Ted
Nugent Owes No Apologies
Gun-grabbing politicians deserve to be target of
rocker's rant
by
J.
H. Huebert
by J. H. Huebert
DIGG THIS
Rocker Ted
Nugent has attracted attention lately with a video shot during his
recent concert at Anaheim's House of Blues.
In the video,
which has made the rounds online and on television, Nugent stands
onstage with an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle in each hand. First he
tells of his recent visit to Chicago, during which he claims he
said to Sen. Barack Obama, "Hey, Obama! You might want to suck
on one of these [guns], you punk!" Nugent adds, "Obama,
he's a piece of s---, and I told him to suck on my machine gun.
Let's hear it for him!"
Nugent then
relays details of a recent visit to New York, during which he putatively
conveyed a similar message to another Democratic presidential candidate,
Sen. Hillary Clinton: "Hey, Hillary! You might want to ride
one of these [guns]into the sunset, you worthless b----!" Then
he shares similar messages he said he was planning to deliver to
California Democratic Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer during
his concert tour of the Golden State.
In the video,
the crowd seems wholly receptive to Nugent's ideas. He knows his
audience, and no doubt reasonably expected that people who like
to hear him sing "Wang Dang Sweet Poontang" and watch
him make a guitar explode by shooting it with a flaming arrow would
also appreciate the form and content of his political message.
Once the video
of Nugent's antics hit the Internet, the reaction from the Left
was predictable. A Rolling Stone blog headline was typical, gasping:
"Ted Nugent Threatens to Kill Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton
During Vicious Onstage Rant!" Nugent was scolded from the right,
too. Guest-hosting Fox News' "The O'Reilly Factor," former
congressman John Kasich told Nugent that such comments should be
"out of bounds." The problem with politics today, said
Kasich, is that it's "being ruined because people are being
polarized because of the personal attacks and innuendoes being labeled
at people (sic)."
What nonsense!
Personal attacks
and innuendo are the least of our political problems. Certainly
our leaders' character and behavior have not entitled them to better
treatment than they get (which is usually fawning, anyway, especially
from TV hosts).
The real problem
is one that Nugent and his audience apparently understand: Politicians
such as Obama, Clinton, Feinstein and Boxer presume to run our lives
from Washington. Specifically, and not coincidentally, all four
of Nugent's rhetorical targets are egregious offenders against the
critically important right to keep and bear arms.
In his bestselling
book, Obama specifically advocates "keeping guns out of the
inner cities." Presumably this means he favors gun bans like
that of his hometown, Chicago, where crime victims are prohibited
from protecting themselves, giving criminals even more confidence
that they won't meet armed resistance. Hillary likewise favors increased
controls, including a desire (shared with Sen. Feinstein) to force
people to take a course and become licensed before they can exercise
their rights.
These are not
trivial points, of interest only to the kind of people who frequent
gun shows and Ted Nugent concerts; they're matters of life and death
for the thousands of people each year who use a firearm to save
their lives (often simply by brandishing it), to say nothing of
the lives that are saved in cities where there is less violent crime
simply because criminals know their would-be victims may be armed.
(Economist John Lott documents this well in his classic book, More
Guns Less Crime.)
An armed populace
is also, of course, an important means of keeping overzealous politicians
in check, which gets to the real reason why the likes of Hillary
Clinton are so afraid of them when they're in the hands of anyone
outside government.
One might observe
that these Second Amendment points are well and good, but Nugent's
vulgar tirade is far beneath the lofty ideals of our founders. And
I'll grant you that it's hard to say how American history would
have progressed if, rather than saying "Give me or liberty
or give me death!" before the Virginia House of Burgesses,
Patrick Henry had instead taken the stage at a local pub, straddled
a cannon and hurled some vintage 18th century invective at King
George.
But,
hey, that kind of stuff has its place. If Americans are ever going
to cast off their ever-more-offensive federal government, they're
going to need rabble-rousers like Ted Nugent to stir them up, not
make-nice types like John Kasich (himself a gun grabber during his
days in Congress), telling them to calm down.
So Ted Nugent
should go right on disrespectfully waving his guns in the faces
of aspiring tyrants, until the day they apologize for their
obscene attacks on our liberty.
Reprinted
from the Orange County Register with permission.
September 18, 2007
J.
H. Huebert [send him mail]
an attorney and an adjunct faculty member of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute. Visit his website.
Copyright
© 2007 Orange County Register
J.H.
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