johnwilliamson062 said:
conceal carry has not been clearly defined as a right as far as I can tell. What exactly "bear arms" includes is not defined. Conceal carry is considered a "privilege". Like driving. There is no federal guarantee any state will acknowledge a drivers license. That is established by a number of agreements between the various states.
Driving is not a good comparison, because there is no guaratnteed constitutional right to drive.
The 2A (and the constitutions of many of the states) guarantees (supposedly) a right to "bear" (which means or should mean "carry") arms. It doesn't say whether that's concealed or open, it just says carry. The supreme courts of several states (including, IIRC, Ohio and Idaho) have ruled that the legislatures may regulate the mode of carry but may not prohibit carry. So, if a state's legislature doesn't like concealed carry, they can ban concealed carry but then they have to allow open carry. This was how Ohio finally got a concealed carry law -- the Ohio court had ruled that open carry could not be banned because the legislature had prohibited concealed carry. People didn't like seeing a lot of open carriers, so the legislature enacted concealed carry laws.
But ... conversely, it could go to other way. In the early days of the U.S., open carry was considered normal and concealed carry was considered "sneaky" and ungentlemanly. It's entirely possible that a state could go to a scheme under which concealed carry is legal everywhere but open carry is entirely prohibited. As long as we can carry one way or the other, it seems the courts will be happy.
Personally, I still don't think regulating or prohibiting one mode of carry while allowing another is really faithful to "shall not be infringed," but I'm not a judge and they typically don't consult me, so my opinion doesn't count.