The upcoming January 6 hearings are not the only subjects being unnecessarily dragged on and on by the liberal media. On Thursday’s edition of Morning Joe, viewers had the privilege of seeing Scarborough and friends once again continue ranting about the GOP as monsters unmoved by children killed in mass shootings.
When reacting to Congressman and assassination attempt survivor Steve Scalise’s (R-LA) speech about gun control, where he compared banning guns to banning airplanes after 9/11, the show’s hosts acted absolutely appalled; with Mika Brzezinski commenting that it was “unspeakably stupid.”
NBC host Willie Geist took a swing at the Congressman’s comparison by saying “So we’ve heard prairie dogs and we’ve heard varmints and we’ve heard feral pigs and we’ve heard what about Hunter Biden and now we have well why didn’t we ban planes after 9/11?”
Geist was a little out of touch with America’s prairie dogs and feral animals, which shows his insensitivity to certain areas. For some Americans guns are essential for everyday life.
And of course, the show’s namesake, host Joe Scarborough said his unnecessary piece because the show clearly wouldn’t be complete without it.
He went off on firearm case law, claiming that these Republicans “don’t understand the law behind the Second Amendment”, and “you look at the Second Amendment as in interpreted by Heller, you basically have Scalia and the rest of the Court saying you have a right to keep a handgun in your house and a shotgun. That’s basically what it says.”
He further ranted that watching people who don’t understand the Second Amendment is “like a dialogue out of ‘Dumb and Dumber.’”
Since we’re throwing around case law and all. It is true that the 2008 Heller case is an important Second Amendment case, but it appears Joe forgot about another consequential case: United States v. Miller of 1939. This 20Th century case found that a sawed-off shotgun was illegal to own because it didn’t have a proper function within a well-regulated militia.
Scarborough then circled back to Congressmen Scalise’s 9/11 comparison attempting to throw TSA regulations in his face. “TSA regulated the hell out of air travel,” Scarborough exclaimed, “You would get checked at the gate. Like, you had to get patted down. You’re still getting patted down. Liquids — Mika and I just traveled. Liquids taken out.”
Joe. Gun reform and the aftermath of 9-11 are two completely different things. It is widely accepted that those TSA “pat-downs” are mostly theatrics. TSA also fails to detect most prohibited items when they are tested.
It’s too early host Jonathan Lemire joined in on the conversation by calling the excuses a “fog machine, just trying to deflect, trying to distract.” He further said that no one wants to ban guns despite multiple Democratic politicians saying that’s what they hope to do.
Scarborough agreed with Lemire and told the story Morning Joe staple Mike Barnacle that “it’s just one lie after another lie after another lie.” And that “they just, like idiots, repeat the words given to them by the NRA.”
Even further, he pushed for universal background screenings. Meanwhile, background checks already exist. They even cover online gun sales and purchases!
These people always give the same message to viewers: Republicans equal bad and Republicans equal evil. This spiel can be repeated three times over. You can be sure that Americans have more important things to do with their time than listening to these endless rants.
Walmart and Liberty Mutual were able to make this media bias example.
For the entire transcript click on ‘expand.
MSNBC’s Morning Joe
6/9/2022
Eastern at 6:44:25(…)
WILLIEGEIST: What’s the best place to start? Next week –
[Cross talk]
JOE SCARBOROUGH: Where to begin? My God! I don’t know where to start.
GEIST: 5 years next week Joe, Scalise was critically injured, almost died in a mass shooting during practice for the congressional baseball game. So we’ve heard prairie dogs and we’ve heard varmints and we’ve heard feral pigs and we’ve heard what about Hunter Biden and now we have well why didn’t we ban planes after 9/11?
SCARBOROUGH, Where is he now?
MIKA BRZEZINSKI: This is unspeakably stupid.
SCARBOROUGH: You know, this really is. For people who really aren’t familiar with constitutional law and they don’t understand the law behind the Second Amendment, and the case law, two centuries of case law which was fairly quiet until, I believe, it was 2008 with Heller, you don’t understand that when these Republicans are talking and saying, like Jim Jordan said on the House floor, that it was destroying the Second Amendment, this is like — if you understand the law, this is like dialogue out of “Dumb and Dumber.” This is Lloyd Christmas, gentleman lawyer. These arguments are absurd. And Jonathan Lemire, I hear the arguments from Steve Scalise.
BRZEZINSKI : He thinks that people are stupid.
SCARBOROUGH: They didn’t ban airplanes. Let me tell you, what did they do. TS– He is aware of this.
BRZEZINSKI : Yes, I do.
SCARBOROUGH: They all know this. TSA regulated the hell out of air travel. So, you had to take your shoes off. You had to go through four grader screenings. I mean, everybody remembers after 9/11. You would get checked going into the airport. You’d get checked going through TSA. You would get checked at the gate. Like, you had to get patted down. You’re still getting patted down. Liquids — Mika and I just traveled. Liquids taken out.
Even, what, how many years later, 21 years later, of our bags in one airport and all thrown out, separated. They did check them. I mean, they have so hyper-regulated air travel to stop another 9/11. Guess what? It’s worked.
So I guess what Steve Scalise is telling us is he is totally fine with the hyper-regulation of guns. Because if his model really is 9/11, there are a lot of progressives that would say, bring it on.
It would be a little too much for me, I mean hey, why don’t we just do universal background checks that 90 percent of Americans support? Why don’t we just raise the age limit from 18 to 21 for weapons of war? And more highly regulate those weapons of war, who can buy them, how they’re stored, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
But again, it is — it’s like Lloyd Christmas goes to Congress. Every argument from these Republicans, dumber than the last.
JONATHAN LEMIRE: They didn’t ban airplanes, but they made it a lot harder to endanger someone on an airplane. And that’s the point of this, they’re not going to ban guns either. They’re going to make it harder to endanger someone with them.
And let’s remember it was Richard Reed, actually, was the attempted shoe bomber a few months after 9/11. It was one incident of one guy trying to blow up something with his shoes. And since then, every single person who steps foot on an airplane has had to take off their shoes. One incident. We’ve of course had, sadly, hundreds of mass shootings this year alone.
But certainly, what we heard from Scalise yesterday is further Republican fog machine, just trying to deflect, trying to distract. There’s certainly, polling that suggests the large percentage of Americans are not with them on this. And now to question of what can happen in the Senate.
And certainly, the House passed a series of bills last night, six in total, with some sweeping restrictions. Those, of course, none of them will become law.
But there are efforts there in the Senate where they think some things can get done. The talks have been halted for a while. There is some optimism, both sides, that eventually this will get done. Likely not this week, probably spill into next. There is also the ticking clock. They fear the longer this drags on, momentum will fade. Before you know it, we’ll be at the July 4 campaign for Congress, and then it is campaign season.
So, there is urgency to get something done. They still believe it will, but aides in it process told me last night, it is focused largely on small measures, expanding background checks, a little red flags. Better than nothing, Mika, but incremental.
…
6:49:14 a.m.
SCARBOROUGH: Because Mike Barnicle, we always hear the same thing from Republicans. They lie. They always say, oh, there’s nothing that could have been done to stop this. Or there’s nothing that could have been done. Or the big lie, if you want to know what the big lie in the gun debate is, it’s that they’re trying to destroy the Second Amendment. Nothing is being done that is trying to destroy the Second Amendment.
If you look at the Second Amendment as in interpreted by Heller, you basically have Scalia and the rest of the Court saying you have a right to keep a handgun in your house and a shotgun. This is basically all it states. Maybe that gets expanded with this New York City case, but we don’t know until the New York City case goes down.
But it’s just one lie after another lie after another lie. Like Lemmings going off the cliff while our children are being slaughtered in classrooms, while parishioners are being slaughtered in churches and synagogues, they just, like idiots, repeat the words given to them by the NRA.
MIKE BARNICLE: You know, Joe, this is so deeply depressing, this conversation that we’re having here, the conversation that’s been going on in Congress and in the country for years now. It is deeply, profoundly depressing.
Steve Scalise raised one important question in his little spiel about banning airplanes. The question he asked in his little clip there that we just showed is, why did this happen? Uvalde Texas.
Well, it happened because and only because one 18-year-old child, 18 years of age, was able to walk in on his birthday to a gun shop and buy two assault weapons, two rifles, two of them. Two, not one. And he used one of those weapons to kill 21 people in a schoolroom. And we have a United States Congress where people come and appear before various committees, including yesterday, and they look into the eyes of members of Congress, elected to help people, and they tell them, “my daughter is dead. But there are other children in this country who need your help. We need your help.”
And what does Steve Scalise and many Republicans, almost all of the Republicans do? They shrug their shoulders and say, “Sorry, but we have to protect your guns first. We have to protect weapons before we protect your children.”
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