Search found 8 matches

by The Annoyed Man
Sat Nov 29, 2014 10:13 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

joe817 wrote:The intimidation tactics used by the open carry groups are not to dissimilar to the same tactics used by the 'brown shirts' of Germany in the 1930's. There is room to be VERY concerned.
My guess is that a significant number of them are, just like CJ Grisham, barred from be able to lawfully carry concealed because they do not meet the standards imposed by law......and that they do not meet those standards exactly because they are by nature the kind of hotheads who get themselves into the kinds of trouble that get in the way of licensing. I believe that this is what motivates them. They have disqualified themselves, and rather than take a good hard look inward, they blame it all on vague dark forces arrayed against them.

I will state up front that I would prefer that there would be no licensing requirement for either concealed or open carry—even if it means that someone of less than impeccable responsibility is able to legally carry a gun—but I also recognize that the more that these idiots pollute the legislative process, the more difficult it becomes for me to defend my position to others.......particularly to fence-sitters and antis......and this is the greatest damage they do of all.

This is one reason why I remain convinced that gun-control provocateurs have infiltrated OCT and other radicalized open-carry groups with a mind to giving them a gentle nudge in the direction of lunacy, thus compromising both the organization's AND the movement's efficacy. If someone as straight-arrow as an FBI agent can successfully infiltrate the SDS and Weather Underground, surely it can't be that hard for someone of already questionable values and character to infiltrate an organization filled with people of questionable values and character.
by The Annoyed Man
Fri Nov 21, 2014 1:35 pm
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

Charles, I don't think he has the personal integrity to reply.
by The Annoyed Man
Fri Nov 21, 2014 11:12 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

Charles L. Cotton wrote:OCT/CJ Grisham. Please give us an answer to the 3 critical questions in the first post on this thread. Why are you refusing to answer?

Chas.
He is refusing to answer because he accomplished his mission: to raise funds - viewtopic.php?f=133&t=75122" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;.
by The Annoyed Man
Fri Nov 21, 2014 10:42 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

Keith B wrote:
paxton25 wrote:
The Annoyed Man wrote:Further down in subsection (g), it says: "Subsections (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), (a)(6), and (a)(7) do not apply if the actor was not given effective notice under Section 30.06."
That appears to me to make 30.06 apply to all carry, not just concealed carry. Now I am confused, but if this says what I think it says, then I cannot support HB195, even though initially Charles said it was "supported".

Charles, can you shed some light on this?
OK that was how I understood it too, that's why I was confused when you started talking about including OC in 30.06 when I was talking about HB195. I didn't figure Charles would be supporting the bill if it did that. While I think the situation you described would be relatively small, I must admit it is an aspect I haven't considered before that is a possible negative consequence that should be considered and opposed. That is the kind of information I was looking for. So far I haven't seen anything about the bill that would suggest to me that I shouldn't push for HB195 to pass.
Actually, I don't believe it would. 30.06 specifically states 'concealed' handgun' so it would not apply to a handgun that was openly carried. There is no mention of any modification to section 30.06 in the bill.
Keith, thanks. That is the part that is poorly written then in HB195. You can see the language from the proposed changes to 46.035 which I included above. It specifically states that the restrictions in the subsections do not apply if the actor has not been given notice under 30.06. But, it also is changed to remove references to concealed handguns. THAT means that any lawfully carried handguns are subject to 30.06........ and that creates a conflict that will HAVE to be resolved in some way or other, as soon as people who want to ban OC in their businesses discover that 30.06 references only concealed handguns, and that they have no current recourse before the law.

Good law should anticipate the obvious—and in this case, the conflict is even obvious to me, an untrained observer of the law—that (A) the law points to 30.06, and (B) that 30.06 does not address OC.......and I am PRO Open Carry. It is only going to be a matter of time, and not much time at that, before people who are anti-carry of any kind get their teeth into this thing.

What then? Well, the demographics of the state are changing, and those changes are not necessarily favorable to gun rights because of the influx of transplants from states where guns are tightly restricted. As the pro-gun roots of Texas get watered down by these arrivals, it gets to be fairly easy at some point to force a change to 30.06 instead of creating a 30.07. Our hope and recourse is that antigun and fence-sitting transplants will come to appreciate their new freedoms here in Texas, and alter their views correspondingly.... but that is NOT something I want to count on.

I would be a LOT more comfortable with HB195 if, instead of avoiding the issue, it settled it by mandating a creation of 30.07.
by The Annoyed Man
Fri Nov 21, 2014 1:30 am
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

paxton25 wrote:So since HB195 is a supported bill and there are no notes about it's effect with regards to 30.06 like there is in the other ones does that mean the concern you mentioned with bringing OC into 30.06 is not an issue with HB195?
Correct. At least as Charles has outlined it above, HB195 does not incorporate OC into 30.06. What exactly it does do about signage, if anything, I don't know. But as long 30.06 is protected and remains relevant only for CC, then HB195 would be a good bill. However, I wish Charles would give us some detail here if he can, because the text of HB195 (upon my first reading of it) is actually disturbing. Ideally, HB195 would add PC §30.07 to the code, which would be to OC as 30.06 is to CC. So if a business wanted to block ALL carrying into its premises, it would have to post BOTH "big ugly signs", and they would BOTH have to be compliant. ..... but that does not appear to be the case as I read the bill.

Here is a link to the changes that HB195 would make to TPC §46.035: http://www.legis.state.tx.us/tlodocs/84 ... 00195I.htm. Here is a link to TPC §46.035 as it currently stands: (UNLAWFUL CARRYING OF HANDGUN BY LICENSE HOLDER) http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/D ... /PE.46.htm.

Currently, paragraph 46.035(i) says: "Subsections (b)(4) [hospitals/nursing homes], (b)(5) [amusement parks], (b)(6) [churches], and (c) [government meetings] do not apply if the actor was not given effective notice under Section 30.06."

Since HB195 removes the license requirement and changes the wording from "carrying a concealed handgun" to "carrying a handgun"...... it says:
(a) A person in possession of a handgun commits an offense if they intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly carry a handgun on or about their person:
  • (1) on the premises of a business that has a permit or license issued under Chapter 25, 28, 32, 69, or 74, Alcoholic Beverage Code, if the business derives 51 percent or more of its income from the sale or service of alcoholic beverages for on-premises consumption, as determined by the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission under Section 104.06, Alcoholic Beverage Code;
    (2) on the premises where a high school, collegiate, or professional sporting event or interscholastic event is taking place, unless the [license holder] person is a participant in the event where [and] a handgun is used in the event;
    (3) on the premises of a correctional facility;
    (4) on the premises of a hospital licensed under Chapter 241, Health and Safety Code, or on the premises of a nursing home licensed under Chapter 242, Health and Safety Code, unless the person has written authorization of the hospital or nursing home administration, as appropriate;
    (5) in an amusement park;
    (6) on the premises of a church, synagogue, or other established place of religious worship;
    (7) at any meeting of a governmental entity;
    (8) while intoxicated
Further down in subsection (g), it says: "Subsections (a)(3), (a)(4), (a)(5), (a)(6), and (a)(7) do not apply if the actor was not given effective notice under Section 30.06."
That appears to me to make 30.06 apply to all carry, not just concealed carry. Now I am confused, but if this says what I think it says, then I cannot support HB195, even though initially Charles said it was "supported".

Charles, can you shed some light on this?
by The Annoyed Man
Thu Nov 20, 2014 4:09 pm
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

paxton25 wrote:I simply want the best bill passed in the next session and I personally believe it is constitutional carry, right now the best bill I see is HB195. I am sincerely interested in seeing if TSRA or NRA or Mr. Cotton have an alternate bill in the works that I can support if there are good reasons not to support hb195 other than some say it can't pass. I have been told by politicians and the political elites several times that what I am pushing for won't happen only to see it happen after not giving in. I don't really see why this should be contentious and cause conflict among 2A supporters.
Paxton25, since you appear to be asking this question in good faith, there are two factors at work here: how a bill affects PC §30.06, and how much political capital will have to be expended in order to pass it.

Here is why anything that messes with PC §30.06 is a bad bill that will not get NRA/TSRA support, and will most likely killed: If it incorporates Open Carry (OC, going forward) into PC §30.06, there is a very good reason for why that must not be allowed to happen. Today, when a CHL walks into an unposted store, so long as he/she behaves themselves, the store owner is not motivated to post a 30.06 sign. Why would he be? Even if he is really ANTI-2nd Amendment, he has no way of knowing if the person entering his store is a CHL or not. Very FEW business owners are self-motivated enough to either do the research, or to hire an attorney to do it for them, to find a way to keep CC out of their stores. It just isn't on their radar, because "out of sight = out of mind". For them, it does not take some kind of pivotal event involving an exposed gun to make then exercise anti-gun activism in their places of business. However, OC is not that way. Whether it is intended as a provocation or not, the OCer has absolutely ZERO control over whether the gun is perceived as a provocative act. The fence-sitter who hadn't give it much though until now, or the rabidly antigun person who simply hadn't considered the possibility until now, will with a high probability post a sign to keep OCers out of the store. Mind you, they STILL won't know they are affecting CCers because CCers fly low and avoid the radar. When they post that sign, if OC is incorporated under 30.06, then BOTH OCers AND CCers are now banned from carrying into the store. This is a step backward for the CCer, caused by the OCer's provocation of the store owner.......and remember, this is provocation whether or not it is intentional. It still provokes a reaction from the business owner.

SO..... exactly ZERO bills that incorporate OC under 30.06 will receive NRA/TSRA support, and in fact will probably be killed—because a setback for CC is completely unacceptable as the price of passing OC. And this is the absolutely CRUCIAL point that OCT refuses to take into account in their calculations.......either that, or they are deliberately trying to sabotage CC. Since they refuse to consider it, they are vastly out of touch with reality.

If you refer to this thread - viewtopic.php?f=133&t=75052" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false; - you will see that there are more than one OC bill under consideration. Here are the one's I've lifted from Charles' opening post in that thread:
Charles L. Cotton wrote:Color-coded and linked bills are available on the 2015 Bill Status Report on the Texas Firearms Coalition website. UPDATED: 11/14/14

HOUSE BILLS:

HB92 (White) Relating to the definition of an illegal knife.
Impact: Removes Bowie knife from definition of illegal knives and from a defense for historical reinactments. Still illegal to carry knives with blades over 5 1/2".
Postion on Bill: Neutral. This bill does not help Texans.
Status: Filed 11/10/14

HB106 (Flynn, R, A+) Relating to the authority of a person who is licensed to carry a handgun to openly carry the handgun; providing penalties.
Impact: Creates licensed open-carry, but destroys the protections of Tex. Penal Code §30.06.
Position on Bill: Oppose, becaue of the amendment to Tex. Penal Code §30.06.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.


HB118 (Flynn, R, A+) Relating to a fee waiver for a combination resident hunting and fishing license for certain military personnel.
Impact: Removes the fee for a combined hunting and fishing license for disabled veterans and active military.
Position on Bill: Neutral.
Status: Filed 11/10/14

HB164 (White) Relating to the authority of a person who is licensed to carry a handgun to openly carry the handgun; providing penalties.
Impact: Creates licensed open-carry and preserves the protection of Tex. Penal Code §30.06
Position on Bill: Support.
Status: Filed 11/10/14


HB152 (Harless, R, A) Relating to the authority of the voters of certain counties to authorize the county to regulate the sale and use of fireworks; providing penalties.
Impact: Deals with county regulation of fireworks.
Position on Bill: Neutral, but monitor to ensure firearms and sport shooting ranges are not added to the bill.
Status: Filed 11/10/14

HB153 (Harless, R, A) Relating to the adoption of noise regulations by certain counties; providing a criminal penalty; authorizing a fee.
Impact: Deals with county regulation of noise generated by loud speakers.
Position on Bill: Neutral, but monitor to ensure firearms and sport shooting ranges are not added to the bill.
Status: Filed 11/10/14

HB172 (Stickland) Relating to municipal regulation of electric stun guns, knives, and personal defense sprays.
Impact: Adds stun guns, knives and personal defense sprays to the Texas preemption statute preventing municipal regulation thereof. However, it adds an unnecessary provision that guts much of the Texas Sport Shooting Range Protection law passed in 2011.
Position on Bill: Oppose this bad bill, unless the proposed Tex. Local Gov't Code §229.(b)(10) is removed.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.

HB176 (Kleinschmidt, R, A+) Relating to protection of the right to keep and bear arms within the State of Texas.
Impact: Attempts to invalidate certain federal gun laws. Also prohibits state law enforcement officer from enforcing certain federal laws.
Position on Bill: Support.
Status: Filed 11/10/15.

HB195 (Stickland, R) Relating to the carrying of handguns; providing for the open carrying of handguns; removing the requirement that a person who may lawfully possess handguns obtain a Concealed Handgun License in order to carry a handgun lawfully in the state of Texas, and conforming changes.
Impact: Created unlicensed open or concealed carry; retains all current off-limits areas.
Position on Bill: Support.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.


HB198 (Huberty) Relating to the carrying of concealed handguns by certain persons attending a school board meeting.
Impact: Would allow school board members and school superintendents to carry handguns at school board meetings.
Position on Bill: Oppose.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.

HB206 (Leach) Relating to an exemption from the sales tax for firearms and hunting supplies for a limited period.
Impact: Creats a sales tax free day for purchasing firearms and hunting supplies.
Position on Bill: Neutral.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.

HB223 (Guillen, D) Relating to acceptable conduct of students in kindergarten through grade five.
Impact: Protects school children from K - 5th grades from being disciplined for certain acts related to firearm representations.
Position on Bill: Support.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.

HB226 (Guillen, D) Relating to certain offenses relating to carrying concealed handguns on property owned or leased by a governmental entity; providing a civil penalty.
Impact: Creats a civil penalty for local governments and agencies that post unenforceable 30.06 signs.
Position on Bill: Support, but demand amendment to allow for private causes of action.
Status: Filed 11/10/14.

HB278 (Ashby) Relating to authorizing certain attorneys representing the state to openly carry a handgun.
Impact: Would allow government attorneys to carry handgun openly.
Position on Bill: Oppose.
Status: Filed 11/12/14

HB284 (Springer, R, A+)
Impact: Sets the minimum caliber for CHL qualification to .22.
Companion Bill: SB179 by Perry.
Position on Bill: Support.
Status: Filed 11/13/14.

HB291 (Huberty) Relating to the authority of a person who is licensed to carry a handgun to openly carry the handgun; providing penalties.
Impact: Creates licensed open-carry, but destroys the protections of Tex. Penal Code §30.06. (Appears identical to HB106.)
Position on Bill: Oppose, becaue of the amendment to Tex. Penal Code §30.06.
Status: 11/14/14.


Senate Bills:[/size][/b]

SB124 (West, D) Relating to certain criminal offenses concerning the unlawful transfer or purchase of certain weapons.
Impact: Expands the scope of Tex. Penal Code §46.06 to certain purchases of firearms making it unlawful to purchase with intent to transfer under certain vague and ambiguous circumstances. This is a class Sen. Royce West anti-gun, anti-gun owner bill. It is intentionally vague so as to be a trap for unsuspecting persons.
Position on Bill: Oppose.
Status: 11/10/14

SB179 (Perry) Relating to the handgun proficiency required to obtain or renew a concealed handgun license.
Companion Bill: HB284 by Rep. Springer
Impact: Sets the minimum caliber for CHL qualification to .22.
Position on Bill: Support.
Status: Filed 11/12/14.
As you can see from this list, there are FOUR Open Carry bills under consideration.
  1. HB106 creates licensed OC and amends 30.06 to include OC. That last bit makes it a non-starter.
  2. HB164 creates licensed OC and leaves 30.06 alone.
  3. HB195 creates Constitutional Carry and leaves 30.06 alone.
  4. HM291 creates licensed OC and amends 30.06 to include OC. That last bit makes it a non-starter.
So as you can see, of the four bills, 1 & 4 are non-starters because of amending 30.06. 2 creates Constitutional Carry and protects 30.06. 3 creates licensed carry and protects 30.06. And, further, both 2 & 3 have TSRA/NRA support.

So the next consideration is, "how much political capital will either of these two bills cost? That question is almost irrelevant if HB164 and HB195 are the only two gun-legislation bills currently under consideration. But, they are NOT. As you can see from Charles' quote I included above, there are currently SIXTEEN bills before the House and TWO before the Senate......and these are just the ones we know about NOW. Each one of those spends some of that political capital.......and please note that Campus Carry, another very important bill, isn't even on that list yet.

Currently, it seems that HB164 probably has a very good chance of passing - creating licensed OC with protection for 30.06. And given the excellent record of CHLers in terms of criminal statistics, there probably ins't going to be that much opposition in the House, at least among the republican majority. Since HB164 wouldn't affect democrat Joe Pickett's income stream from CHL instruction, he might even get some democrats on board.

HB195 is a good bill, but it is a much tougher sell. The question is then, is it important enough to try to push it through in this session, if the price is NOT passing any of the other bills? And then, even if that question is answered in the affirmative and supporters try to ram HB195 through, what happens if they fail? They could fail, you know. It's not unheard of. In that case not only did HB195 fail, but so did a dozen other good bills......bills which might have passed if we had taken the less ambitious route and passed HB164 instead.

And even though it seems too long to wait, what if passing HB164 now makes it a slam-dunk to pass HB195 in 6 years from now?

I would dearly like to see HB195 pass, but NOT if it means that we get nothing at all. HB195 or nothing is a losing game. I'd take HB164 happily and look forward to Constitutional Carry in the future.
by The Annoyed Man
Wed Nov 19, 2014 3:51 pm
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

tomdavis wrote:Thanks for the three points that describe the position of NRA/TSRA. What is the basic parameters of "constitutional carry" and why is it the ultimate goal? Likely when I know what it means the value will be obvious. Why is OC in a 30.06 area a step backward for us CHL's.

Sorry if those answers are somewhere as I did not find them.
I'll repeat what others have said, but say it this way......First, the text of the 2nd Amendment:
A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
Obviously, anything that sets a limit on the unrestrained carry (bearing) of any firearm constitutes an infringement.

We have accepted, and case law tends to support, the notion that "the expression of your right to "A" ends where it infringes on the expression of my right to "B"". So for instance, although we have a protected right to free speech, the expression of your right to freedom of speech stops at the point where it places my right to life in danger. For reasons like this, your freedom of speech does not permit you to foment a riot, or to shout "FIRE!" in a theater.....if there is no fire. On the other hand, if you shout "FIRE!" and there IS a fire, then you may have saved some lives and have not violated another's right to life. Similarly, you have a Constitutional right to bear arms - which includes guns - but you don't have a right to use them in an irresponsible manner that will place another person's life in danger......unless you are actually defending yourself from that person. Hence municipal ordinances against the discharge of firearms within city limits. You have no right to shoot your gun into the air at midnight on New Years Eve, downtown in the middle of a crowd of people. You DO have a right to shoot that same gun at the same location on the same night to protect yourself from an assault.....although the consequences are on your shoulders if it's in the middle of a crowd and you hurt/kill someone else accidentally.

So, with Constitutional Carry, you have the right to carry a gun openly OR concealed (your preference is the only determiner) any place where it is lawful to carry a gun, for any person for whom it is legal to possess said gun. Thus, Constitutional Carry allows you to carry into both the HEB and your house of worship, but not into the town jail or in a courtroom.....provided that certain kinds of criminal convictions are not found on your record which would be disqualifiers to even owning, let alone carrying, a firearm. Section 1 of the 14th Amendment says that nobody may be deprived a their rights without due process. It is on this entirely constitutional basis that we may deprive convicted felons of the rights to vote, and to keep and bear arms. Among the penalties for conviction are loss of rights, and they have received due process before losing their rights.

The issue with 30.06 is easily understood. The very same principle which dictates that your rights stop where they interfere with mine, also dictates that businesses and other private not-owned-by-government entities/persons have a right to control their property as they see fit......including the right to exclude your guns from their property. Since the penalties to you for violating the property owners' right to exclude you from carrying on his property are fairly significant (and used to be even worse, if I recall correctly), PC §30.06 was added to the code to standardize the signage requirements. The pro-CHL majority passed it in such a way as to make it a "big ugly sign" with very specific requirements, which would have the tendency to deter some people from posting one in the first place, and which would make it invalid if not 100% compliant with the legal requirements.

Historically, 30.06 signs are not all that prevalent. There is a REASON for this, and that is that as long as your gun is out of sight, it is out of the other person's mind. PC §30.06 is the perfect illustration of the out of sight = out of mind principle. At first, the only people who tended to post them were those who cared enough about gun control to do the research and/or consult attorneys to find a way to ban firearms from their facilities. Those people were/are internally motivated, and the visibility of your gun, or lack thereof, made no difference. Others posted because an incident occurred at their place of business, or because their insurance company told them to. But the vast majority of businesses are not posted, simply because of the "out of sight = out of mind" principle.

However — and this is where a lot of OTC folks simply fail big time at the "in touch with reality" test — an openly carried firearm is a provocation to many people. Now, it isn't an ACTUAL provocation, as in an intentional act of provocation, but it still has a provocative effect on both fence sitters and "antis" who might not otherwise be thinking about your guns, because they simply aren't on the radar. Monkeys in a tree are still agitated by the sight of a lion, even if the lion can't reach them. The lion isn't trying to provoke, but its presence is provocative. THAT is what OC does. Openly carrying guns places them on the radar, and what OTC folks don't seem to understand, and in fact categorically deny, is that these people who are bothered by openly carried firearms WILL seek refuge in whatever signage relief the law provides, the same way that the monkeys in the tree will still jump up and down and pelt the lion with twigs and branches; and they WILL post signs to exclude Open Carry. They simply WILL, and when OCT folks deny it, they are out of touch with human nature, and they are in denial of reality. I'll be damned if I'm going to let someone else's denial of reality cause a setback to my rights if I can help it, and OCT's record to date is that they ARE in denial, and that DOES affect me.

Therefore, if PC §30.06 includes OC, then when fence-sitters and antis are "provoked" into posting signs to exclude OC, they are ALSO (although they may not even realize it) excluding me with CC. Why? Because I am a law-abiding citizen and will not carry my concealed weapon into a place with a compliant 30.06 sign.

THAT is why it is absolutely crucial that, whether an Open Carry bill provides for Constitutional or Licensed Carry, it absolutely MUST NOT include OC under PC §30.06, and why—if it must address signage, then it must specify OC signage under a separate part of the code........call it PC §30.07 for purposes of discussion.......so that if a business owner wanted to exclude both concealed and open carry on his property, he would have to post TWO "big ugly signs", and they would BOTH have to be compliant signs.

This is the part that OCT does not seem to get — and that's being generous to them — because, if they DO get it, then the implication is that their official policy is that if they cannot OC into a building, then neither should someone be able to CC into that same building....... a classic case of "if I can't have it, then no-one can."

And the galling thing about it is that their response to this FACT is to either LIE about it, or to call anyone who calls them on the inconsistency "anti-gun".....which is the refuge of intellectual midgets and the morally compromised.
by The Annoyed Man
Tue Nov 18, 2014 2:04 pm
Forum: 2015 Legislative Session
Topic: Questions for OCT
Replies: 111
Views: 25321

Re: Questions for OCT

Beiruty wrote:
Charles L. Cotton wrote:
Beiruty wrote:After the election is over, NRA/TSRA has to lay it bare on the ground their strategy for open-carry. There is no point of keeping silent or keeping it a secret.
I've explained our two-year cycle and how we measure and garner support for issues and bills. Open-carry is no different.

Chas.
Cahs,
What I meant: "Are we looking for unlicensed open-carry, or CHL with an option to OC?" If I am asked, I do not know what to say.
Beiruty, the strategy is this: Several OC bills are being advanced. The NRA/TSRA goal appears to be ultimately unlicensed open carry, with a recognition that we may have to achieve that in steps. Bills being advanced seem to run the gamut from Constitutional Carry with 30.06 inclusive for OC (not supported) to Constitutional Carry with 30.07 for OC (recommended and the one with best NRA/TSRA support), to licensed OC with and without inclusion of OC into 30.06 (NRA/TSRA will not support inclusion of OC into 30.06 under any argument), and other bills not addressing OC but expanding our rights in other ways......for instance getting rid of exclusion areas in which CHLs cannot carry.

Here's what you can probably count on to tell your friends who ask:
  1. TSRA and NRA will not support the inclusion of OC into 30.06 for any reason whatsoever because it is a step backward for concealed carry, so any OC bill that does this will not have their support.
  2. Whatever we can get passed that does not include OC in 30.06 is a net positive gain.
  3. The ultimate goal, whether we achieve it in this session or some future session is Constitutional Carry.
Charles, have I stated it accurately enough for general terms?

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