In December 2011, a man was walking his dog peacefully in the park here in Washington state when he was approached by a police officer who demanded to see his identification because he was open carrying. The man offered to show the law-enforcement officer the state law, whereupon the LEO drew down on him and pointed a firearm at his chest from just a few feet away.
This week, the man won his lawsuit. Good for him! I am happy to live in a state where open carry is legal. I am especially happy that some of my neighbors have the time and the mentality where they are willing to go through that kind of encounter simply to keep it so.
But that does not mean that I, personally, want to be the recipient of the next successful but years-long lawsuit – nor does it mean I want to spend any time looking down the muzzle of a firearm held by a twitchy, unhappy person who has limited civil immunity. And it certainly does not mean that I am going to tell every person that I encounter that of course they should only ever open carry. It does not mean that I will gloss over the risks and exaggerate the benefits of this carry method. I think people deserve more respect than that. I think people deserve to know everything about the types of carry that are possible, and about the benefits, drawbacks, and potential consequences of each one. I think anything less than that is unconscionable and unkind. Would it not suck to get drawn into that kind of a lawsuit, if you did not know in advance that such a thing was a possibility when you decided to open carry? But, for those who do know the risks, and choose to take the actions because they want to help change society in a particular direction – I applaud you. You are doing a good thing... as long as you're doing it with your eyes wide open.
I love educating people about all types of carry. I love to talk about the benefits and drawbacks of appendix carry (your femoral artery is at risk). It is awesome to teach people how to use an ankle holster (you cannot draw from an ankle holster while you are running away), or a bellyband (sometimes the gun pops out when you bend over), or a shoulder holster variant (watch out for your own brachial artery). I enjoy teaching women how to use their purses to carry a firearm, and how to do so with less risk (if you do it wrong, your child might die). I love teaching people how to retain control of their own firearm, should they get involved in a close up situation with someone who wants to take it away from them. I am a big fan of carry, no matter what your personal preferred technique for doing that might be. And I am a big advocate of education. I think ignorance is one of the biggest causes of premature death in this world.
All of this means that I do wish more open carry advocates were a lot more realistic about what they doing. I wish the open-carry community would strongly commit to educating each other in good ways to reduce the inherent risks of their preferred carry methods, rather than refusing to admit that those risks do exist. I wish they worked a little harder at being good ambassadors, rather than simply being confrontational in a lot of cases.
I suspect this post will bring some of the more rabid open carry fans out of the woodwork, where they will comment, "OMG! People are so stupid! I can't believe people don't know the facts about open carry!". And those commenters will not be referring to the idiotic LEO who pointed a firearm at short range toward a law abiding citizen who was minding his own business while following the law to the letter. Oh, no. They will be referring to the people who looked at the news, thought about the practical consequences of dealing with law enforcement officers on that kind of basis, and decided that concealed carry was the way to go for them.
pax
This week, the man won his lawsuit. Good for him! I am happy to live in a state where open carry is legal. I am especially happy that some of my neighbors have the time and the mentality where they are willing to go through that kind of encounter simply to keep it so.
But that does not mean that I, personally, want to be the recipient of the next successful but years-long lawsuit – nor does it mean I want to spend any time looking down the muzzle of a firearm held by a twitchy, unhappy person who has limited civil immunity. And it certainly does not mean that I am going to tell every person that I encounter that of course they should only ever open carry. It does not mean that I will gloss over the risks and exaggerate the benefits of this carry method. I think people deserve more respect than that. I think people deserve to know everything about the types of carry that are possible, and about the benefits, drawbacks, and potential consequences of each one. I think anything less than that is unconscionable and unkind. Would it not suck to get drawn into that kind of a lawsuit, if you did not know in advance that such a thing was a possibility when you decided to open carry? But, for those who do know the risks, and choose to take the actions because they want to help change society in a particular direction – I applaud you. You are doing a good thing... as long as you're doing it with your eyes wide open.
I love educating people about all types of carry. I love to talk about the benefits and drawbacks of appendix carry (your femoral artery is at risk). It is awesome to teach people how to use an ankle holster (you cannot draw from an ankle holster while you are running away), or a bellyband (sometimes the gun pops out when you bend over), or a shoulder holster variant (watch out for your own brachial artery). I enjoy teaching women how to use their purses to carry a firearm, and how to do so with less risk (if you do it wrong, your child might die). I love teaching people how to retain control of their own firearm, should they get involved in a close up situation with someone who wants to take it away from them. I am a big fan of carry, no matter what your personal preferred technique for doing that might be. And I am a big advocate of education. I think ignorance is one of the biggest causes of premature death in this world.
All of this means that I do wish more open carry advocates were a lot more realistic about what they doing. I wish the open-carry community would strongly commit to educating each other in good ways to reduce the inherent risks of their preferred carry methods, rather than refusing to admit that those risks do exist. I wish they worked a little harder at being good ambassadors, rather than simply being confrontational in a lot of cases.
I suspect this post will bring some of the more rabid open carry fans out of the woodwork, where they will comment, "OMG! People are so stupid! I can't believe people don't know the facts about open carry!". And those commenters will not be referring to the idiotic LEO who pointed a firearm at short range toward a law abiding citizen who was minding his own business while following the law to the letter. Oh, no. They will be referring to the people who looked at the news, thought about the practical consequences of dealing with law enforcement officers on that kind of basis, and decided that concealed carry was the way to go for them.
pax