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February 11, 2009 3:08 PM

Charlton Heston, "Moses" Of Gun Rights

(CBS/AP)  As Moses, Charlton Heston thunderously rallied his people with the Ten Commandments in hand. The tablet of his political life was carved with something else - the Second Amendment.

Heston was not just the public face of the gun-rights movement but a good deal of the fire in its belly during a transformational time in the decades-old debate.

He lived to see Democrats running away from a cause they once embraced, scared off by the likelihood that they lost the 2000 presidential election in part because of their gun-control advocacy.

Images of Charlton Heston in his many roles, both in the movies and in real life.
For a conservative champion like Heston, that was pretty close to the Promised Land.

His death Saturday night brought tributes from public figures whose fortunes were linked in some way to his.

President Bush praised his commitment to liberty. Former first lady Nancy Reagan remembered Heston's long association with her late husband.

Ronald Reagan, like Heston, was an actor who became more conservative over time - fellow strangers to Hollywood's Democratic mainstream - before walking into an Alzheimer's twilight.

The most pointed tribute may have come in 2003, when Heston stepped down after five years as president of the National Rifle Association, enfeebled by symptoms of the disease.

"Were it not for your active involvement," Florida Gov. Jeb Bush told him, "it's safe to say my brother may not have been president of the United States."

It was in the 2000 campaign that the NRA went after Democratic candidate Al Gore with a vengeance built up over years of confrontation with the Clinton administration and its "jack-booted government thugs," as others put it.

The Moses of gun rights may have had too regal a bearing to use such incendiary words. But in attacking a Democrat who favored mandatory photo ID licenses for future handgun buyers, Heston held little else back.

As he had once lifted Moses' staff in "The Ten Commandments," Heston held a musket above his head and dared Gore from afar to pry it "from my cold dead hands."

Gore lost blue-collar votes to Bush in an election so close any setback was perilous.

The key finding from 2000: About half of voters were from gun-owning households, and they voted for Bush by 61 percent to 36 percent. Voters from households without guns backed Gore 58-39.

Ever since, Democrats in presidential and many congressional and governors' races have scrambled to establish their bona fides as hunters, if they can, or as admirers of firearms or the Second Amendment if they can't.

After a student shot five people dead and then himself on the campus of Northern Illinois University in February, Democratic presidential rivals Barack Obama and Hillary Rodham Clinton asserted their support for the right to bear arms.

Old positions, such as Clinton's support in 2000 for a federal requirement for state-issued photo gun licenses, were brushed aside. Clinton told an audience her dad taught her to hunt, and said to reporters that she shot a duck in Arkansas.

On his way to the 2004 Democratic presidential nomination, John Kerry donned a flannel shirt and rubber boots on a hunting trip where he shot pheasants. In the 2004 campaign and again this year, John Edwards played up his hunting days.

To gun control activists, Heston was brought forward as a palatable, even comforting, face for a movement they consider extremist, aggressive and sophisticated.

Heston hadn't been a box-office star since the 1970s but upon his departure as NRA president, Eric Howard of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence credited him as a persuasive actor for his cause.

Heston was good at "acting as though these extreme measures - basically, what the NRA is doing - aren't extreme," he said.

Heston took up other issues, including violence in entertainment, and he marched for civil rights in the 1960s.

In 1992, he stunned a Time Warner annual meeting by reading aloud lyrics from an album by Body Count, a band featuring rapper Ice-T. The album included songs about killing police and sodomizing women.

"It's often been said that if Adolf Hitler came back with a hot movie synopsis, every studio in town would be after it," Heston said. "Would Warner's be among them?"

In response to such protests, Ice-T pulled the song "Cop Killer" from the album.

But gun rights are where Heston most left his mark.

In June 1998, Heston was elected president of the National Rifle Association, for which he had posed for ads holding a rifle. He delivered a jab at then-President Clinton, saying, "America doesn't trust you with our 21-year-old daughters, and we sure, Lord, don't trust you with our guns."

One television ad featuring Heston also made reference to the Monica Lewinsky scandal when it referred to lies the president has told.

"Mr. Clinton, when what you say is wrong, it's a mistake. When you know it's wrong, it's a lie. Remember?" Heston said in the ad.

After the 2000 election, Gore's campaign spokesman, Doug Hattaway, recalled flying over Gore's home state of Tennessee and overhearing two men talking in business class. "The problem with Al Gore is he'll take our guns away," one said.

"I knew we were in trouble," said Hattaway.

That exchange, it could be said, was his Holy Moses moment.

© 2009 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Add a Comment
by cfin5 April 8, 2008 6:30 PM EDT
"... I simply cannot stand by and watch a right guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States come under attack from those who either can''t understand it, don''t like the sound of it, or find themselves too philosophically squeamish to see why it remains the first among equals: Because it is the right we turn to when all else fails. That''s why the Second Amendment is America''s first freedom. ..." - Charlton Heston
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by thenicks3 April 7, 2008 10:24 PM EDT
Excuse me Cfin while I go throw up!!
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by cfin5 April 7, 2008 7:07 PM EDT
"So that this nation may long endure, I urge you to follow in the hallowed footsteps of the great disobedience of history that freed exiles, founded religions, defeated tyrants, and yes, in the hands of an aroused rabble in arms and a few great men, by God''s grace, built this country." - The Late Charlton Heston, from a speech to the Harvard Law School Forum, February 16, 1999
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by thenicks3 April 7, 2008 2:42 PM EDT
The only things I''m sorry about is that his death didn''t occur sooner and that someone didn''t shoot him. I had so hoped that "live by the sword, die by the sword" would come into play in this jerk''s life. His comments after the Columbine shootings were unnecessary, uncalled for, and unforgiveable.
Reply to this comment
by idnnsg April 7, 2008 2:37 PM EDT
It''s time to get out the prybar ''cause Heston is cold and dead.

To gunownerdan:

To enslave a nation, give them meaningless slogans and turn them into mindless jingoists.

You know dammm well that the US has so many guns that it is absolutely impossible to eliminate them all. In fact, you have said precisely that to justify why you need guns to "defend yourself from criminals". (here''s the mindless slogan that controls your thinking: "If guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns.")

And, BTW, almost NOBODY is actually trying to take away your guns! You are so paranoid that you can''t understand that fact. What most people want to do is to place reasonable restrictions on gun ownership and use.

Charlton Heston mischaracterized (lied about) Gore''s positions on guns (as part of the NRA campain to keep you gun-nuts scared about "losing your rights"). Here is something that details all of Gore''s positions on gun control:

http://www.ontheissues.org/celeb/Al_Gore_Gun_Control.htm

Read it, and you''ll see that all of your hysteria is for nothing!
Reply to this comment
by gunownerdan April 7, 2008 2:12 PM EDT
Free people can own guns, slaves can not.
To enslave a nation disarm the citizens!
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