Posted on 02/01/2012 9:57:31 AM PST by marktwain
Over the last few years, calls for the right to carry firearms concealed have reached a crescendo. In step, politicians from both sides of the aisle have endorsed opinions on the subject and, with very few exceptions, these public servants tend to tailor their stances in line with those of their base of support. For those opposed to concealed carry, this often means pointing to numbers that make the argument gun-related deaths would be vastly diminished if we all were to simply disarm but what these interests tend to avoid are the powerful anecdotal cases where a legally armed citizen defended himself or herself against some robber, rapist or lunatic. The very mention of these occasions generally sends politicians into vapor locks as they vehemently denounce the thought of such self-defense incidents as dangerous (duh?) or bordering on vigilantism.
For example, in 2008 then presidential candidate Barack Obama told the Pittsburgh Tribune, Im not in favor of concealed weapons. I think that creates a potential atmosphere where more innocent people could get shot during altercations. Former Chicago Mayor Richard Daley, in an address at the Federal Gun Legislation Press Conference in Washington DC on the evening of November 13, 1998, stated, If it was up to me, no one but law enforcement officers would own hand guns, but I understand that it's impractical to pass a national ban.
What these folks fail to realizeand what I would argue most gun owners in this country understand with crystal-clear clarityis that their instincts on the issue of gun ownership are ultimately pretty meaningless. Gun ownership is a right delineated under the Second Amendment of the Constitution. Period. But beyond that, when an educated gun owner is carrying a concealed firearm they are likely doing it for very specific reasons related to safetyand not just their own safety but the safety of their fellow citizens.
Gun stats. Dont believe me? Just ask yourself this, why would anybody go through the three-ring circus of getting a permit, forfeit their fingerprints over to Uncle Sam in the process and then spend the rest of their days becoming an armchair attorney just so they can navigate the labyrinthine system of state-to-state carry laws, if they didnt have a well-thought out reason for concealed carrying? Just to waste time?
Its my informed opinion that most folks who carry firearms do not do so because they are looking for altercations or because theyre afraid or exasperated by life, as Obama insinuated when he said people cling to guns as a way to explain their frustrations while on the campaign trail in 08. They do so simply because they do not feel safe in 2012 America and no amount of data is going to change that. They know that a violent criminal isnt going to be convinced to abort his felonious mission because of a bunch of statistics that show the crime rate hes contributing to is actually going down; instead they take every individual story they hear about these horrible acts of violence seriously.
And no wonderdoes it hurt any less to get shot during a downswing in crime? Do you think some eloquently delivered rhetoric about fewer robberies will convince your attacker you dont have to hand over your wallet to him? Does a plummet in statewide gun crime change the fact a man was murdered down your block? Of course not.
Gun safety. The question then becomes, why do guns equate to safety for concealed carriers? Well, its simple really: its pretty damn hard to force an armed citizen to doing anything against their will and to many minds power is safety. By way of anecdote, heres a story I heard recently from a cop friend of mine that illustrates this very point:
A police officer pulled over a speeding car rural in Georgia. He walked up to the drivers side window and asked the motorist, an elderly lady, for her license and registration. While retrieving the requested items the woman told the officer that she was carrying a .38 caliber revolver in her handbag and had two other pistols in the car, one in the glove box and the other in the center console.
What in the world are you afraid of? inquired the officer.
Not a damn thing! she replied.
This elderly lady had guns out of concern for her safety, and why shouldnt she be? Shes old, most likely frail and an easy target for criminals. A couple of purse pistols however means she suddenly went from powerless to likely even more powerful than her attacker (who may never expect Mrs. Fields to press a snub-nose into his stomach). No, her decision to carry concealed firearms does not mean she was afraid, it means she is aware of the world.
To me, concealed carrying gun owners are making the safe bet that a violent offender will most likely use a weapon of some sort to victimize them (the very same assumption police officers make everyday). This is the safe move because it makes no logical sense for a criminal, hell bent on taking your money, virtue or life, to not use something to harm you. Concealed carry evens that playing field.
Gun education.
And yes, Ill be the first in line to admit it: every once in a blue moon there is going to be a tragic gun-related incident involving a CCW holder where a poor innocent person loses their life. This could be because of the negligence of the concealed carrier, negligence of the government for allowing a felon or someone otherwise unfit to slip through the cracks of the permit system, or just an accident.
This is not an if, this is a when but the same goes for just about everything in life. Ill also remind you that there will be tragic car, ice, blender, bathtub, sport, insect, doctor and plane related incidents too and perhaps most importantly to this argument, gun and weapons tragedies not involving CCW holders (likely many times more than incidents involving carriers).
The point is this: the world is a dangerous place, and suppressing rather than understanding the firearm as a tool only serves to make it more dangerous. People carry for their safety and the safety of law-abiding citizens around them, so the drive should not be disarming citizens but rather making concealed carry safer. The governments afraid of innocent people getting shot when a CCW holder pulls their arm in self-defense? Well then, start educating shooters on how to shoot and carry properly.
Because I can.
Because the police harass you when you carry open?
Amen brother!
A police officer friend of mine said it this way. I ask him many years ago why he carried a 1911 (45). He said because they don’t make a 46.
The guy driving the caterpiller to fix my private road wore a sidearm. He said he did it because once he was stuck in his rig due to a pack of wild animals that wanted in. With the gun, no problem.
If it wasn’t concealed, it wouldn’t be called concealed carry.
Because I can and more importantly, if and when we were ever attacked by the rash of flash mobs we all hear about now, I would not have to cry “I’m sorry” over my wife’s dead body at her funeral... or she the same for me.
I’m OK with not knowing.
I carry concealed for the same reason I keep my (other) tools in a chest. It’s no one’s business what I have or don’t have
In PA you don't get finger printed to get a permit.
I've been printed, in the Army, certain kinds of jobs, being arrested, but never to get a permit.
I never leave home without at least two, and sometimes more guns.
If violence takes me, I won't go alone.
“Carrying a gun says: I am a citizen, not a serf.”
It also says “I’m not going to be a victim”.
We all know “when seconds count, the cops are just minutes away!”
When someone asks me why I carry concealed, I ask them if they wear a seat belt. If they reply ‘yes’ I say it’s the same reason.
You don’t wear a seat belt because you expect to get in a car accident. You wear it because it gives you the best odds if an accident happens to occur.
I carry a handgun, not because I expect to be assaulted (much less because I have any desire to shoot someone), but rather because if I am confronted with some bad situation it can provide options which improve my odds.
I tried carrying a cop around with me, but they're too heavy.
Or...
"When seconds count, the police are only minutes away."
And, they don’t fit as nicely in my pocket! ;)
Because I have a romantic attachment to guns and I like to keep romance private.
bump
The element of surprise. . .
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