Virginia Open Carry
The Open Carry Argument - An essay by Mainsail
The Open Carry Argument
My primary goal when Im out and about, besides whatever I went out
and about to do, is to go about peaceably and not be the victim of a violent
crime. To that end I carry a firearm whenever I go out as well as follow
all the other standard safety practices like maintaining situational awareness,
staying out of high crime areas, and avoiding confrontation. I also have
a larger overall goal of making it through my life without shooting anyone.
Simply put, I dont want to be responsible, legally or morally, for
anothers death. Those two goals might appear at first blush to be mutually
exclusive, and with concealed carry it would be a difficult set of goals
to realize. Carry of any firearm or other firearm for defensive purposes
is a solemn responsibility. Those of us that do (openly or concealed) are
mortified by the idea, constantly promoted by the pacifists, that our behavior
is more reckless because we are armed. In other words, because we carry a
handgun we take more risks than we would if we were unarmed. While it would
be dishonest to claim we are all responsible gun owners, it is my belief
that the vast majority of us are. Regardless of what or how you carry, you
need to come to the realization that you are setting yourself up to lose.
Whenever you are placed in a defensive situation, you will always lose;
its only the degree of loss thats negotiable. Ayoob hits on this
in his book, In the Gravest Extreme. He suggests tossing the robber a small
wad of cash and moving off, even if you could prevail with a weapon.
Theres a very good reason for this. Regardless of how skilled you are
at drawing your firearm, you are going to lose. It may be only a minor loss,
like being very shaken up and not sleeping well for a few days, or it may
be a major loss, like becoming fertilizer, or (most likely) it may be somewhere
in-between, but you always lose. Your life will not be the same even if you
prevail. Carrying a concealed firearm presents to a criminal that I am unarmed.
Every study Ive ever read, not most but every study, says that criminals
will avoid an armed person or home when selecting a victim. That only makes
sense, right? Robbers, rapists, or carjackers might be dumb and opportunistic,
but they have the same instinctual sense of self preservation we all have.
Hyenas dont attack lions to steal the gazelle the lions have just killed.
Its all about risk management; are the potential gains (a tasty gazelle
dinner) worth the risks (pain and damage the lions teeth will cause),
and does the hyena really need to test the lion to figure out the answer?
No, the hyena can see the lions teeth and knows to stay well clear.
Deterrent Value
When Im carrying concealed I feel like my teeth are hidden,
and thus of no real deterrent value. If I appear unarmed then I am unarmed
in the eyes of the robber, I appear as easy a target as almost anyone else
out on the street. My probability of being a victim of a crime, violent or
otherwise, is completely unchanged by the fact that I have hidden beneath
my shirt the means to defend myself. My goal, however, is not to be a victim
in the first place, remember? I dont want to be a victim that fought
back successfully and triumphed; I prefer to not be victimized at all. I
recognize that there are some people who (think they) want to be victimized
so they can whip out their concealed firearm and surprise the
mugger; that is, in my opinion, foolish immaturity. Concealed carry is good;
it throws a wrench in the works for criminals who might see the teeming masses
as a smorgasbord of financial gain. This deterrent effect is, nonetheless,
indirect and often nil. At some point the thug will weigh the risks vs. the
gains; is his current desperation for money/drugs/booze/gold grille greater
than the gamble that one of those people might be carrying a gun? If he decides
to play the odds, which helped along with surprise tip the scale in his favor,
he will attack. Will his attack allow enough time for me to draw my concealed
firearm to affect a defense? Maybe, but then again, maybe not. Remember,
I dont want to be a victim and I dont want to shoot anyone. So
how do I realize both goals; or how do I make them inclusive? I can do that
through open carry. By making it clear and obvious that I am armed, that
I have teeth, I tip the risk scale to the point that the criminals
gains are far outweighed by the risk. There is no ambiguity when the thug
is doing his risk assessment, theres something right there in plain
sight that can quickly and painfully change or terminate his life. You may
not think his life has much value, but as I mentioned before, he has the
same sense of self preservation as any other living creature and to him
its every bit as valuable as yours is to you. It would be foolish to
ignore this indisputable fact when you develop your overall tactical strategy.
The Five
Stages of Violent Crime
The Five Stages of Violent Crime I am a firm believer in this defense theology
and urge anyone who carries a firearm for protection (and even those who
do not) to follow the link and read it carefully. Please, for your and your
familys sake, read that. Drill down into the hyperlinks for better
explanations; absorb as much information as you can. A violent crime does
not begin at the point where one person with ill intent draws a firearm or
attacks another. The Five Stages of Violent Crime: Crime and violence are
processes that take time to develop. The attack is not the first step, the
preliminary triangle must be built. There are five distinct stages that are
easily identified:
1) Intent 2) Interview 3) Positioning 4) Attack 5) Reaction
I do not believe the act begins after the BG has made his intentions known
by drawing on you (attack); it began when he formed the intent. Well,
theres not a lot I can do personally to stop anothers intent,
so I need to look a little farther along in the sequence and try to derail
that train before it gets to the attack. For the sake of argument, lets
remove firearms from the equation for just a moment. A 52 unarmed
attacker isnt going to choose a 66 victim over a
51 victim, right? Hes going to attack the easier target.
Now lets come back to the reality of violent crime and add back the
firearms. Concealed carry presumes it is better to wait until the opponent
has drawn his knife or gun and then try to fix the situation.
Its seems a bit foolish to promote the idea that its better to
attempt to stop a violent crime in the fourth stage when you could instead
prevent it in the second. A concealed firearm cannot deter an attack at the
interview stage; its completely ineffectual in that role.
Open carry is the only method that provides a direct deterrent. Lets
say the bad-guy missed the openly carried pistol and holster during the interview
stage, and has proceeded to the positioning stage. Chances are
pretty good hell see it at some point then, right? Then, lets
say the planets have all aligned just so and he, for whatever reason, has
begun his attack despite your openly carried sidearm. At this point, the
OCer is on level footing with the CCer, the attack has begun. Who has the
advantage? Well, Im going to say that with all things being equal (skill
level and equipment) the OCer has a speed of draw advantage over the CCer.
First One To Be Shot
There are some who criticize open carry and claim it will make you more of
a target or the first one shot when a robber walks into the 7-11,
despite the absolute lack of credible evidence that this has ever happened.
If the robber walks in and sees that youre armed, his whole plan has
encountered an unexpected variable. In bank robberies where he might expect
to see an armed guard he will have already factored that possibility into
his plan, but only for the armed guard, not for open or concealed carry citizens.
No robber robs a bank without at least a rudimentary plan. Nevertheless,
being present for a bank robbery is an extremely remote possibility for most
of us regardless of our preferred method of handgun carry, so lets
go back in the 7-11. If the robber sees someone is armed he is forced to
either significantly alter the plan or abort it outright. Robbing is an
inherently apprehensive occupation, and one that doesnt respond well
to instant modifications. He is not prepared to commit murder when he only
planned for larceny. He knows that a petty robbery will not garner the intense
police manhunt a murder would. He doesnt know if youre an armed
citizen or a police officer and isnt going to take the time to figure
it out. Either way, if someone in the 7-11 is unexpectedly armed, how many
others might be similarly adorned and where might they be? Does this unexpectedly
armed individual have a partner who is likewise armed nearby, someone who
is watching right now? Self preservation compels him to abort the plan for
one that is less risky. So we see that the logic matches the history; open
carriers are not the first ones shot because it doesnt make sense in
any common street crime scenario that they would be. If your personal self
protection plan emphasizes Hollywood style crimes over the more
realistic street mugging, it might be best to stay home.
Surprise
Probably the most common condemnation of open carry comes from the armchair
tacticians who believe its better to have the element of surprise in
a criminal encounter. Although this was touched on in the previous paragraph
about deterrence, Ill expand on it specifically here because there
are some important truths you need to consider before you lean too heavily
on this false support. Surprise as a defensive tactic is often based on
unrealistic or ill-thought out scenarios, and seems to exist only in the
minds of concealed carry firearms proponents. The circumstance where several
street toughs surround and taunt you for a while before robbing you, like
in some Charles Bronson movie, is not realistic; the mugger wants to get
in and out as fast as possible. In most cases you will have only seconds
to realize whats happening, make a decision, and react. Imagine
youre walking along the sidewalk when two gangsta looking teenagers
suddenly appear at the corner coming in the opposite direction. You have
only seconds to react if their intent was to victimize you. Do you draw your
concealed firearm now or wait until theres an actual visible threat?
If they are just on their way to church and you pull a gun on them, you are
the criminal and you will likely forever lose your firearms rights for such
a foolish action. If you dont draw and they pull a knife or pistol
when theyre just a couple steps away, your only options are draw (if
you think you can) or comply. Imagine staring at the shiny blade of a knife
being held by a very nervous and violent mugger, three inches from your or
your wifes throat and having to decide whether or not you have time
to draw from concealment. The element of surprise may not do you any good;
in fact the only surprising thing that might happen is that your concealed
carry pistol gets taken along with your wallet. The thug will later get a
good chuckle with his buddies about how you brought a gun to a knife fight.
The simple truth is that while surprise is a monumentally superior tactical
maneuver, it is exclusively an offensive action, not a defensive one. What
many internet commandos call defensive surprise is nothing more
than damage control, a last ditch effort to fight your way back out of a
dangerous situation. I am not aware of any army that teaches using surprise
as a defense against attack. No squad of soldiers goes on patrol with their
weapons hidden so that they can surprise the enemy should they
walk into an ambush.
It will get stolen
Another common criticism of open carry is that the firearm itself will be
the target of theft, prompting a criminal to attack simply to get the gun
from you. Like the previous example of being the first one shot in a robbery,
above, this is despite the fact that there is no credible evidence it happens.
It also blindly ignores the more obvious fact that anything you possess can
make you the target of a crime, be it a car, a watch, or even a female companion
(girlfriend, wife, or daughter). Crooks commonly steal for only one of two
reasons; to get something you have that they want, or to get something that
you have so they can sell it and buy something they want. I dont claim
it could never happen; just that its so remote a possibility that it
doesnt warrant drastic alterations to our self defense strategies.
If you believe otherwise, leave your wife, children, watch, sunglasses, jewelry,
and cell phone at home, hop into your Pinto wagon, and head out to do your
thing. Very often, someone critical of open carry will cite some example
of a uniformed police officer whose gun was taken by a violent criminal,
and yes, this does indeed happen. The argument, however, breaks down when
they assume the officer was targeted solely to steal his firearm. What is
more likely is that the officer was targeted merely for being a police officer
and the gun was stolen as a byproduct of the attack. More often, the
officers gun is taken during the struggle to get the suspect into custody
due to an entirely unrelated matter. However, lets suppose, for argument,
that a police officer really was attacked just to get his firearm. What actions
did the police department take to prevent it from reoccurring? Did they demand
that their officers carry concealed? No, of course not. You should, like
the police, prioritize your defense strategy for the most likely threat first,
and the least likely last.
It scares people
One other statement against open carry I hear is that it damages public
perception of firearms owners, or that by carrying openly we are not being
good ambassadors to the public. While there are some people who have a genuine
fear of firearms, due either to some horrible past experience or anti-gun
indoctrination, the majority of people are either indifferent to them or
quite fascinated by them. Ive never kept track of the dozens of fellow
citizens Ive encountered who have marveled at the idea of open carry,
but I do know exactly how many have expressed displeasure at it; one. People
are scared of many things for many reasons; however, pretending those things
do not exist only perpetuates the fear. Someone who is disturbed by open
carry is going to be every bit as disturbed by concealed carry. The only
effective way to overcome a fear is to come to the intellectual realization
that the phobia is based on emotion and not on fact. By being a firsthand
witness that a firearm was carried responsibly and peaceably, and wasnt
being carried in the commission of a crime, one who was apprehensive about
firearms discovers their fear is not fact based, but emotional. Thus, open
carry can be a very effectual way of helping to overcome the emotionally
based fear of the firearm. After all, youd be much more likely to believe
in ghosts if you saw one rather than if you listened to a ghost story around
a campfire. In other words, we give significantly more credibility to the
things we experience than we do to the things we hear. The bottom line is
that this argument is made by people who dont, cant, or havent
carried openly; those of us who do so on a regular basis have an entirely
different experience.
Im Not Comfortable Carrying Openly
This is really the only reasonable argument against open carry for an individual.
We all have a comfort zone for any aspect of our lives and we prefer to stay
within that comfort zone. We all agree that its better to be armed
and never need the firearm than it is to need it and not have it. There is
a point where concealing your firearm becomes so problematic, due to conditions
like temperature or comfort, that some choose to either leave it behind or
carry in such a way that it would be difficult or impossible to draw it quickly.
If it takes me five or six seconds to draw my firearm from deep concealment
and I had sufficient time before hand to actually do so, I would prefer to
use that five or six seconds to avoid the entire encounter. Im glad
we have concealed carry laws in most of the states; it empowers and protects
not only us but the general public through the offset deterrent effect. Some
of us, however, choose the more direct deterrent effect of open carry.
Conclusion
No, open carry is not the be-all-end-all of self defense any more than concealed
carry is. The purpose of this essay is not to convince you to carry a firearm
openly, but to merely point out the reasoning I used to determine that it
is often the best option for me. If you think otherwise, please feel free
to write an essay of your own outlining the reasoning you used. I would suggest
that you avoid the intellectual mistake of emphasizing rare or unlikely defense
scenarios that many of us will never experience. I believe one should prioritize
for the most likely threat, not the least likely threat. I dont put
Hollywood style bank robberies high on my threat list because I rarely go
into a bank and those types of robberies are very rare themselves. I live
in the most crime riddled city in the northwest; the most likely threat here
is some young male with a knife or gun trying to carjack me or mug me on
the street, in the park, or in a parking lot. With this knowledge I build
my personal self protection plan based on that manner of attack. This may
not suit you, especially if you live in Hollywood.
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