The only people I see obsessing are the radical open-carry-or-nothing crowd. I don't see any strong opposition to open-carry in the gun community. Yes, we will kill any open-carry bill that makes TPC §30.06 apply to both concealed and open carry, but that's not opposition to open-carry, that's protecting current gun rights.paxton25 wrote:I honestly don't know why so money people obsess either way about OC, just like the other states with legal OC it will be a relatively rare occurrence.C-dub wrote:And that's the crux of the issue. Any one of those issues outline by Charles will, by far, affect more people than will the passage of any OC bill. If an OC bill does pass there will probably initially be decent numbers of people doing it just because. However, once the novelty settles down and or more places post whatever sign is required to prohibit the activity, it will become a rarity except for those unable to obtain a CHL, if a license to OC is not required. That also seems to be the group with the loudest voices in opposition to any licensed OC bill. Those that are unable for whatever reason to obtain a CHL, IMO.IlliniBill wrote:Agree 100%. I believe these issues are much more important than open carry. I sent my representative a letter yesterday stating that opinion.Charles L. Cotton wrote:
As I've said numerous times, I'm far more concerned about who can carry and where we can carry than with how we can carry. If we don't remove off-limits areas, prohibit the posting of unenforceable 30.06 signs on government property, pass campus-carry, exempt church volunteer "security" people from the restriction on being armed, remove successfully completed deferred adjudications and delinquent taxes or child-support from the list of CHL disqualifiers, or limit misdemeanor disqualifiers to only violent crimes, because we spent too much time and political capital on open-carry, I'm going to be a very bitter Second Amendment activist! Those are issues that will have a positive impact on hundreds of thousands if not millions of Texans, while open-carry will be practiced by only a relative handful of people.
Chas.
I'm 5'9", weigh 175# and I carry a 5" all steel Government Model 1911 in .45ACP year round. I must admit that when I hear the different gun for different seasons argument, it falls on deaf ears. I've counseled open-carry supporters not to over state their case and make unfounded claims of necessity and benefit. Open-carry is a minor convenience to very few people on very few occasions. Open-carry is the type of legislation to sell not be falsely claiming it is needed, but by asking the question, "why not, why do you think Texans are not as responsible as residents of the states that have open-carry?"paxton25 wrote:I would like the option so I don't have to switch to my pocket pistol in the summer time and keep wearing my full frame 9 . . .
HB195 is not the way to go, not by any stretch of the imagination. You try to both emphasize the claimed importance of open-carry, while at the same time minimize it's impact by admitting that very few people will carry openly. You then use this argument to trivialize the horrendous political war that will result if the NRA and TSRA make HB195 their focus. Passage of HB195 is "problematic" and for it to have any chance, the NRA will have to throw it's full political weight and support behind it. Doing so will alienate political allies and friends in Austin, it will leave many feeling abandoned (I won't say more, so don't ask) and it will burn all of our political capital leaving far more important issues to die in committee. All this for a bill that, at the end of the day, will not pass. There is a way to get to unlicensed open or concealed carry, but open-carry zealots wanting instant gratification don't have the patience to accomplish it.paxton25 wrote:. If we all agree that constitutional carry is the way to go, for the OC crowd and for the concealed carry crowd why don't we all coalesce around the bill that is best for everyone, IMO that is HB 195.
I'll say this much. If OCT carries through with its promise to attack any and all legislators who don't support HB195 even though licensed open-carry is passed, it will guarantee that unlicensed open-carry will not pass for years, if ever.
Chas.