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I seem to have missed that part of the Bill of Rights that requires training or demonstrations of proficiency before one may exercise those rights.
I can understand requiring some basic level of training before a concealed carry permit is issued. Unfortunately we see many legislative and regulatory abuses in this, depending on where we might reside.
On the other hand, once a training/proficiency requirement is enacted we can be sure that the requirements will be increased incrementally until a majority of the people will give up exercising their rights.
Basic firearms safety class sounds reasonable, but will certainly become a 2 week training program only offered once per year, a hundred miles from any population center, all expenses paid by the applicant. Then a 6 week program might become the minimum requirement. Within a few years there might be a Bachelor of Science degree program in firearms safety and laws of self defense.
75% passing scores on the range might be the initial minimum. That could turn into 90%, and then why not 100% just to be extra sure for the sake of public safety?
A right is a right. Once the government starts regulating something there are only privileges to be granted at some bureaucrat's whim.
Give some people an inch and they start thinking they are rulers.
All very true, but somewhere between onerous government intervention and "buy it, have someone load it and never touch it again until you need it" is the responsible, commonsense position of making sure your safety device is still working and you remember how to use it. This should be encouraged.
350 years ago my ancestor was fined a shilling for turning out for a militia drill with a dirty musket. That's why we had to throw the British out.
I bought a smoke detector 5 years ago, loaded it with a battery and hung it on the wall, right over my fire extinguisher. Now I'm protected forever, right?
I'm glad this worked out for this lady and her son, but there are so many points in this story where it could have gone tragically wrong.