JJ wrote:bstrawse wrote:I have no problem with open carry - so my following comments should be taken with that in mind.
This was a bad idea from the beginning. Poorly messaged in advance, the anti's saw it coming and exploited a sympathetic press to spin the story. When the expected blowback came, there was no plan to manage that blowback -- and now the plan has been withdrawn - and a victory in the public / press gets handed to Protect MN, Moms Demand Action, and the anti-gun mayors in Minneapolis and Saint Paul.
They didn't even have to earn it. It was handed to them.
We win when we're polite, when we have simple, key messages, and have a plan to deal with the press, the blowback, the political BS that happens, and so on - and show up in force as a gun owner community.
That's how we ran the table on the anti-gunners this year at the legislature.
We piss away that credibility when things like this are what we hang our hats on.
One of the leaders I greatly admire has a saying: "This isn't checkers, this is mutha-effing chess. Play chess."
We need to play chess - particularly right now when we have a DFL Governor and a DFL controlled legislature. And we need our credibility as a gun owner community to maintain and grow the influence that we have.
B
I am one in the camp that
we could/should be doing more to advance the visibility of our cause. But I have to agree with bstrawse 100% on this.
Plans need to be made well ahead of time. A unified front has to be presented, with simple, easy handle messages. The fractured nature of current advocates has the potential to do far more harm than good for
our cause.
I want to comment on every post in this thread because each one is so dang good and right on...but for the sake of brevity and the sanity of everyone (myself included), I won't. So I'll say the following:
1) +Infinity on bstrawe's comment above, JJ's as well, and forever agreed. I think the goal was sound, but the planning and implementation was not. Others have already made valid points regarding politicizing events, not having a contingency plan for dealing with the fallout, inserting ourselves into a potential hotbed of possible provocation and escalation when we're supposed to de-escalate, etc. It's all been said in this thread, so no need for me to repeat it.
As dor darkwolf45's comments, I agree with them as well, in fact, I don't really disagree with anything said on this entire thread so far, so what follows isn't a disagreement, more of a comment....
"I don't need to parade my handgun around, but an open event to meet other gun owners is always a good thing."
Meetups are a good idea when it's planned and implemented accordingly, which this one was not. (I'm never for parading around to promote OC. I OC because it's how I legally choose to carry, no agenda, no politics, no parading.)
Also, the best OC events are just daily living. We can meet for coffee or just run into each other at a store, say hi.. no need to a special event unless you want to either raise awareness (not always a good thing as seen here), or you just want to get a bunch of people together who share a common interest. the former is more precarious, the latter, not so much. I agree that the sheeple need gun education, but much like people who use computers, many prefer to stay in their ignorance and refuse to learn. They just want their computer to work, aka
"so fix it for me and shut up. I don't need to understand it, I just want it to work." ...and these same people drive cars and probably don't understand much about them either; but it's not just cars, computers and guns, most people are like that about everything...they want to learn the minimum and no more. It's sad really. Most people are willfully ignorant and incompetent on even some basic things of modern life; and while none of us are experts on everything, my point is that many people choose to not even really learn and understand the basics.
"Here at work I could literally get written up and fired just for discussing guns, let alone expressing my views openly about them."
I'm actually going back to my former job at the government defense contractor where I was at for almost 4 years. They all know I have a PTC. My boss's boss was one of the first in MN to have a PTC, as is one of the guys in the Professional Services department also one of the first in MN as well. Some of my co-workers and I have gone out shooting together. Whenever they run a story on the 2003 act, both their pictures appear in the article. (I don't carry at work.) At my last job, the one I was at for about 6 months, they also knew I had a PTC and didn't have a problem with it. My ex-boss was also an ex-cop from South Dakota and we discussed firearms once in awhile. (Prior to those 2 jobs, I didn't have a PTC), so I've never had an issue, and I'm sorry you do at your work. Not all places are so fearful like that. Is it enough to change jobs over? No. I don't think so, but it's sad that you can't be open there about it. Just know not all places are like that.
"And the people at the range are always friendly and welcoming, but they also are usually focused on what they are doing (training with their firearms). A side event would have been nice."
Agreed on all of that.