With all due respect to the courses, I think the legal requirements do more to weed out folks for Texas CHL than the difficulty of the classroom requirements. I learned some interesting information from my CHL class, but I've learned far more in other places (including this forum you provide for us).Charles L. Cotton wrote:If that's all you got from your CHL class, then I'm sorry you missed so much. I wish statistics like those published in Texas were available for other states so I could track them like I do for Texas. If the numbers are as good as we see in Texas, then that would be valuable information to use when promoting unlicensed carry.CleverNickname wrote:I disagree. The CHL class boils down to "Don't be a jerk. You're not a junior policeman now. Here's where you can carry and where you can't. Please stay awake for long enough to regurgitate this info in a multiple choice test. Shoot this 50-round test that a blind spastic monkey could complete." Passing the CHL class doesn't make someone "elite" in any sense of the word.
If you want to make the case for a required class, then you need to look at stats for other states which have no required class and show they have higher rates of licensee misconduct and/or shooting at things in self-defense and missing them than we have in Texas (or other states with required classes).
Chas.
I'm about 95% sure I could have passed the written test requirement (that's not to say I didn't get anything out of the lecture portion beyond passing the test); and I know for sure I could have passed the "proficiency" testing on the range. That was my first time ever to shoot a handgun, and I outshot the deputy sheriff that shared my lane.