Rob Pincus Teams Up With Ex-Brady Campaign President Dan Gross To Promote Actual Gun Safety

By Dan Zimmerman via TTAG. Republished with permission.

โ€œI believe fundamentally in the Second Amendment right to bear arms.โ€

A lot of people said those words or a close approximation thereof at last Novemberโ€™s 2A rally on Capitol Hill. But one person who surprised the crowd with that declaration was former Brady Campaign president Dan Gross.

Yes, that Dan Gross. The man who used to head the gun control operation that started life as the National Council to Control Handguns. Gross got involved in gun control after his brother was shot during a mass shooting at the top of the Empire State Building in 1997. He was Brady president from 2012 until two years ago.

So it was more than a little jarring to hear Gross address the staunchly pro-gun crowd that dayโ€ฆsaying a lot of the right things and getting a generally warm welcome.

But while he didnโ€™t elaborate on why he left gun control advocacy, his audience probably reasonably inferred that he had disagreements over philosophyโ€ฆbasically, how to actually prevent gun-related injuries and deaths.

As he told the crowd that day, gun owners are โ€œrelentlessly and, I believe, unfairly demonized.โ€ He has differences with people whose โ€œideological hatred of guns and the people who own them is more important to some people than the actual goal of saving lives.โ€ These are โ€œpeople who pretend they care about saving lives but really have other agendas.โ€

Thatโ€™s why, he told the crowd of gun owners, he has โ€œmuch more in common with all of you, a crowd of law-abiding and responsible gun owners, than I do with a crowd of people who just want to ban guns.โ€

Hereโ€™s Grossโ€™s speech:

Gross tells TTAG that heโ€™s convinced that banning guns simply isnโ€™t the answer. He says he knows that the โ€œoverwhelming majority of gun owners, like the overwhelming majority of human beings, are decent, responsible, law-abiding people who feel awful when a tragedy happens.โ€

Thatโ€™s why Rob Pincus has teamed up with Gross on a new venture, something theyโ€™re calling Center for Gun Rights and Responsibility. Pincus is aย firearms trainer, consultant and author. Heโ€™s also Very involved with operations likeย Save the Second,ย The Second Amendment Organizationย andย Walk the Talk America.

As Pincus and Gross told TTAG, the idea behind CGRR is to be non-partisan (as Pincus put it, โ€œdogmatically non-politicalโ€) advocates for actual gun safety initiatives. Measures that will save lives and prevent injuries.

That, we assume, is as opposed to the bogus โ€œgun safetyโ€ euphemism used by the gun control industry to mask their prohibition and confiscation agenda.

The goal, they say, is for firearms owners to reclaim the narrative. If gun owners are going to be against government regulation and interference with their Second Amendment rights, they need to be for somethingโ€ฆfor taking positive steps to increase the safety and responsibility of gun owners as a group.

They say CGRRโ€™s goal is to promote non-legislative, non-prohibitionist, non-regulatory, non-confiscatory solutions to promote responsible gun ownership and practices. Actions designed to make real differences in gun safety, saving lives and preventing tragedies.

The CGRR had a somewhat halting rollout at the SHOT Show with a number of attendees fairly alarmed at the involvement of someone seen as a prominent (if now former) advocate for gun control. But the two arenโ€™t deterred and Pincus says heโ€™s confident he isnโ€™t getting โ€œplayedโ€ by a gun-grabber in gun rights clothing.

One of their first initiatives is pushing something theyโ€™re calling GunPRO (Pledge for Responsible Ownership). Theyโ€™re looking for the support of gun shops, ranges, clubs and state associations to promote gun owners taking the GunPRO pledge.

Their three-part pledge will be to 1) learn to use your firearm safely, 2) prevent unauthorized access to it, and to 3) seek voluntary, temporary alternate storage of your gun (with a friend, a club, an FFL, etc.) in times of mental health or other crisis situations when having a gun in the house may present a risk.

The CGRR is still very much in its infancy. They have the beginnings of Facebook and Instagram pages, but no web site yet and nowhere for gun owners to register their GunPRO pledges, though all of that is in the works.

Once thatโ€™s all sorted out, theyโ€™ll have a formal announcement and rollout of the program. In the mean time, theyโ€™ve issued this statement:

LEADERS FROM OPPOSITE SIDES OF GUN DEBATE ANNOUNCE LAUNCH OF โ€œCENTER FOR GUN RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBILITYโ€ TO PROMOTE COMMON-GROUND SOLUTIONS

One of the nationโ€™s best-known Second Amendment advocates and firearm experts, Rob Pincus, and the former president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, Dan Gross, announced the creation of the Center for Gun Rights and Responsibility (CGRR).

The new organizationโ€™s mission will be to conduct and advocate for strictly non-legislative educational and awareness projects aimed at reducing negative outcomes with firearms, such as its flagship program, the GunPRO โ€œpledge of responsible ownershipโ€ that will be announced at the event.

โ€œIn the successful efforts to expand gun ownership and gun rights,โ€ says Pincus, โ€œI fear that we ourselves have not done enough to educate and promote gun responsibility. I fear that we have not policed our own assertively enough when it comes to issues such as gun storage, gun use and general firearms education around the best practices when it comes to defensive firearms carry and the defensive use of firearms in or around our homes, families and businesses. Too many children have been shot accidentally. Too many teens have completed suicide or committed murders with their parentsโ€™ guns.โ€œ

Dan Gross adds, โ€œโ€Iโ€™ve always believed that If you want to talk about preventing tragedies with guns that are legally owned, it should begin with a conversation with gun owners themselves. By engaging in education and awareness around responsible gun ownership, and without even talking about laws, I believe we have a massive opportunity both to protect gun rights and to do what every decent American wants, which is to keep us all safe.

The organization was launched in Las Vegas at this yearโ€™s SHOT (Shooting, Hunting, Outdoor Trade) Show, the gun industryโ€™s largest trade show, on Thursday, Jan. 23, during a discussion with gun industry leaders and advocates from all sides of the issue.

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