It's not silly at all. It took 16 years of hard work by Charles and others before the Texas legislature passed a CHL law. And while it was controversial at the time, it was, IMO, not nearly as opposed by legislators, law enforcement and anti-gunners as open carry is. While it is not impossible to get passed, there are going to have to be way more folks jump on the band wagon to get the support needed to pass it into law. And when that wagon passes by the viewing stand for the judges to see it better be a pretty shiny wagon with gold wheels that woos the public and law makers and not the stinky manure wagon some of the radical OC supporters are already bringing to the parade.Superman wrote:Ya, I didn't even talk about how silly it was to "relatively" compare to the population of all of Texas. The same statement could be used for CHLer's in general, let alone a supposed subset of CHLer's...CHL is "relatively small in comparison to the total Texas population." You even said it yourself when you started your last sentence with "I don't believe...". That's my point, there is no empirical evidence provided to come to any kind of conclusion. I believe your opinion/assumption is correct, but again, I just thought it was funny.
I guess let's just chalk it up to me having a weird sense of humor or maybe some OCD flaring up and move on
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Return to “Great Article... Charles Cotton, Open Carry”
- Wed Apr 30, 2014 1:01 pm
- Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
- Topic: Great Article... Charles Cotton, Open Carry
- Replies: 17
- Views: 3481
Re: Great Article... Charles Cotton, Open Carry
- Wed Apr 30, 2014 10:57 am
- Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
- Topic: Great Article... Charles Cotton, Open Carry
- Replies: 17
- Views: 3481
Re: Great Article... Charles Cotton, Open Carry
I will tell you exactly how you can tell. CHL holders make up approximately 2% of the total population of Texas. This forum is and even smaller subset of CHL holders in Texas (including a few from other states.) Take into consideration just the members here that either do not support open carry or only support licensed open carry, and then those that do support open carry, but not strongly and you will be well into the sub-1% of the population of Texas. I don't believe there is a large group of unlicensed people across Texas who are strongly pro-open carry, which is what the first group referred to is.Superman wrote:I did read the whole paragraph (and article) and no, it doesn't matter what it's talking about...it still doesn't make sense. But here is the whole paragraph like you wanted:jmra wrote:This is an example of what happens when someone takes a sentence out of context. Read the whole paragraph and the sentence makes perfect sense.Superman wrote:If you don't know the number of people, then how can you determine its relative size to anything? Ha!![]()
So now with the whole context, how does it change the fact that since we don't know the number of people in the group that strongly supports open-carry, prefers unlicensed open-carry, but would reluctantly accept a license to legally open-carry...we can't make any relative population claims to anything? It doesn't matter the context...if you say something is relative to something else, you have to know the population sizes (or at least be able to estimate it via a sampling).Generally speaking, people who support, oppose, or fall somewhere in the middle, in terms of open-carry in Texas, fall into three groups. Some strongly support open-carry and these people tend to prefer unlicensed open-carry but will reluctantly acquiesce to requiring a Texas Concealed Handgun License in order to legally open-carry. The number of people falling into this first group is unknown, but it is relatively small in comparison to the total Texas population.
Granted it feels like the statement is correct (I would tend to agree with it), but I just found it funny that it basically says "we don't know how many people think this way, but trust us it's a small group." It's just funny to hear "we don't know something" followed by an assertion on that something...in the same sentence. Just sharing what I found amusing.
ETA: And I probably wouldn't have laughed if it simply said "The number of people falling into this first group is unknown, but we suspect/assume it is relatively small in comparison to the total Texas population."