Thursday, October 2, 2014

One Year Of ‘Guns In North Carolina Bars’ & Guess What… No Mayhem

 Shoot Out

One Year of ‘Guns and Bars’. . . where’s the mayhem?

House Bill 937, which became effective on October 1, 2013, dramatically expanded North Carolina’s concealed handgun law into restaurants where alcohol is sold and consumed, assemblies of people for which admission is charged, parades and funerals, further into state and municipal parks, and even to a limited extent into educational properties.

Guns and alcohol don’t mix’?

As always when we expand concealed handgun laws, opponents and media naysayers predicted shootings in bars, guns stolen from vehicles at schools, and various other sorts of mayhem using platitudes like “guns and alcohol don’t mix.”

GRNC explained endlessly that concealed handgun permit-holders, by virtue of background checks and training, had proven themselves sane, sober and law-abiding since 1995, with a rate of permit revocation on the order of three tenths of a single percent. We explained that permit-holders in restaurants would still be prohibited from imbibing alcohol.

But the dire predictions persisted. Editorials ridiculed legislators. UNC president Tom Ross sent UNC police chiefs to testify against the bill, claiming it would hamper their ability to protect students. Gun control activists pushed restaurants to post against concealed carry.

So what has happened?

More @ AmmoLand

4 comments:

  1. Hopefully a bunch of you armed NC Gun Rights Activists are gonna be going to the fair anyways... doing such things is what helped push through GA's gun laws... if a city attempted to place a park or other such area off limits, we would rally at the parks (armed), the city/county would be immediately sued, and they would drop the ban before it went to court.

    We have a very strong firearms preemption statute here, and we USE it.

    Although bags were randomly searched (for food/drink 'contraband') at the North Georgia State Fair, if a LEO saw a weapon they would just wave them in.

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    Replies
    1. Although bags were randomly searched (for food/drink 'contraband') at the North Georgia State Fair, if a LEO saw a weapon they would just wave them in.

      Interesting.

      Delete
  2. An armed society is a polite society.

    hbbill
    Somewhere behind enemy lines,
    Peoples Republik of Kommiefornia

    ReplyDelete