I didn't know that.
Well at least where I have lived on the East Coast
I didn't know that.
Just my thoughts, but those that want to/do open carry probably feel comfortable in public places where there are many folks around. If your car failed on you and you were by yourself and you had to walk down a dimly lit street in a bad part of town with people on the corners, would you open carry there?
Ten years ago OC was not something you’d see very often in western WA. People did make panicked calls to the police, and the police responded. Sometimes the OCer wore handcuffs until it got sorted out. Here’s the hitch though- OC was just as lawful then as now. So what changed and how did that change come about?Whether open carry is legal or prohibited those doing so will always draw attention to themselves in modern America, and it is only a matter of time before someone makes the panicked "man with a gun" call.
Open carry is legal here. On the east-side of the Cascades, it is no big deal. My concern is, although I detect many people conceal carrying, the ones I see open carrying are hardly good, upstanding examples. Most are dirty, fat, scraggly beards and resemble pot farmers or meth producers (we have more than a few in the area), wearing camo and combat boots. Even seen a couple of wanna-be gang bangers carrying.
A couple of weeks ago, I saw one in Sportsmen's Warehouse. Fat, long hair, tats, camo. Generally scruffy looking. Carrying some inexpensive, high capacity auto-shucker. First thing I noticed was that the magazine was missing. I figured he wanted to be the first one shot if the SHTF. (My wife had her Glock 26 and I had my 27).
Just saying, if you are going to open carry, think of the image you portray!
Ten years ago OC was not something you’d see very often in western WA. People did make panicked calls to the police, and the police responded. Sometimes the OCer wore handcuffs until it got sorted out. Here’s the hitch though- OC was just as lawful then as now. So what changed and how did that change come about?
Well, first of all we just kept right on carrying openly, politely reminded any responding officers of its lawfulness, and before long the word got out that it was legal. Within the first few months police departments began issuing training bulletins to inform their officers of the law regarding OC (or in our case the lack of a law that prohibits it). The ‘slower’ departments paid settlements for civil rights violations; some of them substantial. Today, you will only very rarely hear about a confrontation between OCers and police.
Your ‘right’ to choose your religion is useless if you’re too afraid to attend your church. Your right to assemble is pointless if you have to meet secretly in your basement, complete with a secret knock so you don’t inadvertently open the door to a government agent. Your free speech rights are without effect if the best you can do is grumble under your breath. So how can you claim there is a ‘right’ to carry a firearm if you are too intimidated to do it, or only willing to do it surreptitiously?
You cannot make a legitimate complaint that OC will bring negative response from the police if you are unwilling to stand up against it. So how come you don’t stand up against it? Is it because CC is “good enough” for you? We have no-hassle OC in WA now, and it has benefited all of us regardless of our method of carry. Back when OC was so bold as to compel an officer to violate your civil rights for doing it, they would do likewise for the inadvertently exposed CC.
I think all you fat, old guys are too sensitive!
I R 1 2 @ 65
I think all you fat, old guys are too sensitive!
I R 1 2 @ 65
Nah, I'll just wear my summer loin cloth.May I suggest you add some pants or shorts to your summer attire?
The last person I saw dressed only in a tank top and boots was also being arrested...for solicitation, LOL!!
Characterizing in a negative manner those who carry guns and saying the public objects to them is nothing new.
"The gun toter and the tough man – I don’t want his vote,” “There are a lot of good, law-abiding people in the Lower East Side. They do not like to have the red badge of shame waved over that part of the city. They have no sympathy with the tough men, the men who tote guns and use them far too frequently.”
Tim Sullivan 1910.
The name would become notorious as the Sullivan Act. It was the Sullivan Act that helped usher in an era of banning concealed carry and for the use of the select few elite.
Conceal carry low-lifes... gives a bad name to gun owners!
![]()