My bad. Yes, everywhere is what I should have said.
Im sure some or a good portion of my posts seem anit-gun. I'm not anti gun. I do feel that there should be places that guns should not be allowed.
They don't seem aniti-gun at all, they just seem to be anti-
stupid people with guns, which is fine with me.
You would think that people would know. However, look at drivers ed. Basic rules of the road are taught, yet how many people violate them on a daily basis?
Good point, but there's as much of a fundamental difference there as there is between MA and guns.
Sure, a car can be a deadly weapon, but that's not what it was designed for. When you turn the keys, or when you "practice" driving, you don't think "This could very well be used to
intentionally kill someone." A car is designed to move you and yours from point A to point B. If you use the car improperly, you may kill someone while following that other objective.
Now, granted that a lot of people just buy a gun, load it, and stuff it in their closet for "protection." They've shot maybe 50 rounds through it, then they forget about it. These people are dangerous. They're the ones who have heard the rules, but forget them when the time comes.
Fortunately, that type of person rarely puts in the day-to-day effort that comes with daily carry.
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This next bit isn't directed at anyone in particular - it's just something I've been thinking about since this thread started.
I know for myself, I had a lot of mis-conceptions about daily carry before I started doing it, myself. At first, I did have a strong sense of "responsibility" -- almost a "Hero" mentality. After about 4 days it wore off, to be replaced by a different sense of responsibility. The gun became a burden to bear, after the novelty wore off. Not a heavy burden, but a healthy one.
I became very aware of that family sitting next to me in the restaurant, with the kids, who would have been bothered if they knew that I had a gun, and so I worked hard to keep it hidden. Certain parts of town that didn't bother me before, now became places where a situation could turn bad very quickly. Now I don't like those places, and get uncomfortable being there. I found out that those were places I didn't need to be anyway. I was expecting the opposite feeling -- I figured I would get a sense of invulnerability that would have to be constantly checked and controlled.
In fact, having a gun makes me even more careful, vulnerable, and polite, (and I was a very polite guy before.) Confident, yes, but confident in a way that made me even less aggressive. It also made me constantly be aware of my surroundings, because even walking, I could feel the gun on my hip as a reminder. It is a constant reminder that the world is not safe, but that alertness and preparedness go a long way toward survival.
Even now, I often like to carry because I prefer the attitude that comes with it. That is, I like who I am better when I am armed. I am more considerate, more aware of others, more patient, more forgiving, more confident, with more self-control. In short, a better, more mature person.
I think, at some level, that is what keeps that minority of private citizens who carry, carrying.
People who try to carry to cover up some lack of personal power in their lives won't be able to keep it up, because a gun just doesn't make you feel invulnerable in the long run, in fact, it does the opposite. For a couple of days you feel powerful, but after that it won't give the "rush" that these people seek, and they'll leave their gun at home, looking for another type of power that is more visible to others.
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Forgive me if I missed it, but I don't believe I mentioned anything about a gun in the unsecure area.
That's what I got from this quote:
I'd have to say yes and no to this. Comparing a gun to MA training is IMO, apples to oranges. MA training is something that we do take with us everywhere we go. Unless we actually say something, nobody will know that we train. A gun is something that we have an option to take with us. Taking it into an airport...well, there is a very good chance it'll be detected.
Since the rest of the conversation was about the unsecured area, I read this as referring to the same. Forgive me if I assumed too much.