Editor Is Fired, but Not Silenced, Over the NRA

This is how the NRA takes care of people who defy it. Hope you gun lovers are proud of how they worked to stifle free speech.

"Five days after the shootings in San Bernardino, California, Jan Larson McLaughlin sat down in her home office on her day off and wrote her weekly editorial for the Sentinel-Tribune, circulation 9,000, in Bowling Green, Ohio. McLaughlin has worked for the newspaper for 31 years, the past 2 1/2 as editor-in-chief. She usually writes her editorial in the newsroom, but this one required special care. She was taking on the National Rifle Association, and she was doing it in Ohio.

Her editorial began: "It is time for reasonable gun owners to take back control of the association that supposedly represents them. We as a nation are still mourning one mass shooting when the next occurs. Yet the NRA refuses to discuss any type of gun control, any form of background checks, any type of study that might lead to some answers. Instead, when legislators consider measures to reduce gun deaths, the NRA and its tentacle groups assign them failing grades and label them as anti-gun."

She then focused on the Buckeye Firearms Association for its "blasted criticism" of Bowling Green State University faculty members who had written to state Rep. Tim Brown asking that he not support legislation to allow concealed carry of firearms on Ohio college campuses. Brown voted for it.

The gun group used the Freedom of Information Act to obtain the list of faculty members who had written to Brown. It published their names and email addresses, singling out geology professor James Evans for special retribution by publishing his photo, too, because he called the NRA a "terrorist organization" in his email to Brown. McLaughlin described the rush of threatening emails to Evans from members of the firearms association. (Evans confirmed this in an interview Tuesday.)

After defending the faculty members, McLaughlin ended her editorial with a plea: "We've tried arming every citizen who is so inclined. It hasn't solved the problem. So let's look for other solutions, ones that reasonable gun owners can support. But that will mean responsible gun owners are first going to have to take back control of their national organization, which seems more concerned about the gun industry than the average gun owner."

Early the next morning, McLaughlin sent her editorial to Publisher Karmen Concannon, whose parents own the broadsheet, which publishes Monday through Saturday. McLaughlin also sent the editorial to three of her six staff writers. This is her practice in the small newsroom so that they can catch errors and offer criticism. McLaughlin described what happened next: That Tuesday evening, the publisher told her she had killed the editorial, with little explanation. On Wednesday, the six staff writers submitted a letter to Concannon, asking her to reconsider. She refused to read it. The next day, McLaughlin walked into the publisher's office, asking for an explanation, but Concannon said she didn't owe her one.

The following Monday morning, Concannon told McLaughlin she was fired and ordered her to surrender her keys before being escorted out of the building. She was allowed to return to the newsroom that evening to empty her desk. McLaughlin's termination letter stated that she was fired for insubordination — for doing what she always does, which is to share her editorial with staff writers. The publisher's explanation doesn't pass the straight-face test, which may be why Concannon has refused multiple requests for interviews...

You could reasonably ask, "Why should I care what happened at a small-town newspaper in Ohio?"

I suggest a different question: How often is this happening in our communities?

McLaughlin said that before she left the building, the publisher offered her a severance package. For her 31 years of service, the paper was willing to pay Jan Larson McLaughlin $5,000 — but only if she agreed not to talk about what had happened.

To the benefit of all of us, she declined.

http://www.creators.com/liberal/connie-schultz/editor-is-fired-but-not-silenced-over-the-nra.html

what a whine fest. she was fired for being an idiot. and lets not forget that you anti gun fucktards started the whole outing address thing with concealed license holders being published, so reap what you sow. I do not feel sorry for her petulant whiny ass.
 
I do too especially if we keep heading down the path of your God forsaken country. But don't worry, the muslimes will eat you last. One day you will wish you had guns. Hopefully we won't bail your limey asses out again. Nothing would please me more than to see you beheaded by ISIS militants so I can say "I told you so"
Apart from any other consideration, how exactly will you be able to tell me so if I've been beheaded? Better for you to stay in your mountain lair, I hope a bear gets you!
 
The gun nuts want to suppress discussion of this issue in the US. Yet more evidence we are living in a dictatorship lead by demagogic right wing fascists. We need a revolution to overthrow the fascists and restore order to the United States. Make America great again! Eliminate the rightsts!

Odd... do you say the same of those that wish to suppress discussion about global warming data?
 
Nobody's talking about illegal aliens with guns. It was your gang of bumbling goons who voted to let those on the terror watch list buy guns. How can you prove they're all pure as the driven snow?

Well, wouldn’t you know it? “Membership in a terrorist organization does not prohibit a person from possessing firearms or explosives under current federal law,” according to the Government Accountability Office and now a report from the federal agency finds that over 2,000 individuals on the FBI’s terrorist watch list have indeed successfully and legally purchased a firearm from 2004 to 2014.
The Washington Post highlighted the findings of the GAO’s March report in light of Friday’s terror attacks in Paris:

"Between 2004 and 2014, suspected terrorists attempted to purchase guns from American dealers at least 2,233 times. And in 2,043 of those cases — 91 percent of the time — they succeeded. There are about 700,000 people on the watch-list — a point that civil libertarians have made to underscore that many on the list may be family members or acquaintances of people with potential terrorist connections."

http://www.salon.com/2015/11/18/nra..._legally_purchased_guns_in_the_last_10_years/

For the billionth time... do you support allowing the government to eliminate a persons rights simply by putting them on a list with NO due process?
 
What specific lies and slander did she write?

Opponents of gun control often talk about President Obama wanting to take guns away from lawful owners, and although he has never proposed to do that, many gun owners continue to believe it.

Also

The gun lobby has also become more unyielding in recent years. The N.R.A. has hardened its opposition to expanded background checks, for example, and after years in which the group gave subdued responses to mass shootings, after the Newtown, Connecticut school shooting, Wayne LaPierre, the N.R.A.’s executive vice president, famously declared that school employees should have been armed, because “The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun.”

I guess you didn't read this part about about the NRA: The gun group used the Freedom of Information Act to obtain the list of faculty members who had written to Brown. It published their names and email addresses, singling out geology professor James Evans for special retribution by publishing his photo, too, because he called the NRA a "terrorist organization" in his email to Brown. McLaughlin described the rush of threatening emails to Evans from members of the firearms association. (Evans confirmed this in an interview Tuesday.)

Again I'm referencing free speech and the author's editorial, obviously her opinion.Do you think the paper was afraid to publish an opinion that may have dissented from the editor's opinion?There must be something going on with the NRA and Concannon or her parents that made them so fearful. She could have responded to public questions about the firing.

What a shabby way to treat an employee of over 30 years. Shame on them.

Is it possible that the paper's owners are gun rights advocates?
Perhaps the editor had been warned by them before?
How would the NRA even be aware of an unpublished editorial?
 
Reading the op I can only ask what was omitted for conveniance sake. I would be willing to bet there is information not presented that addresses "insubordination".
 
Where did it say the NRA fired her? And wow, this is suddenly a standard for you for the far greater of those who speak out against non-liberal objectives being fired and threatened into silence?

You don't believe in free speech, you believe in free ... liberal ... speech


That is the point I tried to get through her thick skull, but alas I was unsuccessful. I asked for proof that the NRA caused this woman to be fired and KKKhristiefan's response was "She made the claim, you prove it wrong". That is a high bar KKKhristiefan sets for believing something on the internets.

The bottom line is KKKhristiefan has been taught to hate the NRA and taught to hate gun owners, therefore she is more than willing to believe and think the worst about them.

As you pointed out, she isn't concerned about the overall concept of freedom of speech as she has applauded others being fired for exercising their free speech opposing her pet liberal projects like queer marriage. Then you don't hear a peep out of KKKhristifan about free speech. Oh now, then it is all about the market and people aren't owed a job and your employer can fire you for ANY reason.

She is a vacuous dumb broad
 
That is the point I tried to get through her thick skull, but alas I was unsuccessful. I asked for proof that the NRA caused this woman to be fired and KKKhristiefan's response was "She made the claim, you prove it wrong". That is a high bar KKKhristiefan sets for believing something on the internets.

The bottom line is KKKhristiefan has been taught to hate the NRA and taught to hate gun owners, therefore she is more than willing to believe and think the worst about them.

As you pointed out, she isn't concerned about the overall concept of freedom of speech as she has applauded others being fired for exercising their free speech opposing her pet liberal projects like queer marriage. Then you don't hear a peep out of KKKhristifan about free speech. Oh now, then it is all about the market and people aren't owed a job and your employer can fire you for ANY reason.

She is a vacuous dumb broad

Certainly these standards never come out from her ever except on behalf of liberals
 
This is how the NRA takes care of people who defy it. Hope you gun lovers are proud of how they worked to stifle free speech.

"Five days after the shootings in San Bernardino, California, Jan Larson McLaughlin sat down in her home office on her day off and wrote her weekly editorial for the Sentinel-Tribune, circulation 9,000, in Bowling Green, Ohio. McLaughlin has worked for the newspaper for 31 years, the past 2 1/2 as editor-in-chief. She usually writes her editorial in the newsroom, but this one required special care. She was taking on the National Rifle Association, and she was doing it in Ohio.

Her editorial began: "It is time for reasonable gun owners to take back control of the association that supposedly represents them. We as a nation are still mourning one mass shooting when the next occurs. Yet the NRA refuses to discuss any type of gun control, any form of background checks, any type of study that might lead to some answers. Instead, when legislators consider measures to reduce gun deaths, the NRA and its tentacle groups assign them failing grades and label them as anti-gun."

She then focused on the Buckeye Firearms Association for its "blasted criticism" of Bowling Green State University faculty members who had written to state Rep. Tim Brown asking that he not support legislation to allow concealed carry of firearms on Ohio college campuses. Brown voted for it.

The gun group used the Freedom of Information Act to obtain the list of faculty members who had written to Brown. It published their names and email addresses, singling out geology professor James Evans for special retribution by publishing his photo, too, because he called the NRA a "terrorist organization" in his email to Brown. McLaughlin described the rush of threatening emails to Evans from members of the firearms association. (Evans confirmed this in an interview Tuesday.)

After defending the faculty members, McLaughlin ended her editorial with a plea: "We've tried arming every citizen who is so inclined. It hasn't solved the problem. So let's look for other solutions, ones that reasonable gun owners can support. But that will mean responsible gun owners are first going to have to take back control of their national organization, which seems more concerned about the gun industry than the average gun owner."

Early the next morning, McLaughlin sent her editorial to Publisher Karmen Concannon, whose parents own the broadsheet, which publishes Monday through Saturday. McLaughlin also sent the editorial to three of her six staff writers. This is her practice in the small newsroom so that they can catch errors and offer criticism. McLaughlin described what happened next: That Tuesday evening, the publisher told her she had killed the editorial, with little explanation. On Wednesday, the six staff writers submitted a letter to Concannon, asking her to reconsider. She refused to read it. The next day, McLaughlin walked into the publisher's office, asking for an explanation, but Concannon said she didn't owe her one.

The following Monday morning, Concannon told McLaughlin she was fired and ordered her to surrender her keys before being escorted out of the building. She was allowed to return to the newsroom that evening to empty her desk. McLaughlin's termination letter stated that she was fired for insubordination — for doing what she always does, which is to share her editorial with staff writers. The publisher's explanation doesn't pass the straight-face test, which may be why Concannon has refused multiple requests for interviews...

You could reasonably ask, "Why should I care what happened at a small-town newspaper in Ohio?"

I suggest a different question: How often is this happening in our communities?

McLaughlin said that before she left the building, the publisher offered her a severance package. For her 31 years of service, the paper was willing to pay Jan Larson McLaughlin $5,000 — but only if she agreed not to talk about what had happened.

To the benefit of all of us, she declined.

http://www.creators.com/liberal/connie-schultz/editor-is-fired-but-not-silenced-over-the-nra.html

Good for her not taking the money! There is starting to be a backlash over this on social media, interesting to see what happens, although it seems Concannon isn't willing to defend her actions.
 
Good for her not taking the money! There is starting to be a backlash over this on social media, interesting to see what happens, although it seems Concannon isn't willing to defend her actions.

She was fired for insubordination, no where was there any evidence anyone but her bosses fired her for that reason. She was heavily biased left, how do you know it wasn't just insubordination?
 
She was fired for insubordination, no where was there any evidence anyone but her bosses fired her for that reason. She was heavily biased left, how do you know it wasn't just insubordination?

Editors always share their editorials with the staff, the charge of insubordination is laughable, she didn't even publish the article, it is ridiculous.
 
Editors always share their editorials with the staff, the charge of insubordination is laughable, she didn't even publish the article, it is ridiculous.

They always do? Is this declaration based on your extensive journalism experience across the country or did you pull it out of your ass?

And still no proof that the NRA got her fired as your buddy KKKhristiefan claimed
 
Back
Top