he said while leading the gun rights
    group.
    Win McNamee/Getty Images

    Wayne LaPierre resigned Friday as head of the National Rifle Association,
    after more than 30 years at the powerful gun lobby’s helm.

    Although LaPierre cited health reasons, his exit—scheduled for the end of
    the month—comes as he and three other current and former NRA leaders face
    trial for a lawsuit from New York Attorney General Letitia James. James
    accused the group in 2020 of violating nonprofit laws and misusing
    millions of dollars from the NRA to pay for extravagant lifestyles for themselves.

    Here’s a look back at seven of the most outlandish things LaPierre has
    said.
    The Fools, Frauds, Losers, and Crooks of 2023
    The Fools, Frauds, Losers, and Crooks of 2023 These are the people who
    made the world worse this year—plus a few who fought the good fight.

    1. He said the only thing that can stop a shooter is more guns.

    Just one week after the tragic Sandy Hook elementary school shooting in
    2012, LaPierre insisted that there was no point in trying to pass
    restrictions on gun access. “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a
    gun is a good guy with a gun,” he said.

    2. He said gun restrictions won’t stop school shootings.

    “We can’t lose precious time debating legislation that won’t work,” he
    said in his post-Sandy Hook speech. “I call on Congress today to act immediately to appropriate whatever is necessary to put armed officers in
    every single school in this nation.”

    But as the country saw almost a decade later, the presence of police
    officers on campus did not prevent the shootings in Parkland, Florida, or Uvalde, Texas.

    3. He said women are only free if they can own a gun.

    During the 2016 presidential campaign, LaPierre said that Hillary Clinton didn’t actually care about women because she supported gun control laws.

    “All of America’s women, you aren’t free if you aren’t free to defend yourself,” he said. “If President Obama, Hillary Clinton or anyone else
    denies you that right, they don’t really care about you at all.”

    4. He said guns are necessary because “Latin American gangs” have taken
    over the U.S.

    In a 2013 op-ed for The Daily Caller, widely criticized for its racist undertones, LaPierre justified gun rights on the premise that “Latin
    American drug gangs have invaded every city of significant size in the
    United States.”

    Blaming Latin American immigrants, or gangs, was a popular talking point
    for LaPierre. In 2018, just a week after the Parkland shooting, LaPierre
    fully embraced xenophobia as he accused Democrats of passing ineffective
    laws.

    “Their laws don’t stop illegal criminals from crossing our borders every
    single day,” he said, as if gun control was thus completely unnecessary.

    5. He did not see the irony of his own words.

    “It should not be easier for a madman to shoot up a school than a bank or
    a jewelry store of some Hollywood gala,” LaPierre said during that 2018
    speech, not seeming to realize he had just advocated for gun control.

    6. He pushed antisemitic conspiracy theories.

    In the same speech, LaPierre fell back on a favorite Republican talking
    point: blaming prominent Jewish people for the world’s problems. He
    claimed that socialism was on the rise in the U.S. thanks to “the social engineering and the billions of people like George Soros and Michael Bloomberg.”

    7. He said all pro-gun control politicians should be afraid to go to bed
    at night.

    The NRA’s annual 2023 convention took place in April, on the anniversary
    of one of the deadliest mass shootings in the city’s history and just
    weeks after two major mass shootings in Nashville, Tennessee, and
    Louisville, Kentucky.

    During his speech, LaPierre issued a casual threat. “Gun-hating
    politicians should never go to bed unafraid of what this association and
    all of our millions of members can do to their political careers,” he said
    to cheers from the crowd.

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