Sure, with that attitude it is.anygunanywhere wrote:Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.
But I agree that decreasing the number of off-limits locations to CHLs is likely the next step before we go to Unlicensed OC.
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Sure, with that attitude it is.anygunanywhere wrote:Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.
Experience matters whether you are shooting a Cat III approach or identifying bad guys on the street.Excaliber wrote:Trust me when I say that an experienced LEO can tell the difference between a CHL holder and a felon most of the time just from body language and the look in the person's eyes when he spots the officer. There are also many reasons to stop someone other than for open carry and bad guys tend to be pretty sloppy about not crossing lines. LEO's figure those things out pretty successfully today, and open carry won't diminish their ability to do so.Beiruty wrote:Wait few years and the law would be "enhanced" once people realize that CC and OC is a none issue, things would advance. The only thing that I do not like and I am against is convicted felons and gang members would carry with no penalty or at least no questions asked. I know that they do now. They will open carry if they want to and if they do carry concealed and they were pulled over how the LEO can decide if they are felons with firearms?
That is not my attitude, that is fact. Does anyone actually think that the antics leading up to this last session will be forgotten by our legiscritters?mr1337 wrote:Sure, with that attitude it is.anygunanywhere wrote:Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.
But I agree that decreasing the number of off-limits locations to CHLs is likely the next step before we go to Unlicensed OC.
Yes please.anygunanywhere wrote:
Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.
I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
But after the 30 - 60 days are up and one has a CHL, they can carry a self-defense handgun, but not in off-limits areas so they are defenseless in those areas. That's why I feel that removing all off-limits areas is the most important step we can take for Texas gun owners.TXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
Charles L. Cotton wrote:But after the 30 - 60 days are up and one has a CHL, they can carry a self-defense handgun, but not in off-limits areas so they are defenseless in those areas. That's why I feel that removing all off-limits areas is the most important step we can take for Texas gun owners.TXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
Chas.
There's no way to improve TPC §30.06 unless we were to prohibit businesses from using it on commercial property. That's what I have advocated, but it isn't going to happen, at least not in the foreseeable future. We also are highly unlikely to make it effective only if one refuses a demand to leave. We took a step in that direction with the reduction of the offense to a Class C misdemeanor for inadvertently entering posted property.Taypo wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:But after the 30 - 60 days are up and one has a CHL, they can carry a self-defense handgun, but not in off-limits areas so they are defenseless in those areas. That's why I feel that removing all off-limits areas is the most important step we can take for Texas gun owners.TXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
Chas.
Since we're on the subject, is there any chance of changes to 30.06? I'm really, really torn on the current model. I respect business and property rights, but I'm also frustrated as heck with every movie theater, gym and hotel with a sign maker posting...
Currently, IIRC, the Texas CHL community has a better criminal record than Texas LE. I wonder how much lightening up on the eligibility requirements would effect that?Charles L. Cotton wrote:But after the 30 - 60 days are up and one has a CHL, they can carry a self-defense handgun, but not in off-limits areas so they are defenseless in those areas. That's why I feel that removing all off-limits areas is the most important step we can take for Texas gun owners.TXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
If you mean we should push for unlicensed carry rather than eliminating off-limits areas, then I disagree. As long as OCT and Grisham are polluting the political atmosphere, it's not going to pass. Plus, even if it does, then the off-limits areas will not only still exist, it will be virtually impossible to even reduce their number, much less repeal them in total.
I do think we should repeal some of the current CHL eligibility requirements such as those dealing with deferred adjudications, non-violent offenses, child support and taxes. A person's life and the lives of their families should not be put at risk for such issues. This issue is also one that should be addressed after removing off-limits areas. It's not only a matter of priority, but also a matter of timing. Pushing for legislation out of sequence could result in a current victory that precludes future victories. Bills that would remove off-limits areas have been filed in the last two legislative sessions and they went nowhere. This is the case even though those bills would impact only CHL's with our outstanding track record. Imagine trying to remove off-limits areas after unlicensed-carry were to pass. It would never happen. The proper bill at the proper time is critical to continuing success.
Chas.
Charles L. Cotton wrote:SnipTXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
I do think we should repeal some of the current CHL eligibility requirements such as those dealing with deferred adjudications, non-violent offenses, child support and taxes. A person's life and the lives of their families should not be put at risk for such issues.
Chas.
and I extend that to Federal. If a post office and its parking lot is a "sensitive Place" there should be a guard at every entrance. And why is 1000 feet within a school property sensitive to an out of state licensed holder but no an in state licensed holder? It just and arbitrary anit-gun Federal ruling.AJSully421 wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:SnipTXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
I do think we should repeal some of the current CHL eligibility requirements such as those dealing with deferred adjudications, non-violent offenses, child support and taxes. A person's life and the lives of their families should not be put at risk for such issues.
Chas.
Agree, to an extent. I agree that once a person has successfully completed a DA, and was never officially convicted, then it should not DQ someone for 10 years. Maybe 1-2 after it is completely dismissed, but not 10. I see why they did the child support thing, but I agree it needs to go away... it has nothing to do with defending yourself outside the home.
Can't carry within 1,000 feet of a place of execution on the day of an execution...? What the crap is that...
Places we can't carry should be correctional facilities, courtrooms, and on commercial flights. Basically, if they don't have a metal detector right now, it should not be illegal to carry there... because if it does not have a metal detector, a criminal can carry there, so why not the good guys?
I was arguing with a liberal over whether the Oregon baker having to cough up $135,000 (I think their donations exceeded that so they made bank) was violating the lesbian couples rights, and not simply causing them an inconvenience to find a different baker. Using that as an analogy, I asked him why should a state be able to force this (he used the following word, as opposed to "private") "public" business must sever them irregardless of the owner's 1st amendment religious freedoms, right of association, property rights? Why could this baker not have the right to inconvenience this couple but have the right to inconvenience CHL holders wanting to exercise their 2nd amendment right? His argument came down to "because gays are a "protected class." Yeah, I'd like to know why they (still) are. Seems to me you have to show the "class" is somehow being harmed. If not being able to marry is a harm it was the state governments doing it and not broad-based private (I mean public) businesses. Now if every baker in the town/state was refusing service to gays they have a valid argument that it's more than an inconvenience.Charles L. Cotton wrote:There's no way to improve TPC §30.06 unless we were to prohibit businesses from using it on commercial property. That's what I have advocated, but it isn't going to happen, at least not in the foreseeable future. We also are highly unlikely to make it effective only if one refuses a demand to leave. We took a step in that direction with the reduction of the offense to a Class C misdemeanor for inadvertently entering posted property.Taypo wrote:Charles L. Cotton wrote:But after the 30 - 60 days are up and one has a CHL, they can carry a self-defense handgun, but not in off-limits areas so they are defenseless in those areas. That's why I feel that removing all off-limits areas is the most important step we can take for Texas gun owners.TXBO wrote:I don't agree. People that get a threat to their life need a way to legally carry without waiting 30 to 60 days to obtain a license. I wish everybody was proactive with self defense training and a CHL before they ever had a threat to their life but that's just not the case.anygunanywhere wrote:Reducing prohibited places for CHL is the most important next step. Unlicensed OC is a pipe dream.TXBO wrote:Unlicensed OC and licensed CC is a good next step. Criminals just don't open carry or use holsters.
Chas.
Since we're on the subject, is there any chance of changes to 30.06? I'm really, really torn on the current model. I respect business and property rights, but I'm also frustrated as heck with every movie theater, gym and hotel with a sign maker posting...
Chas.
I like the approach of making it a crime only if the individual is asked to leave and refuses. If we go that route, we can eliminate the 30.06 & 30.07 signage altogether along with the offense of "trespass by a license holder." This is the model used successfully by many other states. I agree that we are unlikely to achieve that all at once, but we can chip away at it like we did this session.Charles L. Cotton wrote: There's no way to improve TPC §30.06 unless we were to prohibit businesses from using it on commercial property. That's what I have advocated, but it isn't going to happen, at least not in the foreseeable future. We also are highly unlikely to make it effective only if one refuses a demand to leave. We took a step in that direction with the reduction of the offense to a Class C misdemeanor for inadvertently entering posted property.
Chas.