I tend to believe that one people start seeing guns that are against them, will try to begin posting 30.06. Out of sight and out of mind with CHL, but OC is open for everybody to see, and some may find they dislike guns in their stores and such. Not saying this would happen, but there is always the possibility. This needs to be addressed carefully.Cedar Park Dad wrote:I think what you referring to is any OC law that links to 30.06 aka you can use a 30.06 sign to ban OC. That would lead to a dramatic rise in locations excluding CHLS as well.tomdavis wrote:Thanks for the three points that describe the position of NRA/TSRA. What is the basic parameters of "constitutional carry" and why is it the ultimate goal? Likely when I know what it means the value will be obvious. Why is OC in a 30.06 area a step backward for us CHL's.
Sorry if those answers are somewhere as I did not find them.
Questions for OCT
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Re: Questions for OCT
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Re: Questions for OCT
The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed? I am very doubtful of that. Don't get me wrong, if HB 195 or similar fails, I'll take licensed OC, but I just feel that now is the time to strive for "Constitutional Carry", with everyone pushing for it. If we get the licensed OC passed, I feel that we would lose some support of those who think that it is "enough" or who totally agree with licensing, and we couldn't go that one step farther.jmra wrote:So you would rather not have the option to OC at all than to have licensed OC? Would you have preferred that we didn't pass a CHL law because it has restrictions that are difficult to get removed? Would you prefer that we didn't have the ability to CC because we didn't get what we wanted from the get go?locke_n_load wrote:The Annoyed Man wrote:Beiruty, the strategy is this: Several OC bills are being advanced. The NRA/TSRA goal appears to be ultimately unlicensed open carry, with a recognition that we may have to achieve that in steps. Bills being advanced seem to run the gamut from Constitutional Carry with 30.06 inclusive for OC (not supported) to Constitutional Carry with 30.07 for OC (recommended and the one with best NRA/TSRA support), to licensed OC with and without inclusion of OC into 30.06 (NRA/TSRA will not support inclusion of OC into 30.06 under any argument), and other bills not addressing OC but expanding our rights in other ways......for instance getting rid of exclusion areas in which CHLs cannot carry.Beiruty wrote:Cahs,Charles L. Cotton wrote:I've explained our two-year cycle and how we measure and garner support for issues and bills. Open-carry is no different.Beiruty wrote:After the election is over, NRA/TSRA has to lay it bare on the ground their strategy for open-carry. There is no point of keeping silent or keeping it a secret.
Chas.
What I meant: "Are we looking for unlicensed open-carry, or CHL with an option to OC?" If I am asked, I do not know what to say.
Here's what you can probably count on to tell your friends who ask:
Charles, have I stated it accurately enough for general terms?
- TSRA and NRA will not support the inclusion of OC into 30.06 for any reason whatsoever because it is a step backward for concealed carry, so any OC bill that does this will not have their support.
- Whatever we can get passed that does not include OC in 30.06 is a net positive gain.
- The ultimate goal, whether we achieve it in this session or some future session is Constitutional Carry.
My only problem with the "steps" idea, is that if we get licensed open carry, would we ever be able to get enough support to remove the license requirement in further sessions? The question people would ask is "why remove the requirement for license and background checks, they are a good idea" to which we reply "licensing is burdensome and against the Constitution" to which they say "we don't care, it's good enough."
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Re: Questions for OCT
If you can't get a license to OC you don't need to OC.
I don't like the license for CC, but it sure beats not carrying.
I don't like the license for CC, but it sure beats not carrying.
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Re: Questions for OCT
Perhaps a relevant comparison can be made by considering "places weapons prohibited"?locke_n_load wrote:The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed?
The restrictions have been eased in some places, and there seems to be some momentum for further easing.
Just because we have CC doesn't mean anyone is content to leave the restrictions as-is.
I think the same will happen if we only get licensed OC this session.
I am not a lawyer. This is NOT legal advice.!
Nothing tempers idealism quite like the cold bath of reality.... SQLGeek
Nothing tempers idealism quite like the cold bath of reality.... SQLGeek
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Re: Questions for OCT
Back on topic. The silence speaks volumes.Charles L. Cotton wrote:Confusing and conflicting statements and instructions have been issued by OCT leadership. All gun owners, and especially OCT members, need a clear and unequivocal statement from OCT on the following issues.
1. Will OCT support any or all licensed open-carry bills during the 2015 Texas Legislative Session?
2. Will OCT oppose any or all licensed open-carry billls?
3. Will OCT support only HB195 - unlicensed open-carry?
It's time for OCT leadership to stop sending mixed signals and let gun owners know their position on these issues.
Chas.
I am not a lawyer. This is NOT legal advice.!
Nothing tempers idealism quite like the cold bath of reality.... SQLGeek
Nothing tempers idealism quite like the cold bath of reality.... SQLGeek
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Re: Questions for OCT
Another good comparison is seat times in classes and renewals. It took some time, but we've managed to reduce the number of hours required for a CHL class, and removed the need to sit for a renewal class at all. We can't let perfect be the enemy of good.RoyGBiv wrote:Perhaps a relevant comparison can be made by considering "places weapons prohibited"?locke_n_load wrote:The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed?
The restrictions have been eased in some places, and there seems to be some momentum for further easing.
Just because we have CC doesn't mean anyone is content to leave the restrictions as-is.
I think the same will happen if we only get licensed OC this session.
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Re: Questions for OCT
I will disagree here, in regards to non-violent class A and B misdemeanors. Some people screw up, no reason they shouldn't be able to protect themselves while not at home or driving. Now if it's violent or weapons related, I agree.carlson1 wrote:If you can't get a license to OC you don't need to OC.
I don't like the license for CC, but it sure beats not carrying.
True, I just see going from licensed to unlicensed as a much bigger step than removing a couple of prohibited places here/there.RoyGBiv wrote:Perhaps a relevant comparison can be made by considering "places weapons prohibited"?locke_n_load wrote:The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed?
The restrictions have been eased in some places, and there seems to be some momentum for further easing.
Just because we have CC doesn't mean anyone is content to leave the restrictions as-is.
I think the same will happen if we only get licensed OC this session.
True. The no renewal class is great, and so is the reduced time. I forgot about those.KC5AV wrote:Another good comparison is seat times in classes and renewals. It took some time, but we've managed to reduce the number of hours required for a CHL class, and removed the need to sit for a renewal class at all. We can't let perfect be the enemy of good.RoyGBiv wrote:Perhaps a relevant comparison can be made by considering "places weapons prohibited"?locke_n_load wrote:The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed?
The restrictions have been eased in some places, and there seems to be some momentum for further easing.
Just because we have CC doesn't mean anyone is content to leave the restrictions as-is.
I think the same will happen if we only get licensed OC this session.
I'm not trying to argue, I am just less optimistic than most I guess for going from licensed to unlicensed I reckon. Thanks all for your input. I also wonder if there will be a bill similar to 195 that will also remove some more off-limits locations but is for no-license OC. Time will tell I guess.
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Re: Questions for OCT
I'll repeat what others have said, but say it this way......First, the text of the 2nd Amendment:tomdavis wrote:Thanks for the three points that describe the position of NRA/TSRA. What is the basic parameters of "constitutional carry" and why is it the ultimate goal? Likely when I know what it means the value will be obvious. Why is OC in a 30.06 area a step backward for us CHL's.
Sorry if those answers are somewhere as I did not find them.
Obviously, anything that sets a limit on the unrestrained carry (bearing) of any firearm constitutes an infringement.A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
We have accepted, and case law tends to support, the notion that "the expression of your right to "A" ends where it infringes on the expression of my right to "B"". So for instance, although we have a protected right to free speech, the expression of your right to freedom of speech stops at the point where it places my right to life in danger. For reasons like this, your freedom of speech does not permit you to foment a riot, or to shout "FIRE!" in a theater.....if there is no fire. On the other hand, if you shout "FIRE!" and there IS a fire, then you may have saved some lives and have not violated another's right to life. Similarly, you have a Constitutional right to bear arms - which includes guns - but you don't have a right to use them in an irresponsible manner that will place another person's life in danger......unless you are actually defending yourself from that person. Hence municipal ordinances against the discharge of firearms within city limits. You have no right to shoot your gun into the air at midnight on New Years Eve, downtown in the middle of a crowd of people. You DO have a right to shoot that same gun at the same location on the same night to protect yourself from an assault.....although the consequences are on your shoulders if it's in the middle of a crowd and you hurt/kill someone else accidentally.
So, with Constitutional Carry, you have the right to carry a gun openly OR concealed (your preference is the only determiner) any place where it is lawful to carry a gun, for any person for whom it is legal to possess said gun. Thus, Constitutional Carry allows you to carry into both the HEB and your house of worship, but not into the town jail or in a courtroom.....provided that certain kinds of criminal convictions are not found on your record which would be disqualifiers to even owning, let alone carrying, a firearm. Section 1 of the 14th Amendment says that nobody may be deprived a their rights without due process. It is on this entirely constitutional basis that we may deprive convicted felons of the rights to vote, and to keep and bear arms. Among the penalties for conviction are loss of rights, and they have received due process before losing their rights.
The issue with 30.06 is easily understood. The very same principle which dictates that your rights stop where they interfere with mine, also dictates that businesses and other private not-owned-by-government entities/persons have a right to control their property as they see fit......including the right to exclude your guns from their property. Since the penalties to you for violating the property owners' right to exclude you from carrying on his property are fairly significant (and used to be even worse, if I recall correctly), PC §30.06 was added to the code to standardize the signage requirements. The pro-CHL majority passed it in such a way as to make it a "big ugly sign" with very specific requirements, which would have the tendency to deter some people from posting one in the first place, and which would make it invalid if not 100% compliant with the legal requirements.
Historically, 30.06 signs are not all that prevalent. There is a REASON for this, and that is that as long as your gun is out of sight, it is out of the other person's mind. PC §30.06 is the perfect illustration of the out of sight = out of mind principle. At first, the only people who tended to post them were those who cared enough about gun control to do the research and/or consult attorneys to find a way to ban firearms from their facilities. Those people were/are internally motivated, and the visibility of your gun, or lack thereof, made no difference. Others posted because an incident occurred at their place of business, or because their insurance company told them to. But the vast majority of businesses are not posted, simply because of the "out of sight = out of mind" principle.
However — and this is where a lot of OTC folks simply fail big time at the "in touch with reality" test — an openly carried firearm is a provocation to many people. Now, it isn't an ACTUAL provocation, as in an intentional act of provocation, but it still has a provocative effect on both fence sitters and "antis" who might not otherwise be thinking about your guns, because they simply aren't on the radar. Monkeys in a tree are still agitated by the sight of a lion, even if the lion can't reach them. The lion isn't trying to provoke, but its presence is provocative. THAT is what OC does. Openly carrying guns places them on the radar, and what OTC folks don't seem to understand, and in fact categorically deny, is that these people who are bothered by openly carried firearms WILL seek refuge in whatever signage relief the law provides, the same way that the monkeys in the tree will still jump up and down and pelt the lion with twigs and branches; and they WILL post signs to exclude Open Carry. They simply WILL, and when OCT folks deny it, they are out of touch with human nature, and they are in denial of reality. I'll be damned if I'm going to let someone else's denial of reality cause a setback to my rights if I can help it, and OCT's record to date is that they ARE in denial, and that DOES affect me.
Therefore, if PC §30.06 includes OC, then when fence-sitters and antis are "provoked" into posting signs to exclude OC, they are ALSO (although they may not even realize it) excluding me with CC. Why? Because I am a law-abiding citizen and will not carry my concealed weapon into a place with a compliant 30.06 sign.
THAT is why it is absolutely crucial that, whether an Open Carry bill provides for Constitutional or Licensed Carry, it absolutely MUST NOT include OC under PC §30.06, and why—if it must address signage, then it must specify OC signage under a separate part of the code........call it PC §30.07 for purposes of discussion.......so that if a business owner wanted to exclude both concealed and open carry on his property, he would have to post TWO "big ugly signs", and they would BOTH have to be compliant signs.
This is the part that OCT does not seem to get — and that's being generous to them — because, if they DO get it, then the implication is that their official policy is that if they cannot OC into a building, then neither should someone be able to CC into that same building....... a classic case of "if I can't have it, then no-one can."
And the galling thing about it is that their response to this FACT is to either LIE about it, or to call anyone who calls them on the inconsistency "anti-gun".....which is the refuge of intellectual midgets and the morally compromised.
Last edited by The Annoyed Man on Wed Nov 19, 2014 3:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Questions for OCT
Your assumption is either that 1) we can pass either licensed open-carry or unlicensed open-carry as a matter of choice; or 2) by filing and supporting licensed open-carry bills, it reduces the chance of passing unlicensed open-carry. Both are inaccurate.locke_n_load wrote:The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed? I am very doubtful of that. Don't get me wrong, if HB 195 or similar fails, I'll take licensed OC, but I just feel that now is the time to strive for "Constitutional Carry", with everyone pushing for it. If we get the licensed OC passed, I feel that we would lose some support of those who think that it is "enough" or who totally agree with licensing, and we couldn't go that one step farther.
We're about to go into legislative session trying to pass HB195 and as yet unfiled licensed open-carry bills, so I'm not going to post something that I don't want thrown in my face during committee hearings. I'll say this much; an all-or-nothing approach with highly controversial legislation almost always gets you the "nothing" result.
While the NRA and TSRA worked hard from the closing weeks of the 2013 Texas Legislative Session until now to build legislative support for open-carry, that support is for removing the duty to conceal from CHLs. (That's a logical and rational first step, just as CHL provided us the opportunity to pass unlicensed car-carry.) One of the strongest points in our argument in favor of open-carry is the excellent 18 year track record CHLs have earned. It's hard for any honest person to argue that CHLs, who are almost 17 times less likely to commit a crime than the general public, will mysteriously become a danger to society if they remove their jacket and expose their handguns. This cannot be said for unlicensed open-carry. In fact, the very people who would be able to carry for the first time are those who are 17 times more likely to commit a crime than those of us who are already carrying.
I'm done. I've already said too much.
Chas.
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Re: Questions for OCT
Yes it does! Surely someone with OCT is watching the Forum; please ask for an official answer to these very important questions. Those answers could well foretell whether there will be a united front during the session, or whether back-biting will kill any chance of unlicensed open-carry.RoyGBiv wrote:Back on topic. The silence speaks volumes.Charles L. Cotton wrote:Confusing and conflicting statements and instructions have been issued by OCT leadership. All gun owners, and especially OCT members, need a clear and unequivocal statement from OCT on the following issues.
1. Will OCT support any or all licensed open-carry bills during the 2015 Texas Legislative Session?
2. Will OCT oppose any or all licensed open-carry billls?
3. Will OCT support only HB195 - unlicensed open-carry?
It's time for OCT leadership to stop sending mixed signals and let gun owners know their position on these issues.
Chas.
This thread was started at 3:49PM on Monday, Nov. 17th and CJ Grisham last logged in at 10:47PM that same day. Since you've seen these questions CJ, please give Texas gun owners answers.
Chas.
Re: Questions for OCT
I only speak for myself, but I feel confident that if constitutional carry is the ultimate goal, which it seems most if not all of us are in agreement on then a compromise licensed OC bill passing next session would hurt the chances of constitutional carry passing soon if not ever. There are a few reasons for that. One, a certain % of the grassroots support would be willing to settle for licensed OC and would give up the fight draining resources away to fight for constitutional carry later on. Second, legislators will rush to claim how pro gun they are because they passed licensed open carry making it more difficult to pressure them to pass constitutional carry in future sessions. Politicians are always eager to make you go away with the least amount of effort as possible. Most of all I am tired of asking politicians to give us a little bit of our rights back at a time, that's how we ended up with a NICS system, AW ban and almost had Manchin-Toomey passed. Nothing wrong with pushing for what we really want. If the politicians see that we are already saying, "we hope constitutional carry passes, but we know that probably isn't going to happen so if you give us licensed open carry we will be happy with that for now" then licensed OC is the best thing that can happen. It's like selling a car to someone "I am asking $10k but I will take $7k" Well what are the odds of getting $10k for your car?
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Re: Questions for OCT
I am surprised however Chas, that 44 other states already have Open Carry options, with only 13 of those states requiring Licensed open carry. Why are we stuck with California, Florida, South Carolina, New York, and Illinois? (My numbers may be off, as my last print out of this information is over a year old, but it still represents my argument.)Charles L. Cotton wrote:Your assumption is either that 1) we can pass either licensed open-carry or unlicensed open-carry as a matter of choice; or 2) by filing and supporting licensed open-carry bills, it reduces the chance of passing unlicensed open-carry. Both are inaccurate.locke_n_load wrote:The CHL law was great because we had no way to carry a handgun in public previously. I just wonder if we go licensed OC, would we ever get the backing to go unlicensed? I am very doubtful of that. Don't get me wrong, if HB 195 or similar fails, I'll take licensed OC, but I just feel that now is the time to strive for "Constitutional Carry", with everyone pushing for it. If we get the licensed OC passed, I feel that we would lose some support of those who think that it is "enough" or who totally agree with licensing, and we couldn't go that one step farther.
We're about to go into legislative session trying to pass HB195 and as yet unfiled licensed open-carry bills, so I'm not going to post something that I don't want thrown in my face during committee hearings. I'll say this much; an all-or-nothing approach with highly controversial legislation almost always gets you the "nothing" result.
While the NRA and TSRA worked hard from the closing weeks of the 2013 Texas Legislative Session until now to build legislative support for open-carry, that support is for removing the duty to conceal from CHLs. (That's a logical and rational first step, just as CHL provided us the opportunity to pass unlicensed car-carry.) One of the strongest points in our argument in favor of open-carry is the excellent 18 year track record CHLs have earned. It's hard for any honest person to argue that CHLs, who are almost 17 times less likely to commit a crime than the general public, will mysteriously become a danger to society if they remove their jacket and expose their handguns. This cannot be said for unlicensed open-carry. In fact, the very people who would be able to carry for the first time are those who are 17 times more likely to commit a crime than those of us who are already carrying.
I'm done. I've already said too much.
Chas.
What is it specifically that has kept our great state of Texas, from achieving this? Aside from a broad answer, I am very curious about this. There are just six states prohibiting Open Carry, and I believe there are more prohibiting concealed carry if I recall correctly. I have been under the impression that there is plenty of movement across the nation to gain reasoning from to push open carry through in the past, and it is still just up in the air now of course. Could you provide some helpful insight into what has been the main barrier in this Chas? I'm just looking to further my own knowledge on this topic.
Thank you. I of course only want you to say what you can without saying anything that could be relevant and important to our current fight for our rights and possible dampen your efforts.
Sincerely,
Charlie
Last edited by Charlies.Contingency on Wed Nov 19, 2014 4:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Questions for OCT
The Annoyed Man wrote:I'll repeat what others have said, but say it this way......First, the text of the 2nd Amendment:tomdavis wrote:Thanks for the three points that describe the position of NRA/TSRA. What is the basic parameters of "constitutional carry" and why is it the ultimate goal? Likely when I know what it means the value will be obvious. Why is OC in a 30.06 area a step backward for us CHL's.
Sorry if those answers are somewhere as I did not find them.Obviously, anything that sets a limit on the unrestrained carry (bearing) of any firearm constitutes an infringement.A well regulated militia, being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed.
We have accepted, and case law tends to support, the notion that "the expression of your right to "A" ends where it infringes on the expression of my right to "B"". So for instance, although we have a protected right to free speech, the expression of your right to freedom of speech stops at the point where it places my right to life in danger. For reasons like this, your freedom of speech does not permit you to foment a riot, or to shout "FIRE!" in a theater.....if there is no fire. On the other hand, if you shout "FIRE!" and there IS a fire, then you may have saved some lives and have not violated another's right to life. Similarly, you have a Constitutional right to bear arms - which includes guns - but you don't have a right to use them in an irresponsible manner that will place another person's life in danger......unless you are actually defending yourself from that person. Hence municipal ordinances against the discharge of firearms within city limits. You have no right to shoot your gun into the air at midnight on New Years Eve, downtown in the middle of a crowd of people. You DO have a right to shoot that same gun at the same location on the same night to protect yourself from an assault.....although the consequences are on your shoulders if it's in the middle of a crowd and you hurt/kill someone else accidentally.
So, with Constitutional Carry, you have the right to carry a gun openly OR concealed (your preference is the only determiner) any place where it is lawful to carry a gun, for any person for whom it is legal to possess said gun. Thus, Constitutional Carry allows you to carry into both the HEB and your house of worship, but not into the town jail or in a courtroom.....provided that certain kinds of criminal convictions are not found on your record which would be disqualifiers to even owning, let alone carrying, a firearm. Section 1 of the 14th Amendment says that nobody may be deprived a their rights without due process. It is on this entirely constitutional basis that we may deprive convicted felons of the rights to vote, and to keep and bear arms. Among the penalties for conviction are loss of rights, and they have received due process before losing their rights.
The issue with 30.06 is easily understood. The very same principle which dictates that your rights stop where they interfere with mine, also dictates that businesses and other private not-owned-by-government entities/persons have a right to control their property as they see fit......including the right to exclude your guns from their property. Since the penalties to you for violating the property owners' right to exclude you from carrying on his property are fairly significant (and used to be even worse, if I recall correctly), PC §30.06 was added to the code to standardize the signage requirements. The pro-CHL majority passed it in such a way as to make it a "big ugly sign" with very specific requirements, which would have the tendency to deter some people from posting one in the first place, and which would make it invalid if not 100% compliant with the legal requirements.
Historically, 30.06 signs are not all that prevalent. There is a REASON for this, and that is that as long as your gun is out of sight, it is out of the other person's mind. PC §30.06 is the perfect illustration of the out of sight = out of mind principle. At first, the only people who tended to post them were those who cared enough about gun control to do the research and/or consult attorneys to find a way to ban firearms from their facilities. Those people were/are internally motivated, and the visibility of your gun, or lack thereof, made no difference. Others posted because an incident occurred at their place of business, or because their insurance company told them to. But the vast majority of businesses are not posted, simply because of the "out of sight = out of mind" principle.
However — and this is where a lot of OTC folks simply fail big time at the "in touch with reality" test — an openly carried firearm is a provocation to many people. Now, it isn't an ACTUAL provocation, as in an intentional act of provocation, but it still has a provocative effect on both fence sitters and "antis" who might not otherwise be thinking about your guns, because they simply aren't on the radar. Monkeys in a tree are still agitated by the sight of a lion, even if the lion can't reach them. The lion isn't trying to provoke, but its presence is provocative. THAT is what OC does. Openly carrying guns places them on the radar, and what OTC folks don't seem to understand, and in fact categorically deny, is that these people who are bothered by openly carried firearms WILL seek refuge in whatever signage relief the law provides, the same way that the monkeys in the tree will still jump up and down and pelt the lion with twigs and branches; and they WILL post signs to exclude Open Carry. They simply WILL, and when OCT folks deny it, they are out of touch with human nature, and they are in denial of reality. I'll be damned if I'm going to let someone else's denial of reality cause a setback to my rights if I can help it, and OCT's record to date is that they ARE in denial, and that DOES affect me.
Therefore, if PC §30.06 includes OC, then when fence-sitters and antis are "provoked" into posting signs to exclude OC, they are ALSO (although they may not even realize it) excluding me with CC. Why? Because I am a law-abiding citizen and will not carry my concealed weapon into a place with a compliant 30.06 sign.
THAT is why it is absolutely crucial that, whether an Open Carry bill provides for Constitutional or Licensed Carry, it absolutely MUST NOT include OC under PC §30.06, and why—if it must address signage, then it must specify OC signage under a separate part of the code........call it PC §30.07 for purposes of discussion.......so that if a business owner wanted to exclude both concealed and open carry on his property, he would have to post TWO "big ugly signs", and they would BOTH have to be compliant signs.
This is the part that OCT does not seem to get — and that's being generous to them — because, if they DO get it, then the implication is that their official policy is that if they cannot OC into a building, then neither should someone be able to CC into that same building....... a classic case of "if I can't have it, then no-one can."
And the galling thing about it is that their response to this FACT is to either LIE about it, or to call anyone who calls them on the inconsistency "anti-gun".....which is the refuge of intellectual midgets and the morally compromised.
I repost the entire thing as its said so elegantly.
Re: Questions for OCT
Most states that have open carry have never had a ban on it in the first place. Those that have licensed open carry may have once been illegal, but that was usually in cities.Charlies.Contingency wrote:I am surprised however Chas, that 44 other states already have Open Carry options, with only 13 of those states requiring Licensed open carry. Why are we stuck with California, Florida, South Carolina, New York, and Illinois? (My numbers may be off, as my last print out of this information is over a year old, but it still represents my argument.)
What is it specifically that has kept our great state of Texas, from achieving this? Aside from a broad answer, I am very curious about this. There are just six states prohibiting Open Carry, and I believe there are more prohibiting concealed carry if I recall correctly. I have been under the impression that there is plenty of movement across the nation to gain reasoning from to push open carry through in the past, and it is still just up in the air now of course. Could you provide some helpful insight into what has been the main barrier in this Chas? I'm just looking to further my own knowledge on this topic.
Thank you.
An example of good change is Missouri, who has always had unlicensed open carry, but allowed cities and municipalities to enact ordinances prohibiting the open carry of a weapon. The legislature just passed a bill that now prohibits cities from enacting ordinances on licensed open carry. It is yet to see how that will be received in cities that once disallowed any open carry at all. You can still open carry without a license in rural areas and in cities that don't have ordinances against it.
Keith
Texas LTC Instructor, Missouri CCW Instructor, NRA Certified Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun Instructor and RSO, NRA Life Member
Psalm 82:3-4
Texas LTC Instructor, Missouri CCW Instructor, NRA Certified Pistol, Rifle, Shotgun Instructor and RSO, NRA Life Member
Psalm 82:3-4
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Re: Questions for OCT
I am surprised however Chas, that 44 other states already have Open Carry options, with only 13 of those states requiring Licensed open carry. Why are we stuck with California, Florida, South Carolina, New York, and Illinois? (My numbers may be off, as my last print out of this information is over a year old, but it still represents my argument.)
What is it specifically that has kept our great state of Texas, from achieving this? Aside from a broad answer, I am very curious about this. There are just six states prohibiting Open Carry, and I believe there are more prohibiting concealed carry if I recall correctly. I have been under the impression that there is plenty of movement across the nation to gain reasoning from to push open carry through in the past, and it is still just up in the air now of course. Could you provide some helpful insight into what has been the main barrier in this Chas? I'm just looking to further my own knowledge on this topic.
Thank you.
Mmmm so you're saying we can open carry in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, Massachusetts, and Michigan? Sure you can...You can't even own a gun in New Jersey, much less OC it. Connecticut with some of the most stringent bans in the Union, permits OC? Prove it, and no if the lasw is silent but you can't own the firearms in the first place, its irrelevant.