My son exited a restaurant in Chicago and a panhandler approached him and said she was hungry. He told her he'd take her into the restaurant and buy her a meal. She said she didn't like that kind of food and wanted Chinese food. The result: she got nothing. They do think they're owed a handout....that's precisely what the government and the "entitlement" system have taught them.Taurus.40 wrote:Just a tid bit from my experience, they will not take no for an answer. I'm nice at the first request but I get real aggregated the second time I'm asked. It used to be that someone would ask once. Now they will ask and when you say no they get mad. It's like they think they are owed the hand out. I told a guy no a few months back and he got mad and told me that he guesses there are no Christians in my town.
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Return to “Opinions/comments on parking lot guy approching me?”
- Fri Dec 13, 2013 11:58 am
- Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
- Topic: Opinions/comments on parking lot guy approching me?
- Replies: 48
- Views: 8856
Re: Opinions/comments on parking lot guy approching me?
- Thu Dec 12, 2013 1:06 pm
- Forum: Gun and/or Self-Defense Related Political Issues
- Topic: Opinions/comments on parking lot guy approching me?
- Replies: 48
- Views: 8856
Re: Opinions/comments on parking lot guy approching me?
I think this is the best approach in an ambiguous situation where you haven't made a clear decision to draw. I read about an incident at a gas station in Austin where a couple of guys were "interviewing" a woman for attack. She did what you did, and he asked "do you have a gun?" Her response was "that's for me to know and you to find out." Him and his buddy jumped into their car and drove off.SewTexas wrote:I would suggest (for the future) the best way to do this type of move, and what I've done, is to not "show" the gun, but to let the stalker "know" that you have it.
Basically, when I was in the same situation you were, (it was dark-ish and in a WM parking lot, so it was reasonably well lit) I was able to shift my bags to the same hand as my purse and put my hand under the hem of my shirt, he saw what I did, I did it very deliberately and with my eyes on him. There was no mistaking what I had my hand on, but I had not displayed anything, so no one not involved could possibly be nervous.
meanwhile remember, the law was changed about failing to conceal, you're ok. and we don't have a brandishing law. I think you're ok.
I like her more guarded approach. She didn't say she had a gun and didn't display a gun.