(Okay, I typed it out for your reading pleasure
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President's Message
I have had a lot of communication with gun owners lately who were unhappy that they have to temporarily give up the right to carry in order to get into gun shows. The NRA Annul Meeting in Dallas created quite a furor with some of the Internet crowd. The meeting was held in the Dallas Convention Hall (where the city bans handguns), in the Exhibit Hall and even in the parking lot. Many people felt like they have been betrayed by the NRA which supported the TSRA in fighting for the right to carry but subsequently banned handguns at its own meeting.
Not being able to wear a concealed handgun into gun shows seems to be bothering a lot of gun owners. I decided to share a few of my observations and opinions on this matter.
Every gun show that I have ever attended has had personnel checking all firearms going into the show to make sure that they were not loaded. Most shows physically disable any guns going inside with nylon straps so that the firearms either can't be loaded or the action can't be closed. The purpose of this procedure is to insure the safety of all attendees by protecting them from the potential consequences of an accidental discharge. This was going on long before the CHL law was passed.
Now that the Texas Legislature has granted some of us the right to carry a concealed handgun for self defense, we have become very proud and very protective of that right. Many of us are active in trying to convince businesses that it is not necessarily in their best interests or in the best interests of their customers to ban handguns from their premises.
At this same time, it is important to remember that businesses which choose to ban handguns have every right to do so. Many of the businesses ban because they believe that they limit potential liability.
We try to convince them that by banning they are actually increasing their liability exposure diametrically to their objective. We further tell them that we believe this so strongly, that we will no longer do business with them because it exposes us as customers to greater risks. We promise to pass this wisdom along to our friends and family, also. The final decision to ban or not to ban rests with the business owner.
We need to look at gun shows from a different perspective from the way we look at businesses. At a gun show there is wall-to-wall gun handling in an environment jammed with people. Everybody depends on the gun show sponsors to make sure there are no loaded guns inside the building. Treating every gun as if it were loaded and not pointing the muzzle at anything you don't intend to shoot are our normal safety rules. These rules are almost impossible to practice in the gun show environment. Sure, you see a lot of people opening cylinders and bolts and locking slides back peering into chambers, but it's not too long before somebody is dry firing or inadvertently pointing the muzzle of an exhibited firearm at another person somewhere in the building.
If a dozen or so people with loaded concealed handguns were intermingled with a gun show crowd, the stage would be set for a catastrophic accident. If those guns remained concealed, like they do under normal circumstances every day all over Texas, then there would be no problem. That's harder to do in a gun show atmosphere. After all, we are among friends and peers, people that share our affinity to firearms and for the most part favor the CHL law. There is more temptation to show our choice of a carry gun and maybe even let the other guy feel of it to see if our choice might not be their choice also. Or, maybe there have been modifications to improve the carry gun such as a trigger job, tritium sights, or grips. There are features that are safely shared at the range or across the kitchen table, but not at a gun show.
I use the term "catastrophic accident" above because that is exactly what any accidental discharge would be at a gun show. Multiple gun shot injuries would likely result. Expensive lawsuits would be filed. Even if there were no injuries, an accident would still be catastrophic. Media coverage would settle like the plague over future gun shows. City councils would certainly react adversely to allowing further gun shows on city property. Damaging legislation could be introduced.
The best way to prevent this from happening is to continue following the policies that the gun shows and the NRA Exhibit Hall have followed forever. These rules inconvenience us a little, but at least gun shows have a good safety record. Yes, we are exposed in the parking lot, but no more than we have been for years. When I posted some of these opinions recently on the Internet, and opinions are all that I represent them to be, I had a private e-mail from a gun show sponsor in Atlantic City who thanked me for speaking out on the issue. That gave me some assurance that I was on the right track.
Jim Nicholson
TSRA President
This message was printed in the May/June 1996 issue of the TSRA Sportsman, the official publication of the Texas State Rile Association.
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