NRA disrespectful of everyone on phone call after Columbine
The victims:
NRA OFFICIAL KAYNE ROBINSON: Is there something concrete that we can offer? Not because guns are responsible, but because we care about these people? Is there anything? ... Does that look crass or ...
NRA LOBBYIST JIM BAKER: You mean the legislative?
ROBINSON: No, I'm talking about something concrete ...
PR CONSULTANT TONY MAKRIS: Like a victims fund ...
ROBINSON: Yeah, we create a victims fund, and we, uh, we give the victims a million dollars or something like that, uh. ... Does that look bad, or does it look uh ...
MAKRIS: Well, I mean, that can be twisted too. I mean, why ... why are you giving money? You feel responsible?
BAKER: No. ... Well, you're — true. It can be twisted, but we feel sympathetic and ...
NRA SPOKESPERSON BILL POWERS: Respectful.
The members:
Talking about how to run the NRA's annual meeting in Denver
"At that same period where they're going to be burying these children, we're going to be having media ... trying to run through the exhibit hall, looking at kids fondling firearms, which is going to be a horrible, horrible, horrible juxtaposition," says NRA lobbyist Jim Baker on the conference call.
"You know, the other problem is holding a member meeting without an exhibit hall. The people you are most likely to get in that member meeting without an exhibit hall are the nuts," says LaPierre.
"Made that point earlier. I agree," says Makris. "The fruitcakes are going to show up."
Says Hammer: "If you pull down the exhibit hall, that's not going to leave anything for the media except the members meeting, and you're going to have the wackos ... with all kinds of crazy resolutions, with all kinds of, of dressing like a bunch of hillbillies and idiots. And, and it's gonna, it's gonna be the worst thing you can imagine."
Bush senior:
After Oklahoma City bombing, which targeted the ATF a week after the NRA put out a fundraising letter calling the ATF "jackbooted government thugs,":
"What we're trying to avoid here, I think, is what happened after the Oklahoma City bombing," says PR adviser McQueen. "When we lost control of a situation and the result was a half a million members, the president of the United States bailing out on us and a firestorm of negative media that if you went back and looked at, it was probably in the hundreds of millions of dollars in opposition to us and our point of view."
"And I think this will be worse," responds Baker.
Arms industry:
MAKRIS: Jim, let me ask you a question. ... What's the industry going to do?
BAKER: I think the industry will do whatever we ask them to do.
LAPIERRE: Do you think they have a preference, Jim? Is there anybody we ought to be talking to?
BAKER: I talked to Delfay this morning, and he said they stand ready to help us orchestrate whatever we want to do. They're just waiting to know.
Robert Delfay was the head of an industry trade group.
Republicans(?):
"We got a call from Congressman Tancredo, who is ... as good as they get, and he's nervous as a cat on a hot tin roof," says Baker.
LaPierre claims that Senate Majority Whip Don Nickles, R-Okla., had secretly asked him for talking points to use after the shooting.
"I was talking to Nickles' office this morning, and what they told me is they're planning on sending them all to school because what they wanted us to do was secretly provide them with talking points," LaPierre says.