WELCOME to the debut of “The Truth Is!”, a blog of reporting and commentary that aims to be informative, thoughtful and provocative. At least initially, the blog will have a strong heartland flavor by virtue of the connection of a number of us to Cowles family journalism. I am former editor of the Des Moines Register’s opinion pages. Another contributor, Michael Gartner, is former editor of the paper; he later served as president of NBC News. Another former Register editor who has agreed to contribute, Geneva Overholser, is director of the University of Southern California’s Annenberg school of journalism. Followers of the blog will have access also to the work of Herbert Strentz of Des Moines, a close Register and other newspaper watcher who once headed Drake University’s journalism school. Bill Leonard, a longtime Register editorial writer, will add insights.

“The Truth Is!” will be supervised by my daughter, Marcia Wolff, a communications lawyer for 20 years with Arnold and Porter (Washington, D.C.). Invaluable technical assistance in assembling and maintaining the blog is provided by my grandsons Julian Cranberg, a college first-year, and Daniel Wolff, a high school senior.

If you detect a whiff of nepotism in this operation, so be it. All of it is strictly a labor of love. —Gil Cranberg

Sunday, December 23, 2012

Gilbert Cranberg: DOES NRA HAVE GUN CONTROL UP ITS SLEEVE?


Wayne LaPierre, the National Rifle Association’s chief executive, painted a scary picture of life in the United States at his December 21 press conference. In his apocalyptic view, the country is crawling with “an unknown number of genuine monsters – people so deranged, so evil, so possessed by voices and driven by demons that no sane person can possibly ever comprehend them.”

Sound like the warm-up to an NRA plea for improved mental-health services? Rather, it was the prelude to LaPierre’s pitch for his proposal for armed guards in every one of the nation’s 99,000 schools.

The NRA executive did not explain whether his guns-in-schools plan was intended to deter monsters in our midst from entering school houses or to outgun them once they arrive. If deterrence is the objective, putting armed guards in schools may have the opposite effect. People as deranged as LaPierre pictured are beyond reason, and thus deterrence. Those who are suicidal could well be drawn to schools with armed guards as a way to end their lives. Suicidal nuts trading gunfire in schoolhouses is the last thing the country needs.

LaPierre’s press conference obviously was not intended to make the case for gun control. But that was what he inadvertently succeeded in doing. His graphic description of real-life “monsters” was highly effective. The description amounts to a compelling reason for assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition clips to be kept from the people LaPierre so vividly portrayed.

His proposal to post armed guards in classrooms is a ludicrously feeble response to his own description of the problem. For starters, it does nothing to protect the multitudes who gather in crowds beyond schoolhouses.  The NRA proposal is so unrealistic and falls so far short of the nation’s public safety needs it forces me to wonder if the organization, if only to save face, has up its sleeve a gun-control measure with teeth. It better have.