I don't think it should have gone as far as a resignation, though I think his "apology" was kind of watery. As I said, it's damned hard to backtrack from the original statement which demonstrated an unclear undertanding of what the second amendment is all about --not an uncommon thing, after all, especially west of Nevada and east of the Rockies.

Zumbo more-or-less redeemed himself, although I haven't seen anything from him in
American Rifleman after his gaffe. He was "educated" into the true meaning of 2A, and now apparently stands foursquare for its principles, at least as far as I can tell. I am of a forgiving nature, however, pursuant to some notion from somewhere about "casting the first stone." Somebody help me out on that quote.
Hopefully that whole Zumbo affair was a wake-up call to the NRA "blued-steel-and-checkered-walnut" and "pricey-O/U-shotgun" segments of its Board of Directors.
And also hopefully, Tsai now "gets it," and might make an even better gun rag editor.
Maybe the "outrage" referred to was a little overdone, but a spanking was definitely necessary. I
have noted a tendency for pack behavior in some of the gun community (as in other communities). Cleverly worded put-downs like the "You suck and we hate you" meme seem to develop a life of their own and are sometimes applied unfairly, reflexedly, without thought.
Terry, 230RN