Hoi Polloi wrote:I regularly see two conflicting statements here.
As to how others should view your having a CHL, the argument usually is that you make the place safer because you can take out a bad guy and people around you should be happy you are carrying.
As to how you should respond when an incident happens, the argument is that you take care of yourself and your immediate family and if they wanted protection, they should have been carrying.
I don't have a problem with either of these statements in isolation, but when the same person/community is regularly espousing both, I have to call it as bunk. You can't have it both ways. If you're one of the people who says both, please re-think which of these is more important to you and only run with one of them.

I see the apparent conflict between the statements, but I don't think they necessarily have to be conflicting.
You carry your pistol for the purpose of defending yourself and your loved ones, not to go out and play cop.
On the other hand, the more armed citizens we have, the more dangerous the criminal's career becomes because the chances of his victim being armed is higher.
Also, if a CHL sees someone shooting at or about to shoot innocent people, and has a clear shot without unduly increasing the risk to himself or those with him, I think many (most?) would take the shot rather than stand back and just "be a good witness." I realize that opens up a huge can of worms. Do you know that shooter was the bad guy and not someone defending himself from another threat you can't see? Do you know he's not an undercover LEO pointing a gun at a suspect?
I believe that if Suzanna Gratia had her handgun with her that day in Luby's, she might have saved her parents and a few others. She might not have. But I have to think that the people in there would have been a little safer if she had been armed. George Hennard killed 23 people and wounded another 20 before he committed suicide. One armed person might not have saved them all, but might have lowered those numbers a bit.
Say that had taken place a few years later, and she was carrying legally under the authority of a CHL. Defending all those other people wouldn't really be her business. But if she popped the guy who was shooting, maybe he would have only killed 15, maybe only 5, maybe none. We can play "what if" all day and we'll never really know. But I think everyone in there would have been "safer" had she been armed.
EDIT: I was typing when TAM posted. His last paragraph summed up what I was trying to say before I got into the Luby's example.
The Annoyed Man wrote:Beyond that, when we happen upon a situation, of how much can we truly be certain, and how much is guess work? We come around a corner to see a woman on the ground, with a man standing over her holding a gun. Is the woman on the ground a victim being threatened by the guy with the gun; or was she a jealous ex-girlfriend assailant who was disarmed by her former boyfriend who is now holding her at gun point with her own gun, and wishing he had brought his cellphone so he could call 911? You come upon two men, one is down and shot, and the other is holding him at gunpoint. Is the wounded man a perpetrator and the gunman a cop, or is the wounded man a cop, and the gunman a bad guy? Is the guy with the gun a CHL holder (without a badge and sash)? Given your stumbling upon either scenario, do you try to aid the person on the ground, or the person with the gun? Or, do you turn around and walk the other way before you get shot, and call 911? See what I mean? There just isn't any way to know sometimes, and so I'll have to simply rely on instincts and risk analysis and react accordingly.