The NRA evolved from backing a 1934 ban on machine guns to blocking nearly all firearm restrictions today.
By Robert Spitzer, The Conversation
The mass shootings at a Buffalo, New York, supermarket and an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, just 10 days apart, are stirring the now-familiar national debate over guns seen after the tragic 2012 and 2018 school shootings in Newtown, Connecticut, and Parkland, Florida.
Inevitably, if also understandably, many Americans are blaming the National Rifle Association for thwarting stronger gun laws that might have prevented these two recent tragedies and many others. And despite the proximity in time and location to the Texas shooting, the NRA is proceeding with its plans to hold its annual convention in Houston on May 27-29, 2022. The featured speakers include former President Donald Trump and Sen. Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican.

After spending decades researching and writing about how and why the NRA came to hold such sway over national gun policies, I’ve seen this narrative take unexpected turns in the last few years that raise new questions about the organization’s reputation for invincibility.
Recent Posts
Trump’s Concentration Camp Build-Out Includes Nearly $40 Billion for Warehouse Conversions
February 14, 2026
Take Action Now “Germany’s concentration camps didn’t start as instruments of mass murder, and neither have ours,” wrote talk show host Thom…
Everyone Is Allowed To Protest
February 13, 2026
Take Action Now Tied up with the apparently very longstanding tradition of claiming that all opponents of atrocities are purely engaged in what has…
Abolition Is Still The Only Way Out Of This
February 13, 2026
Take Action Now Forget the useless so-called “reforms” to ICE and policing currently on offer. We need much more fundamental change.By Andrea J.…
Leading Papers Call For Destroying Iran To Save It
February 11, 2026
Take Action Now The opinion pages of the New York Times and Washington Post are offering facile humanitarian arguments for the US to escalate its…




