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On Fri, 22 Sep 2000 15:08:18 EDT, [EMAIL PROTECTED]  wrote:

To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Fwd: The Coming UN Gun Ban
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 22 Sep 2000 15:08:18 EDT



To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: The Coming UN Gun Ban
From: The Republican <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2000 16:29:49 -0500




The Coming UN Gun Ban

FrontPageMagazine.com
September 19, 2000


http://www.frontpagemag.com/archives/gun_rights/metaksa09-19-00.htm

HOW MANY AMERICANS living in America read the International Herald Tribune?
My guess is not many and even fewer gun-owning citizens. Yet, on January
26th of this year an article authored by Mark Malloch Brown and Janyantha
Dhanapala was required reading for American gun owners and those who
believe in our national sovereignty. The point of view they expressed will
surely affect Americans' Second Amendment rights in the years to come.

The title of the article was, "Let's Go Out Into the World and Gather Up
Small Arms." The authors are both employees of the United Nations. Mark
Malloch Brown is the administrator of the United Nations Development
Program and Janyantha Dhanapala is the UN undersecretary-general for
disarmament affairs: two influential people prominent in the global gun ban
movement.

The article tells the story of how the UN Department for Disarmament
Affairs visited Gramsh, Albania to "help broker an agreement by which
community services would be delivered in proportion to the volume of arms
and ammunition turned in." In other words until the citizens of Gramsh
turned in their firearms, medical services and other essential services
would be withheld by the great humanitarian organization, the United
Nations.

Brown and Dhanapala call for, among other items, destroying surplus,
confiscated or collected small arms, legislation to monitor, trace, and
police legal arms transfers, and international guidelines for tracing
weapons and ammunition through serial numbers and transit guidelines.

If anyone thinks that Brown and Dhanapala are just whistling in the wind,
they better think again. Next year the UN is convening its first
international conference on the "illicit" trade in small arms and light
weapons - a watershed event. As I mentioned in my last week's article on
FrontPageMagazine.com, ("Global Gun Grab," 9/13/00) the United Nations has
been slowly and steadily working towards this international conference
since 1995.

A very large group of non-governmental organizations (NGO) are supporting
these UN employees and diplomats in their effort to ban guns across the
globe. Most of these organizations have worked in the disarmament movement
for years and learned their political lessons in the successful effort to
get a United Nations treaty that bans land mines. Although the United
States has yet to ratify the land mine treaty, most of the other nations
are signatories.

Most of these NGOs get their funding from organizations, foundations, and
other groups that would be considered politically to the extreme left of
center. They are a cohesive group which has been meeting together regularly
for years and have developed a well-connected and well-funded network,
which tends to meet most often in conjunction with UN workshops on
disarmament and small arms at various venues.

Additionally, there is a US small arms working group (USSAWG), which
includes such anti-firearms notables as Michael Bears of the Coalition to
Stop Gun Violence, Tamar Gabelnick of the left-wing Federation of American
Scientists, and Natalie Goldring or some other designee of the British
American Security Information Council (BASIC). I have copies of notes from
several meetings of the USSAWG detailing the incestuous relationship these
groups have not only with UN personnel, but also with national government
officials across the globe.

The anti-firearms NGO's and other informal groups are supported by
governments such as Canada, Belgium, and Japan. For example, according to
the notes a meeting of the USSAWG was held in Canada "with support from the
Canadian Ministry of Foreign Affairs." A BASIC press briefing held in
Washington featured Joost Hiltermann, an Organization of American States
(OAS) official and the South African Ambassador.

According to meeting notes of a June 1998 meeting of these groups, the UN
Group of Governmental Experts on Small Arms "requested a meeting with a
number of NGOs to discuss the next stage of the process." The meeting was
held at the Quaker United Nations Office and representatives from BASIC,
Federation of American Scientists, and Center for Defense Information
attended. Although the National Rifle Association's Institute for
Legislative Action (NRA/ILA) was an accredited NGO, all requests for a
meeting with the UN Group had been denied.

It is evident that even as early as 1998 the US NGO anti-firearms community
was hard at work drafting strategy to include more and more like-minded
organizations in their push for global gun control. They were making
overtures to the World Council of Churches, the Arias Foundation, Human
Rights Watch, and Amnesty International and inviting their representatives
to meet and discuss tactics.

This careful planning behind closed doors had an ultimate goal: the
creation of a huge umbrella group to coordinate the international global
gun-control efforts in support of the UN conference in 2001. The leading
anti-firearms and peace operatives across the globe met in Brussels,
Belgium in October 1998 to develop the ground work, an international
network with leadership and staff dedicated to this one issue: elimination
of the private ownership of small arms across the globe. Maybe we all
should read the International Herald Tribune - our rights are in the
balance.



Tanya K. Metaksa is the former executive director of the National Rifle
Association's Institute for Legislative Action. She is the author of Safe,
Not Sorry, a self-protection manual, published in 1997. She has appeared on
numerous talk and interview shows such as "Crossfire," the "Today" show,
"Nightline," "This Week with David Brinkley" and the "McNeil-Lehrer Hour,"
among others.



[Forwarded For Information Purposes Only - Not
Necessarily Endorsed By The Sender - A.K. Pritchard]

------------------------------

A.K. Pritchard
http://www.ideasign.com/chiliast/
http://rosie.acmecity.com/songfest/189/

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"The laws that forbid the carrying of arms...disarm
only those who are neither inclined nor determined
to commit crimes. Can it be supposed that those who
have the courage to violate the most sacred laws of
humanity...will respect the less important and arbitrary
ones... Such laws make things worse for the assaulted
and better for the assailants, they serve rather to
encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed
man may be attacked with greater confidence than an
armed man."

Cesare Beccaria's "On Crimes and Punishment",  1764,

translated by Jefferson and copied into his  "Commonplace
Book" of  great quotations.


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chas
get your neighbors and family registered - deadline Oct 10.
             then get them to the polls!
Register To Vote or Register Your Firearms; It's YOUR Choice!
      A VOTE FOR ANYONE BUT BUSH IS A VOTE FOR GORE.
Charles L Hamilton    Houston, TX   email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
X-No-Archive: Yes

Please keep replies trimmed. That includes that annoying advertisement above - chas



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