NRA goes nontraditional

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New member
NRA goes nontraditional
The group's likely 2nd female president plans to focus on self-defense
By RACHEL GRAVES
Copyright 2005 Houston Chronicle

Now the first vice president of the National Rifle Association, Froman is expected to be named president after the group's annual convention in Houston.

Perhaps the most enduring image of the National Rifle Association is Charlton Heston, brandishing a rifle above his head, stirring the crowd with his oft-repeated, "From my cold, dead hands!"


It is a tough act to follow.

Sandra S. Froman, the NRA's first vice president, is expected to be elected president by the NRA's board of directors on Monday, after the group's annual convention, which begins Friday in Houston.

She will not be trying to outdo the man who played Moses.

"Every president of NRA brings to the office their own skills, their own personality," Froman said Tuesday, shortly after arriving in Houston to prepare for the convention.

Heston, suffering from Alzheimer's, stepped down in 2003 after five years as a dynamic head of the organization.

"He was charismatic, well-known, I mean, a movie star," said one of the NRA's harshest critics, Peter Hamm, a spokesman for The Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. "He served the organization's wrong-headed goals well."

Kayne Robinson, who became president immediately after Heston, leaves office next week after a quiet and brief tenure.

Froman plans to use the position to emphasize women's issues, especially self-defense.

"Being a woman and a nontraditional, if you will, president of NRA, may bring some attention to the organization," said Froman, who will be the group's second female president.

The first was Marion Hammer, who was elected in 1996.

While Heston spent a career in front of cameras, Froman is a novice in the media spotlight.

She carefully chose a chair facing away from a window so that she would not be distracted during an interview Tuesday.

"It's new to me," she said. "It's not something that I've had a lot of experience with, but I'll do whatever the job requires."

Froman, a lawyer who lives in Arizona, bought her first gun about 20 years ago, after someone tried to break into her home in Los Angeles.

Froman was going through a divorce and living alone at the time.

She was just falling asleep when she heard a noise downstairs and went to investigate.

"I looked out of the little peephole of my front door, and there was a man with a screwdriver," she recalled.

She banged on the door to try to scare him away and called the police. Eventually the man left.

"The next day I went to a gun store," Froman said.

She took gun safety classes, tried shooting several types of guns and, a few weeks later, bought a .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol.

"It was a serious gun," Froman said.

She now hunts, shoots competitively and has guns for self-defense. Froman did not want to give exact numbers, but said she owns pistols, rifles and shotguns.

"What do they say? I have more guns than I need and less guns than I want."

Froman's second husband, who was a special agent supervisor with the California Department of Justice and an NRA supporter, died in 1995.

"I honor his memory by serving in the NRA," she said.

Not even elected yet, Froman has already attracted her first criticism.

Shortly after the Minnesota school shootings, she said, "I'm not saying that that means every teacher should have a gun or not, but what I am saying is we need to look at all the options at what will truly protect the students."

NRA Chief Executive Officer Wayne LaPierre clarified the following week that the NRA is not advocating arming teachers and supports the federal law that bars most guns from schools.

On Tuesday, Froman seemed to retreat from her initial comments.

"The only people that ought to have firearms in the schools are law enforcement and trained security personnel," she said.

Froman, who did not grow up in a family of hunters, is a recent convert to the taste of game.

Her kitchen is stocked with deer salami from a Missouri hunting trip, and she is perfecting a posole recipe made with a javelina she shot in Arizona.

She is hoping to find a game cookbook at the convention this week to expand her repertoire.

"I really enjoy eating the animal that I shot," she said.

rachel.graves@chron.com

MB Comment - Why, thank you, Mr. LaPierre and Mrs. Froman! :barf:
 
I would be very happy with her as NRA pres.

From your comment I guess you didnt like that they seemed to retract a previous statement that implied they were in favor of armed teachers in schools. This again, as I have posted many times, is politics. The NRA can't afford to be seen any more as a bunch of fringe wackos.

And on the armed teacher subject, the teachers I know are morons and I would certainly not trust them with weapons in a situation where the chips are down. I doubt that training would fix this as behavior during such situations can be governed by innate qualities such as character.

There are all kinds of good arguments on all sides, but the bottom line is Froman would be a good NRA pres. :)
 
And on the armed teacher subject, the teachers I know are morons and I would certainly not trust them with weapons in a situation where the chips are down. I doubt that training would fix this as behavior during such situations can be governed by innate qualities such as character.

That's not really a fair statement. I know law enforcement that I could say the same thing about, but that doesn't mean all or even most are like that. Most of those who would not handle a gun well, will shy away from carrying one daily.

I agree that the NRA has to strike a balance between what they really want to say, and what will help them further the agenda.
 
And on the armed teacher subject, the teachers I know are morons and I would certainly not trust them with weapons in a situation where the chips are down. I doubt that training would fix this as behavior during such situations can be governed by innate qualities such as character.

Quite a sweeping statement. Care to expand on it and give some specifics, or shall I just assume that you still resent the time your middle school math teacher wouldn't let you use the hall pass?
 
"What do they say? I have more guns than I need and less guns than I want."

Amen.

On the guns in clasrooms, if they can legally carry, they should be able to legally carry in school.
 
I was referring to the teachers I KNOW, not ones I knew. But I live in the middle of a buckteef zone.

Example: Inability to follow simple sequence of directions. :rolleyes:
 
And on the armed teacher subject, the teachers I know are morons and I would certainly not trust them with weapons in a situation where the chips are down. I doubt that training would fix this as behavior during such situations can be governed by innate qualities such as character.

So, you trust them to be with your children 8 hours a day, but you don't trust them with a gun? Can they carry guns outside of school, then? Mind you, arming teachers worked as a solution to school shootings where I live, which is in Israel. Repealing the Gun Free Schools Act is a Second-amendment-friendly solution, too.
 
Sandy Froman's second husband was the late Bruce Nelson.She is one of the most dedicated defenders of the Second Amendment around today.She rose through the ranks of the NRA and is one of the true supporters of grassroots activism.Sandy is brilliant and articulate and may become one of the best presidents the NRA has ever had. I believe her term will be the best thing that has happened to the NRA in a long time. Oh yeah, she is one hell of a shot with just about any firearm around.
 
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The NRA shouldn't have backed off....

The NRA should not have backed off the suggestion that allowing teachers to arm themselves was a viable school security teacher.

To be frank, most Americans might be a bit uncomfortable with allowing teachers who have CCW's to carry guns but they do not think that people who advocate that position are nutjobs. Those who do think that people who want to empower teachers to save their own lives and the lives of their students already loathe the NRA so nothing is lost in irritating them a bit more.

The bonus though, is that putting the armed teacher position out there will give it time to build into a viable counter argument to more gun control. Every time someone hears the argument seriously discussed, by implication they are also hearing the concept of armed self defense discussed seriously as well. Thus, the public can see civilian gun use as a solution as well as a "cause" of crime.

What is more, if one advocates the arming of teachers and your law is blocked at least you tried to save lives. If another school shooting occurs and the anti-gunners start lying and blaming the NRA, then at least the NRA 'can wave the bloody shirt' and truthfully blame the Brady Campaign for their obstructionist tactics which kept guns out of the hands of honest teachers. Its nice but the anti-gunners would have started it and the pro-gunners would merely be finishing it.

The NRA should never start the blame game as any pro-gun use of blaming should only be retaliatory. If the anti-gunners actually (for once) refrain from distorting the facts and treading to political victory over the corpses of kids then the NRA should not do so either.

Let's see how they like being blamed for the actions of criminals. It could be time to put the the shoe on the other foot.

Furthermore, the NRA should also advocate beter training for teachers and school counselors to prevent bullying (one of the chief causes of school shootings). Merely detecting suicidial/homicidal kids is a bankrupt strategy. Merely shooting them after they've already killed a few people is also pretty lousy.

It is far beter to prevent such kids from ever getting in the mindset that their life is so terrible that all they have left to do is kill their tormentors and then themselves.
 
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