I see OC in a similar fashion to the eight blind men touching an elephant. Each reports what he feels but none is able to provide the comprehensive picture.djjoshuad wrote: It is no longer necessary for one to be armed in order to survive daily life. Threats do still exist, even ones that are outside the reasonable protection of local law enforcement. For that reason, I believe that citizens should arm themselves. But we also live in drastically closer quarters than we did back then. We have new drugs and abnormalities that did not exist or were not as prevalent back then. Your average citizen has access to others on a scale that would have stupefied any of the founding fathers. We have a lot more "idle hands" than ever before... regulation of firearms is paramount.
For the same reasons I support regulation of firearms, I support campus carry and the employer parking lot bills. I (cautiously) support open carry. I want the good guys to have guns. I know that the bad guys will get them, regardless of the laws, but I want to make it tougher for them, and for them to be more heavily punished when they do break the laws. Unregulated ownership and carrying of firearms threatens our ability to do that. But... I digress. This is about OC, not about gun control. BTW - go mavs :)
There are places in our country where it is absolutely necessary to be armed to survive. There are places in our cities where even the LEO refuse to go. There are varying degrees of that lawlessness. Camden, NJ is a great example.
In contrast, even populated areas of PA would not be agast at OC. Guns are an accepted way of life and seeing one is not going to cause mass hysteria. I agree that Philadelphia and Pittsburgh are probably not good candidates for OC but Lancaster County or Wilkes Barre would be.
I'll submit that in many places (Chicago) we currently have unregulated ownership of firearms. The bad guys have them. The good guys, because of the overregulation, do not, or not in any effective way. NJ is another place. Yes, you can own them but don't even think about using them for personal protection. Yet in Newark, gun crime is significant. None of the guns involved in those crimes follow NJ's burdensome gun controls.
I don't want to take this too far but I do believe that there is a reason. Politicians are not afraid of BGs with guns except on a random basis. They are afraid of GGs with guns. Hence the disparity.
I would agree that some of our US population needs a period of time to acclimate to OC carry again. That process needs to start somewhere and at some time. I don't see mass hysteria coming from the States that already offer OC but admit that the reason may be that not many people do it. In Texas, OC in Justin or even Weatherford would probably go unnoticed. The same OC in Dallas could produce a different result. Downtown Atlanta would not be good either but Kennesaw, where individual gun ownership is a requirement for all households, would probably not have a problem with OC.
My chief concern with OC is not that 30.06 signs will suddenly appear everywhere. There will have to be a catalyst. Many people would assume that an OC was an off-duty LEO unless that appearance and demeanor of that person said otherwise. Two guys with western style revolvers and holsters showing up in a Austin shopping mall would be that catalyst. As the Texas Legislature acted to handle the aftermath of the church shootings by loosening the restrictions on church carry, I believe that they would act to tighten up gun carrying in general if there were several OC catalyst events. I doubt that the best efforts of the NRA and associated groups would be able to manage the Legislative overreaction to those catalysts.