Suspect Waves a Gun at Customers in Dollar General; Two Seconds Later He’s Dead
Posted by IndianaGary 10 years, 9 months ago to News
In an Orrville, Alabama Dollar General Thursday, a suspect burst in waving a gun. He threatened to kill everyone in the store. Luckily, he did not get that chance. A customer pulled out their concealed firearm and shot the suspect in the chest. He died instantly.
This is how predators should be handled!
This is how predators should be handled!
No need to worry! I lost those habits long time ago. Besides, I could never match the real masters of the art.
I think that I noticed, over the decades since I came, that Americans are gradually using more and more their hands in "speaking". Do you notice that?
How do you gag an Italian?
Tie his hands behind his back.
Thank you very much. I hope that you will be around for much longer than that. Do I need to remind you when the time comes ;-) ?
All the best.
I'm still thinking that it was not originally intended to limit the ability of States to have some oversight in this area. Although, unlike the first, it does not start with "Congress...". And the 14th amendment would render that argument null and void anyway.
Plus, as I mentioned, the "shall not be questioned" in the PA constitution is actually stronger language than the US constitution. If you cannot even question my right to keep and bear arms for my own defense or the defense of the Commonwealth. I believe that that clause pre-dates the US constitution as well but I'm not sure.
However, the PA LTCF clearly "questions" the rights of citizens and the Philadelphia police often harass citizens even if they have the license.
To my understanding, a convicted felon has forfeited their right to posses a fire arm. However, a pardoned person, even a mass murderer that used guns to commit the crime, can posses, as that crime was expunged.
That said, a blanket requirement for a license, clearly is an unconstitutional infringement.
What you mean to say is that open carry is not infringed upon in Wisconsin...
The key words, "on parole". A prisoner on parole is not a free man.
A convicted murderer (citizen), who's served his sentence or been granted a pardon, has every bit as much right to carry a weapon as does a citizen who's committed no crime.
Ironically, the PA constitution is even less ambiguous than the US constitution. It states that the right of a citizen to keep and bear arms, for their own defense or that of the Commonwealth, shall not be questioned. So one could argue that requiring a citizen to have a permit in PA is actually unconstitutional from a state perspective.
I still do not feel confident with my accuracy with a handgun. Give me a rifle and I can hit a 2 inch circle at 300 meters with 9 out of 10 rounds or 10 out of 10 rounds every time. A handgun at 20 feet I can hit that same circle about 5 out of 10 times.
Te me a hand gun is for target shooting, or to help me get to a rifle, nothing more. I do not pack one as I would rather have a knife at 20 feet and beyond that I would not shoot if anyone else was around the target. My accuracy is not there.
Without training I would not know this fact about myself. I suck with handguns, close quarters I will take a knife or my Bushmaster AR15 M4 over a handgun as I can use them both better.
People that pack a weapon should know there limitations with that weapon; perhaps more important, the capabilities with the weapon. Then they can operate with some intelligence and reason rather than guesswork and conjecture.
Even saying that, it should not be required and neither should a permit.
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