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July 6, 2022

I woke up Tuesday morning to hear folks on a local (ostensibly conservative) radio show absolutely gushing over how “awesomely cool” it was that Lee Greenwood had made a surprise appearance at an Independence Day celebration Saturday, July 2, at Kansas City’s Liberty Memorial (also home to the National WWI Museum), and of course had performed his signature song, “God Bless the U.S.A.”

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Apparently, the crowd ate it up. They either lack my sensibilities or they have short memories.

I remember how I used to feel a thrill and tears would well up in my eyes whenever I heard that song. But I was cured of those feelings back in late May. That was when, days after the unspeakable horror of the mass shooting in Uvalde, Texas, on May 24, Greenwood, along with fellow Country Music artists Don McLean and Larry Gatlin and others, decided to virtue-signal by announcing they were backing out of their scheduled appearances to perform at the National Rifle Association’s convention in Houston on Memorial Day.

Greenwood even appeared in numerous interviews, explaining how he could not in good conscience perform at the convention, because to do so would be construed as an “endorsement” of the AR-15 rifle; he said his appearance would be seen as a statement that “I like this weapon. And obviously, that weapon killed kids.”

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The singer, who has partnered with a major fireworks company to use his name to promote sales of its brand of pyrotechnics, continues to sing the line “And I’d gladly stand up next to you and defend her still today, ‘cause there ain’t no doubt I love this land—God bless the U.S.A.!” Presumably he would not be standing up and defending his beloved U.S.A. with an AR-15 (and perhaps any other rifle) in his hands, because, after all, “that weapon killed kids.” He’s OK with fireworks, but not with firearms.

Along with the other drop-outs, Greenwood claims to be a big supporter of the Second Amendment. But apparently, these guys are not such ardent supporters of the NRA. Yet the NRA is one of the staunchest defenders of the Second Amendment against those who would exploit tragedies like that in Uvalde to advance their agenda of further infringing on American citizens’ God-given right to keep and bear arms and to undermine and even do away with the Second Amendment, and ultimately to disarm the American citizenry.

A major way tragedies such as those in Uvalde are exploited as part of that nefarious agenda is to blame and condemn the instrument, in this case, the AR-15. And Lee Greenwood has jumped on that bandwagon.

Image: Lee Greenwood. YouTube screen grab.

I happen to be a Life Member of the NRA. If I have any beef with the NRA, it’s that the organization’s positions actually tend to be a bit more liberal than I care for. For example, instead of answering the gun-grabbers’ claim that the Second Amendment was never intended to protect citizens’ rights to keep and bear “weapons of war,” the NRA argues that, technically, the AR-15 is not a military weapon. I wish the NRA would take the offensive and educate people that military weapons are precisely the type of arms to which the Second Amendment refers.

This was expressed best by Tench Coxe (1755-1824), one of our lesser-known Founders, a political economist and a delegate from Pennsylvania to the Constitutional Convention. His remarks about the Right to Keep and Bear Arms are eminently worthy of inclusion in an American History curriculum if such a curriculum were to ever return to being taught in American public schools (“Gender Studies” and “Drag Queen Story Hour” might have to be jettisoned to make room for American History to be taught again).

Firm in his assertion that “the militia” is neither law enforcement nor the military but rather is “ourselves,” and that “The unlimited power of the sword is not in the hands of either the federal or state governments, but where I trust in God it will ever remain, in the hands of the people,” Coxe added that Congress possessed “no power to disarm the militia,” and that no clause in the federal or state constitution conferred such power.