January 22, 2010
Firm to Remove Bible References From Gun Sights
By ERIK ECKHOLM
Bowing to Pentagon concerns and an international outcry, a Michigan arms company said Thursday that it would immediately stop embossing references to New Testament Scriptures on rifle sights it sells the military.
The company, Trijicon Inc., has multimillion-dollar contracts with the Pentagon for advanced telescopic sights that are widely used in Iraq and Afghanistan. Trijicon also said it would provide the Pentagon with 100 free kits to use for removing the lettering on existing weapons.
For years, the company acknowledged, it has put small scriptural references near the model numbers on some products, a practice started by its founder, who was a Christian.
The references, like JN8:12 and 2COR4:6, referring to passages in the Gospel of John and in Second Corinthians, had not been widely noticed or debated until an ABC News report this week. Scopes with biblical references were also sold to the Australian, New Zealand and British militaries.
Neither the company nor the Pentagon released estimates of how many current military weapons carried Trijicon gun sights.
The Marine Corps has a $660 million contract with Trijicon for more than 200,000 of the high-tech rifle sights, said Capt. Geraldine Carey, a Marine spokeswoman. The Army said it had bought just under 200,000 of the sights.
A Trijicon spokesman said the company started adding the biblical references to products well before it received its first military contract, in 1995, and had done so until now.
As word of the practice spread, it was condemned by civil liberties groups and some religious groups in the United States and abroad.
Michael L. Weinstein, president of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, said that several of the group’s members, including active-duty military personnel, had contacted him in recent weeks to complain about the subtle religious references on their weapons and that he had alerted ABC.
“The Constitution won today,” Mr. Weinstein said of the company’s decision.
After the television news report, Pentagon spokesmen called the inscriptions inappropriate and said they were looking into the matter.
In Afghanistan, the Al Jazeera news service reported that sights with the Christian references had been distributed to some Afghan soldiers and that this would provide the Taliban with a propaganda coup.(no shit, Sherlock)
“Our decision to voluntarily remove these references is both prudent and appropriate,” said the statement by Stephen Bindon, the company’s president (the guy who put them there in the first place- hey, I'm thinking, Czar of Information
)
Among the passages referred to on gun sights was John 8:12, which, in the New Standard Revised edition of the Bible quotes Jesus as saying: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life.”
Another, Second Corinthians 4:6, reads: “For it is the God who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.”
Only a Philip K. Dick could make this up....
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/22/us/22guns.html?ref=us
The company, Trijicon Inc., has multimillion-dollar contracts with the Pentagon for advanced telescopic sights that are widely used in Iraq and Afghanistan. Trijicon also said it would provide the Pentagon with 100 free kits to use for removing the lettering on existing weapons.
For years, the company acknowledged, it has put small scriptural references near the model numbers on some products, a practice started by its founder, who was a Christian.
The references, like JN8:12 and 2COR4:6, referring to passages in the Gospel of John and in Second Corinthians, had not been widely noticed or debated until an ABC News report this week. Scopes with biblical references were also sold to the Australian, New Zealand and British militaries.
Neither the company nor the Pentagon released estimates of how many current military weapons carried Trijicon gun sights.
The Marine Corps has a $660 million contract with Trijicon for more than 200,000 of the high-tech rifle sights, said Capt. Geraldine Carey, a Marine spokeswoman. The Army said it had bought just under 200,000 of the sights.
A Trijicon spokesman said the company started adding the biblical references to products well before it received its first military contract, in 1995, and had done so until now.
As word of the practice spread, it was condemned by civil liberties groups and some religious groups in the United States and abroad.
Michael L. Weinstein, president of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation, said that several of the group’s members, including active-duty military personnel, had contacted him in recent weeks to complain about the subtle religious references on their weapons and that he had alerted ABC.
“The Constitution won today,” Mr. Weinstein said of the company’s decision.
After the television news report, Pentagon spokesmen called the inscriptions inappropriate and said they were looking into the matter.
In Afghanistan, the Al Jazeera news service reported that sights with the Christian references had been distributed to some Afghan soldiers and that this would provide the Taliban with a propaganda coup.(no shit, Sherlock)
“Our decision to voluntarily remove these references is both prudent and appropriate,” said the statement by Stephen Bindon, the company’s president (the guy who put them there in the first place- hey, I'm thinking, Czar of Information
![Happy](https://www.itulip.com/forums/core/images/smilies/happy.gif)
Among the passages referred to on gun sights was John 8:12, which, in the New Standard Revised edition of the Bible quotes Jesus as saying: “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness but will have the light of life.”
Another, Second Corinthians 4:6, reads: “For it is the God who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ who has shone in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.”
Only a Philip K. Dick could make this up....
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/01/22/us/22guns.html?ref=us
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