


I thought there was one GIANT beating dead horse emoticon....I had to go with 3 small ones

Here's what I mean: the 'first six months' are actually 'easy' in that you know what to do...your instructor has literally scared the sheit out of you and you're walking on eggs and TRIPLE-THINKING every thing you do...
"THE TEMPERING EXPERIENCE" is when you...'lose your temper while carrying a loaded firearm'
You wind up (usually behind the wheel of a car after some A-hole has almost killed you) and you realize "Oh My God, I have a loaded gun in my pocket and I want to Kill / intimidate that A-hole who so richly deserves it"
So....I think it takes a year for you to find your 'Tempering Experience' Training helps.
gunsmith"[quote="gunsmith wrote:.....
So just visualize Minnesota wionstitutional Carry' starting tomorrow:
HOW MANY KNUCKLEHEADS WILL BE DOING DRUNKEN KNUCKLEHEAD STUNTS AND EMBARRASSING THE ENTIRE 2A COMMUNITY ON A WEEKLY BASIS.....
gunsmith wrote:"Oh My God, I have a loaded gun in my pocket and I want to Kill / intimidate that A-hole who so richly deserves it"
gunsmith wrote:
Good Point.
I'm NOT an instructor and probably never will be....but I HAVE OPINIONSand THEORIES.
One Theory is that it takes 2 years (possibly one) to "Learn to Carry'
Here's what I mean: the 'first six months' are actually 'easy' in that you know what to do...your instructor has literally scared the sheit out of you and you're walking on eggs and TRIPLE-THINKING every thing you do...
That's good for the first six months but you can't live practically and Triple-think everything.
Scared-Sheit-less that's part one....it will fade.
Part Two is: "THE TEMPERING EXPERIENCE" You've had one. I've had one.
"THE TEMPERING EXPERIENCE" is when you...'lose your temper while carrying a loaded firearm'
It's a turning point and it's an experience that can't be 'Staged' it's like a form of spiritual enlightenment...in that you can't learn it from a text-book or in a classroom.
You wind up (usually behind the wheel of a car after some A-hole has almost killed you) and you realize "Oh My God, I have a loaded gun in my pocket and I want to Kill / intimidate that A-hole who so richly deserves it"
A flash of inspiration follows: You realize that you need to live not one but two steps back from the edge of any confrontation. You realize that you have to let that drunken, illegal, retard smash up your new car and injure your passenger and YOUR FIREARM MUST NEVER ENTER THE EQUATION.
You will leave the encounter a 'changed man'
Training helps but you must learn this on your own. Requiring permits...'helps' and for some reason here in MN our 155,000 permit holders are not mucking things up every drunken weekend.
So....I think it takes a year for you to find your 'Tempering Experience' Training helps.
The whole concept of 'Constutional Government' is growing on me but I'm not an Idealist.
Constitutional Carry is #11 on my list of the top ten things we need to accomplish to support RKBA in MN.
Rip Van Winkle wrote:gunsmith wrote:"Oh My God, I have a loaded gun in my pocket and I want to Kill / intimidate that A-hole who so richly deserves it"
I've carried almost 10 years, deal with multiple a-holes on a daily basis and have never had this thought. Perhaps our government overlords should look closely at your right to carry.
hunterfreakhd wrote:And who was your instructor?
I credit that to my father.
gunsmith wrote:All the rights are qualified (fire in theater)...
jshuberg wrote:gunsmith wrote:All the rights are qualified (fire in theater)...
This is a personal pet peeve of mine. The idea that rights can be restricted by government, because after all "you can't yell fire in a crowded theater". Well, its bull$hit. This common piece of folklore originated in the US Supreme Court ruling Schenck v. US.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schenck_v._United_States
The case involved a man who was distributing leaflets urging people to resist the draft during WWI. The Supreme Court ruled that speech is not protected by the 1st Amendment when it represents a clear and present danger. The reference to yelling fire in a crowded theater was never actually part of arguments, but simply used as a metaphor. The language in the opinion was:
The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic. [...] The question in every case is whether the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create a clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent.
However, the court reversed itself in 1969 in the Brandenburg v. Ohio ruling:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brandenburg_v._Ohio
Here, the court found that a "clear and present danger" was too broad a criteria for limiting 1st Amendment protections, and adopted the new standard of an "imminent lawless action". So the commonly cited metaphor breaks down under the current standard. While falsely yelling fire in a crowded theater may be a danger, it's still protected as it's not the advocating of an imminent lawless action.
A person can yell fire in a crowded theater. He may be arrested, or even charged with a crime, but the standard set by the Supreme Court in 1969 results in his speech being protected, and he should not be found guilty of a crime simply because he yelled fire in a crowded theater. Only when a person advocates or "eggs on" another person to commit a crime, and the commission of that crime was imminent is the speech not protected.
Our rights are not absolute, but any limitations on our rights have to be extremely narrowly defined. Specifically, speech that poses a danger *is* protected so long as it doesn't advocate for imminent lawlessness. Any limitations on our 2nd Amendment rights should follow the same model. They should not be limited based on any "potential" for danger, but only when a lawless action is imminent, or has already been committed. This should be the only restriction the people concede to the government concerning our fundamental human rights without due process of law.
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