Name something that CC supporters have done to kill OC support? Nothing that was in last years legislation for CC was anti-OC. What killed support for OC legislation in Texas was a few idiot OC supporters that felt they could play hardball and managed to do more damage to any future chance of OC in Texas than could be imagined.tacticool wrote:No more than CC supporters have been willing to throw open-carry under the bus to further their goal of CC.Charles L. Cotton wrote: I find it interesting that OC supporters are willing to throw concealed-carry under the bus to further their goal of OC.
Better we should all work together but if "A" is willing to abrogate the rights of "B"
then "A" doesn't have a leg to stand on when "B" returns the favor.
OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 session
Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
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
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
"No more than"
When in doubt
Vote them out!
Vote them out!
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
I disagree. The very vocal and radical OC supporters last year were willing to push the legislation at all costs, which included potential negative implications on how/where we can CC.tacticool wrote:"No more than"
The best bet now for OC supporters is to rally together and 'respectfully' try to work with a legislator to craft a bill that would be acceptable to all gun owners in Texas. They have to make sure that the win for them does not constitute a major set-back in any concealed carry laws and legislation (and vice-versa.) The problem for OC supporters now will be to try and find someone who is not gun shy (pun intended) to take up their cause and run with it. I think there are those out there like SA-TX and others who have similar goals and are willing to try to get it done the right way, but they are going to have a real tough time fending off the radicals of last year and repairing the damage cause by them.
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
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
Just like concealed carry supporters are willing to exclude open carry from their agenda.
As I said on the previous page, TSRA can carry the flag for open carry, or not. It's their (our) choice. But if TSRA won't support open carry, we have no grounds to complain when open carry supporters don't support concealed carry.
I'm sure the Brady Bunch is happy with us fighting each other instead of pushing back against all anti-gun laws together.
As I said on the previous page, TSRA can carry the flag for open carry, or not. It's their (our) choice. But if TSRA won't support open carry, we have no grounds to complain when open carry supporters don't support concealed carry.
I'm sure the Brady Bunch is happy with us fighting each other instead of pushing back against all anti-gun laws together.
When in doubt
Vote them out!
Vote them out!
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
Your beef appers not to be with CC supporters, but with the TSRA, so why don't you just call it what it is. Don't equate CC supporters and TSRA as one entity.tacticool wrote:Just like concealed carry supporters are willing to exclude open carry from their agenda.
As I said on the previous page, TSRA can carry the flag for open carry, or not. It's their (our) choice. But if TSRA won't support open carry, we have no grounds to complain when open carry supporters don't support concealed carry.
I'm sure the Brady Bunch is happy with us fighting each other instead of pushing back against all anti-gun laws together.
IMO, the TSRA has taken on firearms legislation that they feel has a real chance of being implemented. It is not all CC issues. MPA was supported by the TSRA, and that is not a CC issue. They were big supporters of the Castle Doctrine being passed, again a law that is for all firearms owners in their right to defend themselves, not just CC. They have to be realistic in their support of what will and won't be for the overall good of the members and Texas gun owners. So, don't think that TSRA is just supporting CC, from my view they are just supporting legislation that has a real chance of being passed.
Having been in several political fights and battles in the past, I recognize there are the correct times and places to introduce legislation. If the time and place is right for OC legislation, then I think TSRA and NRA will be on board 100%. If not, then the folks are smart enough to not let it or other legislation hurt or kill something that has a real chance of getting us additional capabilities and moving closer to regaining our 2nd Amendment rights that have been chipped away at over the years.
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: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
It hasn't happened. I've never seen a concealed-carry proponent argue that CC is constitutionally protected, but OC isn't. OC supporters are just mad that TSRA and NRA haven't taken up the OC banner. Not supporting an issue is not the same as opposing it and it certainly doesn't constitute throwing them under the bus. OC supporters repeatedly contend that OC is protected by the Second Amendment, but CC isn't. That's throwing CC under the bus.tacticool wrote:No more than CC supporters have been willing to throw open-carry under the bus to further their goal of CC.Charles L. Cotton wrote: I find it interesting that OC supporters are willing to throw concealed-carry under the bus to further their goal of OC.
Better we should all work together but if "A" is willing to abrogate the rights of "B"
then "A" doesn't have a leg to stand on when "B" returns the favor.
Chas.
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
Charles is good, isn't he?Charles L. Cotton wrote:It hasn't happened. I've never seen a concealed-carry proponent argue that CC is constitutionally protected, but OC isn't. OC supporters are just mad that TSRA and NRA haven't taken up the OC banner. Not supporting an issue is not the same as opposing it and it certainly doesn't constitute throwing them under the bus. OC supporters repeatedly contend that OC is protected by the Second Amendment, but CC isn't. That's throwing CC under the bus.
Chas.
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
I'm gonna bronze this statement. Put it on my wall. May make T-shirts of it.Charles L. Cotton wrote:I've never seen a concealed-carry proponent argue that CC is constitutionally protected, but OC isn't. OC supporters are just mad that TSRA and NRA haven't taken up the OC banner. Not supporting an issue is not the same as opposing it and it certainly doesn't constitute throwing them under the bus. OC supporters repeatedly contend that OC is protected by the Second Amendment, but CC isn't. That's throwing CC under the bus.
Of all the 50 states' gun laws, you know where I'd like to live?
Texas.
Carry under Government Code Subchapter H, Chapter 411 is consistent State-wide.
Consistent State-wide. This is very important.
We are a shall-issue State, and our State statutes don't allow municipal governments--or individual PDs--to decide who should be allowed a CHL...or where they can carry.
Research carefully the "open carry" states. Where, how, and what you can carry will vary significantly.
Not to mention that almost all non-LEOs still choose to carry concealed. And logically so.
The OC faction can hammer Texas all it likes. But the fact is, the State of Texas has one of the best concealed handgun licensing programs in the nation.
Join the NRA or upgrade your membership today. Support the Texas Firearms Coalition and subscribe to the Podcast.
I’ve contacted my State Rep, Gary Elkins, about co-sponsoring HB560. Have you contacted your Rep?
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I’ve contacted my State Rep, Gary Elkins, about co-sponsoring HB560. Have you contacted your Rep?
NRA Benefactor Life Member
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
Yes he is. Being an attorney and one with great gun-rights bon fides, it concerns me that I find myself on the opposite side of the argument from him.The Annoyed Man wrote:Charles is good, isn't he?Charles L. Cotton wrote:It hasn't happened. I've never seen a concealed-carry proponent argue that CC is constitutionally protected, but OC isn't. OC supporters are just mad that TSRA and NRA haven't taken up the OC banner. Not supporting an issue is not the same as opposing it and it certainly doesn't constitute throwing them under the bus. OC supporters repeatedly contend that OC is protected by the Second Amendment, but CC isn't. That's throwing CC under the bus.
Chas.
Charles, as you know I am not mad at TSRA and do not confuse not supporting something with opposing it. As for throwing CC under the bus, that certainly isn't my intention. I L-O-V-E what TSRA has accomplished in Texas. It was only a few short years ago that we had nothing and I haven't forgotten! I also support the goals that you have the upcoming session (campus, parking lot, and range protection). My position is that, in addition, I support open carry.
As for what is constitutionally protected, please put on your lawyer hat for a minute and help me make sense of what the SC said in Heller and what was said in the oral arguments for McDonald:
Beginning on page 42 of the official Heller decision where the Court is discussing the meaning of "carry", some early court cases are reviewed. Nunn v. State struck down a Georgia law against carrying pistols openly. The same is true in State v. Chandler from Louisiana. Here the Court quotes from Chandler:
It then goes on to discuss Aymette v State (TN) where the Court concludes that Aymett's holding is]“This is the right guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States, and which is calculated to incite men to a manly and noble
defence of themselves, if necessary, and of their country, without any tendency to secret advantages and unmanly assassinations.”
Further the Court quotes J. Kent from "Commentaries on American Law" (12th edition, 1873). I've shortened the quote for brevity, but I don't think I've damaged the context. The italics are in the original.Aymette held that the state constitutional guarantee of the right to “bear” arms did not prohibit the banning of concealed weapons.
On page 57, there is this:whether a statute prohibiting persons, when not on a journey, or as travellers, from wearing or carrying concealed weapons,be constitutional. There has been a great difference of opinion on the question.”
Question -- I took these passages from the Opinion of the Court section of the document. Can any of them be considered dicta? The rules on what is and what isn't are confusing to me.Like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited. From Blackstone through the 19th-century cases, commentators and courts routinely explained that the right was not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose. See, e.g., Sheldon, in 5 Blume 346; Rawle 123; Pomeroy 152–153; Abbott 333. For example,
the majority of the 19th-century courts to consider the question held that prohibitions on carrying concealed weapons were lawful under the Second Amendment or state analogues. See, e.g., State v. Chandler, 5 La. Ann., at 489–490; Nunn v. State, 1 Ga., at 251; see generally 2
Kent *340, n. 2; The American Students’ Blackstone 84, n.11 (G. Chase ed. 1884). Although we do not undertake an exhaustive historical analysis today of the full scope of the Second Amendment, nothing in our opinion should be taken to cast doubt on longstanding prohibitions on the possession of firearms by felons and the mentally ill, or laws forbidding the carrying of firearms in sensitive places such as schools and government buildings, or laws imposing conditions and qualifications on the commercial sale of arms.
From the oral arguments for McDonald:
(page 17 of the official oral argument transcript)JUSTICE SCALIA: Well, why would this one be resolved on the basis of statistics? If there’s a constitutional right, we find what the minimum constitutional right is, and everything above that is up to the States.
MR. GURA: That --
JUSTICE SCALIA: If they want to have, you know -- I think we mentioned in Heller concealed carry laws. I mean, those are -- those are matters that we didn't decide in Heller. And you may have a great deal of divergence from State to State. And on that, I suppose, you would do statistics, wouldn't you? Or the legislature would.
Justice Scalia mentions that the status of concealed carry specifically wasn't decided in Heller. True enough, but his implication seems to be that concealed carry may not be inside the "minimum constitutional right" particularly considering that all of the 19th century cases cited either a) overturned attempts to ban open carry or b) upheld the banning of concealed carry.
In this passage, Feldman (for Chicago) is expressing concern about the Court's interpretation of "carry" because of its implications.
(page 56)MR. FELDMAN: ... But even more than that, Heller construed the Second Amendment's "bear" -- the word "bear," "to keep and bear arms" -- to mean the same thing as "carry" in this Court's case in Muscarello, much later. And to carry -- generally to carry. Many -- there’s a long history of regulation of not just concealed carry, as the Court did recognize in Heller, but of banning open carry in a variety of jurisdictions. Again, generally, it's someplace that is -- it has a particular problem; it's a city or something like that.
I believe Feldman thinks that Heller stands for the proposition that concealed carry can be regulated (and presumably banned) by States and localities but no so for open carry.
SA-TX
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
I must be talking, online and IRL, with the wrong OC supporters because I've never heard such a thing.Charles L. Cotton wrote:OC supporters repeatedly contend that OC is protected by the Second Amendment, but CC isn't.
"Ees gun! Ees not safe!"
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
My only response is that we've achieved what we have by little steps, and must continue to work towards our goals step by step.SA-TX wrote: Charles, as you know I am not mad at TSRA and do not confuse not supporting something with opposing it. As for throwing CC under the bus, that certainly isn't my intention. I L-O-V-E what TSRA has accomplished in Texas. It was only a few short years ago that we had nothing and I haven't forgotten! I also support the goals that you have the upcoming session (campus, parking lot, and range protection). My position is that, in addition, I support open carry.
To that end, which is more important? That you can leave a gun in your car when you go to work? That you can attend or work for an institution of higher learning without forfeiting your right to self defense?
Or is it more important we get OC passed so we can show off our bar-b-que guns in places we can at least CC right now?
I far prefer increasing the amount of places we CAN carry and then quibble about HOW we carry.
Just my .02 on the subject.
TANSTAAFL
Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
I think it's more important to carry at work instead of leaving it in my car. That's why I don't work for anti-gun bigots.
Just my two centavos.
Just my two centavos.
"Ees gun! Ees not safe!"
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
Me too, but in spite of the gun laws . I've lived here for 35 years and my age begins with a 4. There's no place I'd rather be. That doesn't mean that we couldn't use some improvements.Skiprr wrote: Of all the 50 states' gun laws, you know where I'd like to live?
Texas.
Agreed. Many open carry states have pre-emption, just like Texas. According to http://www.handgunlaw.us, WA, OR, CA (yes, even CA has some pre-emption! That's how the recent vote in San Fran was overturned), ID, MT, NV, WY, UT, AZ, CO, NM, ND, SD, OK, MN, IA, LA, MI, KY, TN, AL, GA, OH, ME, NH, PA, VA, and NC all have pre-emption statues. I've tried to exclude those that have grandfather clauses of recent vintage. I would submit that these are evidance that state-wide consistency isn't incompatible with open carry.Skiprr wrote: Carry under Government Code Subchapter H, Chapter 411 is consistent State-wide.
Consistent State-wide. This is very important.
Of the above states, all but AL and CA are shall-issue. AL is practically shall-issue. CA is closer to "no-issue" but there are some exceptions. Again, what about open carry prevents effective premption?Skiprr wrote: We are a shall-issue State, and our State statutes don't allow municipal governments--or individual PDs--to decide who should be allowed a CHL...or where they can carry.
Additionally, even our consistency has some flaws. Can you carry anywhere in your local municipal building that has a court or court office in one part of it (think of a 4 or 5 story building with 1 city traffic court & offices on floor 4 and a city water department pay window on floor 1)? Sometimes yes, sometimes no. It depends on the city. Can police officers disarm you simply for "officer safety" or must they have reason to think that you are a danger to yourself or someone else? This seems to be very officer dependent.
State to state, that's true. Within a given state, there are some that have different rules for open versus concealed carry but others have exactly the same rules -- either the place is off limits or it isn't. As for what you can carry, what other shall-issue state issues licenses that include handgun classes (SA vs. NSA)? How many ban professional sporting events? Polling places on election day? Horse race tracks? Six Flags? Govenment meetings? I'd make a small wager that most of the open carry states have fewer off-limits places than Texas.Skiprr wrote: Research carefully the "open carry" states. Where, how, and what you can carry will vary significantly.
I agree that CC is more popular. I agree that it is logical. There are definitely tactical advantages. Even if OC were legal in TX tomorrow most CC's aren't going to switch. Even as a proponant, I wouldn't go from 100% CC to 100% OC but I can think of some occasions where OC would be convenient. Whatever our personal preferences, is the fact CC is more popular a good reason for OC to be illegal? What's wrong with having the freedom to choose?Skiprr wrote: Not to mention that almost all non-LEOs still choose to carry concealed. And logically so.
The OC faction can hammer Texas all it likes. But the fact is, the State of Texas has one of the best concealed handgun licensing programs in the nation.
I have to respectfully disagree about our CHL system and gun laws in general. I'm a Texas homer as much as the next guy and I defend her on almost all other grounds, but I believe our gun laws are needlessly restrictive, confusing, and expensive. Shall we go down the list and discuss the desirability of each? I only scratched the surface above. It will be a long discussion.
SA-TX
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
I would love to be able to Open Carry, at least outside in the yard (just moved here, the house is the G/Fs and with what I've seen with TX laws, I'd not risk it).
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Re: OK passes open carry & TSRA planning for Texas '11 sessi
I'm in not interested in showing off anything but I would like to know what a bar-b-que gun is .74novaman wrote:My only response is that we've achieved what we have by little steps, and must continue to work towards our goals step by step.SA-TX wrote: Charles, as you know I am not mad at TSRA and do not confuse not supporting something with opposing it. As for throwing CC under the bus, that certainly isn't my intention. I L-O-V-E what TSRA has accomplished in Texas. It was only a few short years ago that we had nothing and I haven't forgotten! I also support the goals that you have the upcoming session (campus, parking lot, and range protection). My position is that, in addition, I support open carry.
To that end, which is more important? That you can leave a gun in your car when you go to work? That you can attend or work for an institution of higher learning without forfeiting your right to self defense?
Or is it more important we get OC passed so we can show off our bar-b-que guns in places we can at least CC right now?
I far prefer increasing the amount of places we CAN carry and then quibble about HOW we carry.
Just my .02 on the subject.
I definitely want parking lot carry and campus carry. If I could only choose 1, I'd choose parking lot carry because I think it affects the most people. But why do we only have to choose two (parking lot and campus) or three (parking lot, schools, and range protection)? Isn't the Legislature capable of dealing with multiple 2A proposals in a given session? As I said originally, I'm a pragmatist. If I have to settle or take a 1/2 loaf or bargain down from what I really want I'm willing to do that at the appropriate time but before the discussion is even undertaken?
It should be noted that we don't have an infinite amount of time. Until the mid-90's when Texas became a Republican state, we had no carry at all and hadn't had for over 100 years. The Republicans nearly lost the Texas House during the last election. While I think they will pick up seats this time, it will still be fairly close. It requires a 2/3rd vote in the Texas Senate to advance any bill (assuming the blocker bill is in place). Governor Perry could also lose re-election and I doubt his opponant would be as pro-gun. The fact is there is very little margin for error. We have to move as much pro-2A legislation as we can while we've got a relatively friendly legislative and executive branch. Never let a session go to waste because it sometimes take a couple to get an idea over the hump. The later you start, the later you will finish, IF you finsh. Getting anything passed into law in this state is hard, and deliberately so. That means that repealing something is harder still. We've got to do all that we can to advance 2A freedom while the circumstances are favorable. I hope we can work together to do just that.
SA-TX