Posted on 07/08/2012 4:53:41 PM PDT by marktwain
One in 40 Minnesota adults now has a permit to carry a handgun, and there's no consensus on whether we're safer.
It's become another thing Pat Cannon makes sure he has on him each morning before heading out the door of his south Minneapolis bungalow.
Wallet? Check. Keys? Check. Handgun?
"Actually, the gun usually goes on with the pants," said Cannon, who tucks his loaded Ruger .357 Magnum revolver into a holster he conceals inside his waistband. He positions it far enough forward on his right hip so that he can drive comfortably, but far enough back so that the grip doesn't poke out and alarm someone at work or in the grocery store.
He's not a vigilante. He's not a nut. He's just another average Minnesotan who has acquired the power to kill.
Cannon, 59, a gray-haired production artist, is one of 103,000 state residents with a permit to carry a handgun -- more than 10 times the number there were a decade ago. They, in turn, are part of a growing "carry' culture across the country: a record 8 million people who have taken on the means to use deadly force if they decide it's necessary.
Handgun owners have more freedom now than they've had in nearly a century, with every state except Illinois offering average residents the option of getting a carry permit, up from just a few states in the 1970s. In Utah, where gun laws are so liberal public schools can't even prohibit them, one in nearly seven adults has a permit. In New Jersey, where local authorities have retained the discretion to deny permits, just one in 4,200 adults has one.
(Excerpt) Read more at startribune.com ...
Thinking the title was one of those weird MN dialect things I expected good news aboot the gunbearer job market.
like this little feller except taller, blonde, and female.
Ah well, good news nonetheless. Still....
LOL! What convoluted *liberal* logic to call the Bill of rights liberal.In Utah, where gun laws are so liberal ...
You have it backward - whats convoluted is the usage which implies that there is anything liberal about socialism:At the start of the Twentieth Century the term "liberal" meant the same in America as it still does in the rest of the world - essentially, what is called "conservatism" in American Newspeak. Of course we "American Conservatives" are not the ones who oppose development and liberty, so in that sense we are not conservative at all. We actually are liberals.But in America, "liberalism" was given its American Newspeak - essentially inverted - meaning in the 1920s (source: Safire's New Political Dictionary). The fact that the American socialists have acquired a word to exploit is bad enough; the real disaster is that we do not now have a word which truly descriptive of our own political perspective. We only have the smear words which the socialists have assigned to us.
And make no mistake, in America "conservative" is inherently a negative connotation - we know that just as surely as we know that every American marketer loves to boldly proclaim that whatever product he is flogging is NEW!
Actually, the judge did. I found out about him from a retired US Army CSM. In his case, some (unspecified) bad guyz wanted to do him harm, but his (chain) employer would not let him be armed on the job. So this judge provided him a bench order, pretty much the same kind as for the women.
He showed me the order he carried with him, in case some policeman had heartburn with him being armed in public.
In this case, all the local police were aware of the judge, but that does raise a question about police who didn’t.
In such a case, it would probably “pay to advertise”, to visit the local cop shop, show a supervisor the order, to see if he is cool with it.
If you’re ever involved with anything that might be controversial, it is usually a great idea to visit the police station. They can’t read minds, and with all the changes in the law, it’s pretty hard to keep current. So when somebody gives them a heads up on a subject that might create friction, they are generally grateful.
New gun laws for CC and open carry take a lot of getting used to, for one.
Need more permits.
The Strib must have caught some heat over the original title of the story that appeared in the print edition (page one, center, above the fold).
The original title used the word “toters” instead of “carriers”.
The problem with that is that I really don't trust the police. Given the stories I see today, I think that is the best position to take.
That’s why I specified at controversial times. Open carry and CC are great examples of this.
Say your state has just legalized open carry. If you toodle over to the cop shop and ask their Public Affairs officer about it, you may get critically important information, such as:
1) Huh? When did that happen? First I’ve heard.
2) We haven’t received guidance from the city attorney, so we are still doing “business as usual”.
3) The Chief says he doesn’t want any “gunslingers” in his town.
4) We’ve been closely monitoring that law, which goes into effect next month, and as soon as it does, we have trained our officers to be cool with it.
etc.
Even if you don’t trust cops, it is far better to go to them than for them to come to you.
He’s just another average Minnesotan who has acquired the power to kill.
The commies at the “Star & Sickle” at their best again.
Do they say the same thing when someone gets a drivers license? a 2X4? a kitchen knife? A power tool??
Population of Minnesota over 18 is 3.75 million
100,000 permit holders of 3.75m is 2.6%...
1 in 40 is approximately 2.6%...
Article seems true, I stand corrected.
“To: marktwain
Acquired the power to kill? Hes acquired the power to protect himself.”....
People are BORN with the “power” to kill, once the person is physically capabile. The gun is merely a tool to accomplish the tast.
One should not need a permit to carry a concealed weapon, period.
No problem, Jay.
The number I posted is as of July 1.
Hopefully, we’ve picked up a couple more since then.
I’m working with a young man who wants to get his permit. So we’re meeting on the weekends at the local range.
Side note... Pat Cannon, quoted in the article, and I grew up in the same neighborhood.
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