Well I just skimmed over the Utah concealed handgun laws and actually from what I read there is nothing that would prevent someone who is totally blind from getting a license and carrying a gun.CollinLeon wrote:Well, isn't that better than just painting a Scarlet "V" (for "victim") on your forehead?VoiceofReason wrote:So when I’m 96, my hands shake, and I can’t see ten feet with thick glasses, I can get a Utah license and carry in Texas? That’s good to know. Yall be safe now.
For that matter, why shouldn't someone who is confined to a wheelchair and totally blind not be able to defend themselves? I don't seem to remember the Founding Fathers saying anything about age or infirmity in the 2nd Amendment. In fact, I'm pretty sure that they said, "SHALL NO BE INFRINGED". As such, even the requirement to get a CHL is an infringement on our 2nd Amendment rights.
Now, doesn’t the mental image of a totally blind person in a parking lot or apartment complex blasting away just give you a warm fuzzy feeling?
My concern is that this would give the Brady Bunch and the media some great fodder. Headline “It is possible for someone to get a license and carry a gun in 32 states without even being able to see what they are shooting at.”
Most states just recently permitted people to legally carry and a few still don’t. I would not want to see us lose ground because of this. Governments do not give people certain rights but they sure can take them away.
By the way, I am disabled and will probably soon be in a wheel chair but even I wouldn’t carry if I couldn’t see what I was shooting at or what was behind behind my intended target.