why do you have a CCW?

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willyjixx

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how do you answer this? not just for answering Anti's but if say old Friends an family an new inlaws ask? especially those from relatively "safe" areas.

or how do you explain it to niave (sp?) people.

an please a little more thought than !2nd amendment sais i can !!
 
I had a close call with a bad situation once. After that, I decided to take responsibility for my own protection.
 
I don't know how to answer it to tell you the truth.

"Because I can."
"It's a right and I'm going to exercise it."
"Just in case."
"You never know when you might need it."

All of those and more.:)
 
Better of all that a ''CCW'' per se was not even required ... to excercise a right.

That said .... I have every intention of being in a position to protect both self and family .. at all times possible. No one else is gonna be able to do that. It is a responsibility .... one I do not take on lightly either.

There is in the end, for me - no choice. I either live in hope (tho I am in a safe area by and large) .... or take my resonsibilities seriously. It is no more than insurance ... most of the time we pay premiums ''in case'' .. usually hoping not to ever make a claim.

For those who wear seat belts .. it is ''just in case'' .. again the hope is they are never needed.

I quite often would like to be free of the minor incumbrance but .. carry is for me 16/7 .... and rest of time it is just under bed. All or nothing .. no half measures.:)
 
I've been shot too many times to want to be shot again. In this case, I believe in the old (Biblical - but somewhat modified! :D ) saying of "Do unto others what they're trying to do unto you - but do it first!".
 
Permit?

I can't afford to do the time in prison for carrying without one. I hear they've even got criminals in there! :what:
 
Ryder

well thats the best dang excuse ive ever heard!!!

seriosly! that made the most sense. answers any more questions that the other person would ask!!!:D
 
how do you answer this? not just for answering Anti's but if say old Friends an family an new inlaws ask? especially those from relatively "safe" areas.
I tell them the average police response time where I live, and add that I've got to be able to do something while I'm waiting for the police to arrive.

pax
 
Why Carry?

Well, a surley attitude dosen't act as a repellent to certain 2-legged predators who have indicated they regard me as 'Food', also road rage and carjacking is on the increase in my area.... When I was filling out the paperwork for my original CCW application, I listed my address and the number of assaults, armed robberies and breakins within a mile of my address in the previous year as well as a number of clippings of sheriff/police reports published in our local paper for the same time span.
Got the permit. :evil:
I've never had to shoot anyone, but there have been a couple of instances where the attitude backup of a concealed handgun has probably been the deciding factor in a nasty situation being defused without the weapon having to be utilized.:)
 
Given that if you are CCW then you will have a gun I like to show this to people that ask that question. I forget where i found it I tink that it was on the board somewhere.

QUOTE
___________________________________________________________
Guest columnist Will Dougan, 30, is director of music ministries at a local church.

August 17, 2003

"Legitimate defense can be not only a right but a grave duty for one who is responsible for the lives of others."

- Catechism of the Catholic Church, No. 2265 (1997)

The question "why do you choose to carry a firearm?" has haunted me.

I am a fairly normal guy. I love to eat barbecue, I pay taxes, I vote. I'd like to take my wife out more often (to eat barbecue), I attend church and I'm a baseball fan - just like many other men in Memphis.


One thing that makes me different from some of those men is that I carry a gun. I do so because I truly believe that preserving the safety and well-being of my wife, my children and myself is my duty.

Do I think there are villains around every corner waiting to pounce? Certainly not. To quote the Boy Scout motto, my intent is only to "be prepared."

I carry a spare tire in my car, have emergency supplies at home, and always wear my seatbelt, all so that I will be prepared. I have used my spare tire twice, never used the emergency supplies and found my seatbelt's restraints necessary only once. So why do I still maintain all those safeguards? Because I know that when I do need them, I'll need them desperately.

For me, a handgun is much the same - a safeguard. I carry it and train with it just in case I ever need it.

I hope never to need my gun. I avoid places I think might not be safe. I pay close attention to what is going on around me, so that I can stay one step ahead of potential dangers. I do not look for trouble nor go around with a chip on my shoulder.

I love my family more than anything on Earth. I want my children to grow up, go to school, move out and give me grandchildren. I want my wife and me to live and love each other until death do us part - when we are very, very old. The thought of losing them or having them lose me makes my eyes well up and lodges a lump in my throat.

I grew up in rural Madison County, where guns were a part of life, not something to be feared or mistrusted. We all had them, we all used them, and we all respected them.

A gun was and is a tool - nothing more, nothing less. You would never know my gun is there; it is safely tucked away in a manner that renders it harmless unless it is called upon. When you are at my home, there is no sign of a firearm; they are all stored in locked safes.

I take my duty as husband and father seriously. Part of that duty is being willing and able to protect my loved ones - from drugs, economic dangers and physical threats. The words of my father ring in my ears: "With great privilege comes great responsibility." I carry a gun because it is my responsibility alone - not that of the police, nor the government, nor the community - to defend the precious lives that God has entrusted to me.

Although I have great distaste for the possibility of taking a life, I recall the words attributed to St. Augustine: "Though defensive violence will always be a 'sad necessity' in the eyes of men of principle, it would be still more unfortunate if wrongdoers should dominate just men."

Fathers are like sheepdogs. We must be persistent, gentle, playful and, at times, ferocious. On occasion, we must become like the wolf that threatens our flock.

For me, that means owning, carrying and undergoing extensive training with a firearm, so that when the wolf appears out of the shadows, I will be prepared to defend what the Master has given me.
____________________________________________________________

works all the time.:D
 
Got my first one in NY...had to if you wanted to shoot at a range, then alwys just had one..just to have...

Now in Alaska means I can walk in and buy a gun without waiting the 1 minute for a background check....


WildeasierthatwayAlaska
 
I live in a "safe" area but:
In case I need to shoot someone.

Or to try to keep from being shot.
I tell them the average police response time where I live, and add that I've got to be able to do something while I'm waiting for the police to arrive.

That and the occasional druggie here. But the thing is, noone really knows if I'm carrying.
 
I like guns. The area I live in and the places I go are so safe that I only need to take it out once every 9 months to a year. Funny. I never know when that is going to be.
 
It generally depends on how the question is asked.

If their interest in genuine: "because I enjoy target shooting and possessing a permit makes the hobby more convienent to practice, plus it provides an effective means of defense if I can't run away fast enough from a bad situation."

If they're trying to start another rambling debate about gun laws: "Why do you feel the need to ask me about it?"
 
The biggest reason I got my CHL is that it was my right to have it. I think there's something to be said for exercising your rights to keep them strong, etc. Also, when gun issues are raised in a political context, I want the pro-gun numbers to be as strong as possible. That's the main reason I joined the NRA and have sponsored others. There are other smaller reasons why I got mine, but that's the main one...

But having said that, I've never carried one of my guns concealed. For me, I just don't feel it's necessary. If I were going someplace that I felt I needed a gun, I wouldn't go period. The chances of me needing to shoot someone in my normal day-to-day life are so infantesimal that it's just not worth it. But that's just me...
 
For handgun hunting

I'm in CA and am an avid handgun hunter. I spend a lot of time in the mountains in my Jeep. You can carry a loaded, but unchambered long gun, but must completely unload your handgun everytime you get in and out of a vehicle and must keep the handgun unconcealed, which is very inconvenient. Since I got my CCW several years ago, I've had two bad experiences where I didn't have to use the gun but was glad I had it. I now carry almost everywhere.
 
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