This statement reflects the fundamental difference of opinion, you say that the person is allowed to carry, as if its its not a right. Are you "allowed" to speak, or is it a guaranteed right. People are allowed to drive, but they have no right to drive. As for training, sure people should be trained and they should practice but should anyone have to pay money for something that they have the right to do anyway. When it comes to comes the left cry out everytime there is a change, each change is going to result in bodies lining the streets. When concealed carry started in this country the left said that it was going to result in shootouts in the streets, mass passion shootings, and innocents being killed in record number, none of which happened. In five years were going to find the same thing in this case, nothing is going to happen.
Originally Posted by dirty dog
We pay for many of our rights, including the right to drive. You said that driving is a privilege, not a right, but actually the Supreme Court has ruled that driving is a right. They were wrong in my opinion, but that is neither here nor there. Just because you have a right to drive according to the USSC, does not mean that society does not have a right to expect you to know the basic rules of the road. And it also means that it costs you money to be able to drive - license fees, registration, property tax on your vehicle.
You also have a right to work, but you pay for that right in the form of income taxes.
You have a right to free speech, but you pay for that right in the form of taxes on your cell phone, landline phone, and internet usage.
Having the right to do something does not mean the gov't can't and won't take its cut. We can have a discussion about how much the gov't loves to dip into our pockets on another thread if you like. For the purposes of this discussion though, the argument that it is wrong, or a curtailment of our rights to have to pay to exercise those rights does not work. You pay to exercise your rights in 100 different ways every day.
Some arguments are simply self evident to the point of needing no support. Better training will always result in better results. This is true in any endeavor. Regardless of whether it is job training we are talking about, or hand gun training, you will always get better results, better safety, better performance through practice and training. And when we are talking about allowing people to carry a deadly weapon in public, it is not unreasonable for the public to expect that person to have a minimum proficiency in handling that weapon. After all, we also have the right to expect a reasonable amount of safety out in public.
One other point that has not been made in this debate is that requiring a CC permit also makes things much easier and safer for law enforcement. Do you want to be the law enforcement officer talking to someone on the side of the road, who sees a hand gun casually sitting there in arm's reach of the person you just stopped? In a no permit state, the officer now has to use their best judgement to decide if you are a lunatic or not. In a CC permit state, the motorist who says "Yes officer, I have a permit for my hand gun" and shows it to him makes it a whole lot easier for law enforcement to determine that the hand gun does not present a threat to him. Being a police officer is dangerous enough. Anything that makes their job safer and easier is fine by me.