That's not much of an introduction, unless asking a string of little hypotheticals is going to be your persona here.
Hey, even if the post is a troll, it is an intriguing question.
To misapply Shakespeare, "Whether 'tis nobler in the mind to suffer the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune"
Would I live in a place where I enjoyed legal rights or where I enjoyed the comfort and support of a supportive community in a hostile legal environment?
Black in a Jim Crow state?
Arab in Israel?
Rohingya in Miyanmar?
Hindu in Pakistan?
How many of those who prefer to live where the laws are friendly would sacrifice that convenience for the rigors (that our founding fathers embraced) to band together and re-form this "more perfect union" that tries to guarantee those freedoms we hold dear.
Do we luxuriate in the freedoms out forefathers bought for us? Do we spend our efforts to buy back for our children those same freedoms that are being vacuumed up from us, state by state?
Having said that, I recognize that I live in a gun-friendly state and enjoy a community that embraces the shooting sports. So, I have few sacrifices I have been called upon to make. But I support pro-choice candidates and laws wherever I can and oppose anti-choice politicians and laws at every turn. I choose the right to be my arbiter of what is right and wrong and the right to possess the means of self-defense is one of the most important, for symbolism as well as for real-world practical reasons.
Live in a comfortably secure condition? Oppose tyranny in an uncomfortable legal environment?
I have friends and family in California. Maybe I should move....and vote.
Those examples I gave earlier run in a range from life-threatening to merely inconvenient. Sure, if I were to die if I stayed in a state or a country, I might leave (or form an underground resistance, which is life-risking enough), but we live in a country that allows, even encourages. us to form communities and organizations to change local laws inhospitable to our beliefs (and, by extension, Federal laws, too). So, living where laws are in opposition to our choice to embrace the Second Amendment, but where we have an inchoate politically powerful gun-friendly community, are we not missing an opportunity if we don't stay and work (fight) to change the world to guarantee us the right to choose to shoot, to hunt, to carry?
Lost Sheep