Associated Press Displays Anti-Rights Credentials

Associated Press reported that on Sunday, a Mount Rainier National Park ranger was murdered by a man whom authorities suspect had earlier shot four people at a house party near Seattle.

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The story’s fairly well written until the conclusion, which is where writers place the message they want readers to take with. After writing about how sad this situation is — and it is — AP wrote:

It has been legal for people to take loaded firearms into Mount Rainier since 2010, when a federal law went into effect that made possession of firearms in national parks subject to state gun laws.

Gun banners 101: Work up the emotions and insert the anti-gun message to get people motivated to do something.

As if somebody committing murder — a capital crime resulting in death or a life sentence — cares about a niggling misdemeanor or low-level felony like a gun ban?

Tacoma News Tribune mirrored the AP message in their lede, except when they interviewed George Coulbourn, a park volunteer who’s against guns in parks, who admitted:

If guns had been prohibited at the park, it doesn’t sound like that would have any effect on this. This is murder.

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“I don’t think that has any bearing on this. When you have someone who would spontaneously kill someone, a prohibition of guns in the park wouldn’t stop someone like that.

Regarding park carry, Coulburn also said: “If you’re not comfortable visiting the park because of animals, you don’t belong there.”

Curiously, News Tribune ran a story a few weeks back where a woman died in an “animal attack, possibly a wolf attack.”

Grades: News Tribune, C; AP, F.

There’s a world of difference between gun nut paranoia and reality. Media fails in its duty by creating news instead of reporting it.

(Brady misreports, too.)

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