Taking political advocacy to a politician’s private residence should be avoided in most cases. That is, until all other avenues of petitioning a government representative for redress of grievances have been exhausted.
Seems as though many in New Jersey feel that they have exhausted traditional avenues and are opting for more aggressive means to get their message across to the Garden State’s anti-gun senate president. With that in mind, the New Jersey Second Amendment Society brought their message directly to New Jersey Senate El Presidente Steven Sweeney in recent days.
Senator Sweeney wasn’t home, but his wife was, and she was not one bit pleased.
“You have no right to do this to us,” Mrs. Sweeney says of the protesters’ right to peaceably assemble and walk on the sidewalk out front of his home.
So, what did she do?
She turned sprayed the protesters with water.
Maybe we should consider the same for Illinois Senate President John Cullerton? After all, Mr. Cullerton has refused to meet with any meaningful representatives of the gun rights side in Illinois, or pro-hunting folks. Mr. Cullerton has stopped all pro-gun and pro-hunting bills from even getting a committee hearing in his chamber.
And now, with the May 31st deadline passed, bills now need a 60% super-majority to pass.
If your Illinois State Senator is a Democrat and claims to be pro-gun, ask him why, if he (or she) is so pro-gun, why then didn’t he (or she) push Cullerton off his refusal to allow a free and fair vote on pro-gun and pro-hunting bills.
It should be an interesting response.
Typical Democrap elitist pig.
I call it projection. Democrats think that just because their moonbat hippie protesters smell awful and need a bath, that all people protesting are dirty and need to be washed.
The politicians don’t think of us as the “unwashed masses” for nothing.