I'll be happy to define flaunt for you:
flaunt
verb: flaunt; 3rd person present: flaunts; past tense: flaunted; past participle: flaunted; gerund or present participle: flaunting
display (something) ostentatiously, especially in order to provoke envy or admiration or to show defiance.
Using that definition will emphasize my point.
What makes you think that the time has passed for open carry?
Simple. Because it has. As a general rule, the time has passed for riding horses down Main Street, too. Horses interfere with cars; therefore, we don't routinely ride them on the public thoroughfares any longer. Sometimes there is occasion for it but I'm speaking as a general rule.
Carrying a handgun openly in today's society is, for the most part, ostentatious, and defiant, and if you think it doesn't create terror or worse in the average citizen then you're just being stubborn about it. The fact that it's legal in some places and, therefore, the 911 operators know how to calm down the frightened public, is not sufficient to state that it's not a thing of history that belongs relegated to the dustbin of history.
Again, I made it perfectly clear that it doesn't upset me personally. My main reason for supporting it is to ensure that if I happen to expose my concealed handgun it doesn't violate any laws.
I've gone to parties wearing openly visible handguns, even western style, double holsters, etc. But that's on private property where the folks all knew me and understood the concept. Doing the same thing just walking down the street is just being obnoxious and disrespecting the feelings of my peers.
Clearly, a snub nosed revolver in a tight to the body holster isn't a western rig on display but, still, it will be seen and it will create negative reactions in the America of the 21st century. Arguing that that doesn't matter because legal is legal is just rude and disrespectful to others.
What specifically is ridiculous about open carry? Why is it a stupid plan?
It is ridiculous simply because it is no longer acceptable, and it is stupid for the very same reason. If open carrying of weapons becomes acceptable in normative society I applaud it. It requires a paradigm shift in perception for the average person. YOU AND I/WE are not average when it comes to firearms so OUR acceptance is outside the norm. I am not offended or affrighted by the sight of a handgun on a person's belt. The average citizen is, however, and thus we have to overcome the fear of 350 million people, more or less.
I think it's excellent that a 911 call in Oklahoma generates questions that allow the emergency operator to assuage the fears of the person who called and, at the same time, educate that person. But doing it because you can and knowing that a 911 call will not cause the police to come after you doesn't make doing it any less flaunting.
I well remember in years gone by what my reaction was when I saw firearms openly carried. As a gun person, even decades ago, when I saw a gent come out of a convenience store with a small revolver holstered on his belt (this was in Mississippi as I recall) I was stunned. "Wow!", I thought, "I wonder how he gets away with that??!!" (The law was weird back then in Mississippi - something about a gun in a holster being okay due to partial concealment.) My point is that I was stunned and I liked it. What about the guy who is stunned and scared to death by it?
Then there was a parade in Prescott, Arizona. July 4th, almost exactly 30 years ago today. Bikers lined the streets and it seemed to me that every motorcycle had a rider sporting a handgun. Nobody paid attention - there were only two possible reasons. First, it was legal. Second, everyone was intimidated. But there were police around so I simply asked and discovered it was legal and acceptable. PARADIGM SHIFT REQUIRED. In Arizona, in the small town of Prescott for sure, everyone knew it was legal and it was acceptable. Fine by me.
But I'll also tell you that those guns were being openly flaunted and the only people doing it were on motorcycles. To my way of thinking, that was a necessity for them. Okay, fine.
If you can teach that to 350 million Americans I'm with you. If you can't then open carrying of handguns is stupidly ostentatious, offensive, and it's time has passed.
You know what?
I want to be wrong.
***GRJ***