Perhaps I wasn't eloquent enough. What i was trying to say is that, within the context of our rights, restrictions on those rights are determined by the people through their representatives. That's why "assault" weapons were banned for a while but are not banned now. That's why concealed carry was once illegal but is now the norm.mloamiller wrote:In general, I agree with the statements above, but I think the last sentence contradicts them. Yes, our rights are limited by the impact they have on the rights of others (unless the "others" are conservative, heterosexual Christians, but that's a different thread). However, we shouldn't have to prove that our exercising our rights will not endanger or threaten others. The reverse should be true - those who want to limit our rights should be required to prove that our excising those rights will adversely impact the rights of others. So in the context of this thread, has it been proven that constitutional (unlicensed) carry is a threat to others? I don't think so.baldeagle wrote: So long as the government does not break into or encroach upon your right to keep or bear arms, any action they take would be constitutional by legal definition. No right is absolute. All rights must be balanced against the rights of others.
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Similarly, you have the right to keep and bear arms, but you may not do so in a manner that is threatening to or endangers other people. The question is obviously raised, who decides what is threatening to or endangers other people? The answer is the people do, through their representatives. So, if you want "constitutional carry" (or more accurately unlicensed carry), you must convince the people that it will not endanger them or threaten them in some way.
As it has been said many times in many ways, it isn't the carrying of a gun that threatens others, it's the intent and motivation of the one carrying it, and no law or license is going to impact that.
Whatever our rights might be, the people will decide what restrictions there are on those rights, right or wrong, constitutional or not. Obviously, if one believes that open unlicensed carry should be legal, then one must convince enough of the people that their representatives will make it so. Some states have done that. Others have not. But constitutional carry is a misnomer adopted by the unlicensed carry proponents in an obvious effort to claim righteousness for their position. Carry is constitutional. Licensed or unlicensed is a matter for the people to decide. If it were not so, we would have unlicensed carry now nationwide.
IOW, however ineloquent I may be, the battle is in the legislature, not the courts, and those who desire unlicensed carry must fight that battle to win it.