I believe that the right to keep arms in your home is absolute. I believe that the right to carry them in public should be based on demonstrating an appropriate level of competence.rm9792 wrote:But, if it was too hard then it would be an infringement to RKBA. Cant have it both ways, If you feel the RKBA is absolute then you have to take the good with the bad. We argue constantly on here and other boards that licensing, registration, waiting periods, etc, are all bad and that they infringe but then want to say someone has to be a competent shooter? Just like everyone who can pass a simple test to drive but not be a competent driver must be issued a license we should feel the same about a firearm. More are killed/injured by bad drivers than bad shots, even adjusted for differences in per capita I would imagine.
In a perfect world I would agree that competency should be a requirement but then you get the "slippery slope" argument going. I am truly not wanting a lot of people i meet to be carrying but I also believe that is their right as well and they may feel the same about me.
Statistics vary depending on which study you read, but they seem to hover around a 50% hit rate in close quarters engagements. That's fine from one perspective. I carry a .45 with 10 in the magazine and one in the chamber. If I am attacked and get a 50% hit rate, I will put 5 or 6 shots on target. I like my odds of neutralizing a threat when I hit them with 5 or 6 .45 cal JHPs. So from a personal defense standpoint... a 50% hit rate is probably ok. The problem is that if I am in a public, crowded place... what is going to happen to the 5 or 6 misses? If even one of them hits an innocent bystander then my right to self defense just stomped all over their right to be free from harm. What gives me the right to injure or kill another innocent person while defending myself?
I think about it all the time. It was the biggest question that I had to resolve when I was trying to decide if I wanted to get my license and start carrying. The way that I resolved the conflict was to make a promise to myself that I would do everything in my power to improve my skills and knowledge. I read a lot about real-world encounter tactics. I practice regularly (somewhere around 8K rounds per year). I shoot IDPA for practice doing things I cannot do at the range but will have to do in a real engagement.
I don't think that the right to carry should be based on the whims of politicians or law enforcement officials. I don't think it should be based on social or economic status. But I DO think that it should be based on being able to demonstrate an acceptable level of skill in the employment of your weapon. Do I think you need to be Jeff Cooper or Dave Sevigny in order to be able to carry? Of course not. Do I expect people to shoot thousands of rounds per year in order to be able to carry? Absolutely not. Do I expect them to be able to perform to a much higher standard than they are currently held? Yes I do.
I'm sure it's not a popular opinion. But I don't want John Doe's right to self defense to cost me a son or a daughter because the first time John ever tried to draw and shoot was in the neighborhood 7-11.