the bold section.. [from the realization that anyone in the room or on the street may be armed] that's exactly what it is for.
I was referring to
concealed carry--for example, in Florida, where there are more than a quarter of a million people carrying concealed. No one knows who they are. Assuming the guy didn't drive down from New Jersey or Illinois, there is a deterrent effect that benefits everyone.
The person carrying openly has no anonymity, and while someone looking for easy cash who notices that a citizen is armed may choose to come back later and probably will, a person who is a determined killer who sees the man with the gun knows exactly what to and do to whom, and if someone has already commenced the commission of a crime, the first option is no longer available.
anyone getting in the way of a BG, either in the process of or the act of leaving the scene, is a target, regardless of being armed or not. an armed person had a better chance of survival,IMHO,and an openly armed person is to be avoided in most BG mindsets.
At the risk of sounding unkind, let's think about that.
You are holding up a store or carjacking someone. You have a gun in your hand, adrenalin in your blood, and a high level of desperation in your mind.
You don't want to shoot anyone, but you will
to avoid capture or
to preserve your skin. You will avoid anyone you can, but if he can shoot you from a distance, you may not be able to. And there's the rub.
An apparently unarmed man walks in, or by, and notices you. What are you going to do? Shoot?
Why?
A uniformed policeman comes along and sees you. You
know what you'll do here, if you can't run or drive away. Unfortunately it happens a lot more than we like.
A civilian with a gun on his hip? Well, maybe he won't seem as much a threat until you see the gun, but then ...
Think about it.
Or try it this way. You're off duty, or out of your jurisdiction, or a civilian.
You walk into a stop and rob, perhaps at the same time as someone else you've never met, and a desperate man with a gun
in his hand shouting orders at people to stay back sees you come in.
Would you rather appear unarmed and therefore not likely a threat, or would you like him to see a gun on your hip? Or would you rather be a policeman in uniform? Remember,
he has the drop on you,
his adrenaline level is a lot higher than yours,
he may feel that he has absolutely nothing to lose, and
you pose a serious danger to him.
To me it's a complete no brainer.
By the way, if you are off duty in a place where a robbery occurs, what does
your training tell you to do?