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Firearms Open Carry Litter Cleanup And Friendly Gathering

Friday, March 19th, 2010 at 9:51 am

Firearms Open Carry Litter Cleanup And Friendly Gathering

ICarry.org

ICarry.org

Beloit, Illinois --(AmmoLand.com)- As you know, we are having an “Open Carry” event in Beloit this Sunday, March 21st!!

This event is for everyone from Illinois and Wisconsin to get a chance to meet one another, exercise their rights, and help the community out by cleaning up trash along Riverside Drive and Armstrong-Eddy Park.

One of our members, Todd, contacted the local media – Beloit Daily News – and they are going to publish a story before the event!! What better way to promote the event than to have a story not only after the event but before as well! The reporter wanted a member in Beloit, so we contacted them all and another member, Mildred, answered the call and will be having her photograph taken tomorrow for the story.

Thanks to everyone getting involved to make this event a huge success. I can’t wait to see everyone there! Even if the weather is not as good as it has been the past few days, we’ll still be out showing our numbers. I hope to see you there with us. There should be a lot of people we can help educate and spread the word.

Event Information: http://www.icarry.org/ftopict-2580.html

What: Open Carry litter cleanup and friendly gathering When: Sunday March 21st – starts at 12:30 PM – we’ll wrap up at 4:00 PM

Where: Meeting at Armstrong-Eddy Park in Beloit, Wisconsin (Intersection of South Riverside Drive and Valley Road) —->

http://www.google.com/#hl=en&q=armstrong+eddy+park+beloit&fp=1

Litter cleanup along Riverside Rd (we will stay outside of school zones and mark them off). We will also be picking up litter in the park and depending on time possibly sticks/leaves. If you can bring a rake, you should do so just-in-case. Local police have been very friendly and helpful and have worked with us to ensure a fun and safe event for everyone. The township has also given us the OK on the road/park cleanup and is providing reflective vests/bags/etc.

Bring the whole family and come out for a fun event! Beloit is right on the IL/WI border just north of Rockford and is a very short drive for anyone in northern Illinois!! Don’t miss out on the first major event of Illinois and Wisconsin firearms owners working together to better our communities.

Open carry is highly encouraged but not required of course. If you’ve never open carried, this is a perfect chance to give it a try. It’s a lot of fun!!! Any questions you have can be answered in our forum http://www.icarry.org/forum-28.html

Wisconsin Open Carry Info:

1) Open carry is well-established in Wisconsin and we have held many events and no one has ever had legal trouble arise from it. 2) No permit is required, no license, no FOID card even when in Wisconsin!!! 3) Must be 18 years old to OC 4) When in your car, your gun must be unloaded, in a case, and out of reach (or as far as possible) 5) Do not open carry within 1,000 feet of the property of any grades 1-12 school 6) Do not open carry in an establishment that serves alcohol

Dinner after event: We will be having dinner at an open carry friendly establishment in Beloit. The location of the dinner after the event is to-be-announced.

Facebook Link for Event: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?invites&eid=414977599111

Please RSVP on there if you plan on going :)

Check-in for March giveaway: http://www.icarry.org/checkin-fwj9o3fcnkgfse.html

We hope to see you out on Sunday!!! ICarry.org, 1817 18th Avenue, Rockford, IL 61104, USA

Sincerely yours,
ICarry.org
1817 18th Avenue
Rockford, IL 61104, USA

About:
ICarry.org, a website devoted to to bringing concealed carry to Illinois and Wisconsin – the only two states without it.

A Matter Of Perspective when Citizens Choose Guns for Self Defense

Tuesday, March 16th, 2010 at 7:47 pm

A Matter Of Perspective when Citizens Choose Guns for Self Defense
© by Gary Marbut, President
Montana Shooting Sports Association
Author, Gun Laws of Montana

Teeth may be tools only (for eating), weapons for defending, or weapons for aggression. Same with Firearms.

When police administrators think analogously of canine teeth, they may imagine the wolf in the picture above.

Montana Shooting Sports Association

Montana Shooting Sports Association

Montana - -(AmmoLand.com)- It is a matter of record that too many members of professional law enforcement, especially administrators, simply do not trust citizens to be armed and enabled to defend themselves from criminal attack.

Notwithstanding this too-common attitude among some law enforcement administrators, many street cops understand that they can rarely be present to stop a criminal attack – to interpose themselves between a criminal and his intended victim — no matter how they sincerely wish to protect people.

Why do some police administrators distrust armed citizens?

Do they seek a monopoly of force to build their bureaucracies by creating a “protection racket”? Dr. Sarah Thompson reminds us of the phenomenon of “projection” that we all learned about in Psych 101, and believes many who oppose firearm ownership do so because they project their own psychological instabilities onto the rest of us. Could projection be the primary motivator for law enforcement administrators’ opposition to citizen empowerment to reject victimization by being armed? Or, do they fear that the sheer volume and intrusiveness of the laws they are tasked to enforce will become insufferable to armed people?

Certainly there is a different perception of the armed citizen by firearm opponents than by the armed citizens themselves.

Consider only the language used by each. Those who object to firearms in civilian hands call self-loading rifles “assault weapons,” while the owners of these firearms call them “sport utility rifles” or “homeland defense rifles.”

There is no doubt that police administrators view citizen self defense from a unique perspective. Everyone sees the world from a unique perspective. Police administrators perceive the world from their unique point of view as full-time participants in the criminal justice system.

This unique perspective is influenced primarily by three factors:

  1. The clientele they deal with are not a cross section of the population. The people subject to their work are primarily ne’er-do-wells of one sort or another, conditioning some in law enforcement to grow to believe that anyone not a police officer and not in jail just hasn’t been caught yet committing his or her special crime.
  2. Their peer associations tend to be limited to their narrow circle of co-workers, so they don’t have the level of everyday exposure to usual citizens that those not in law enforcement have.
  3. Their mission has changed. The primary mission of the people hired to wear badges and guns used to be to keep the peace in the community, and to prevent the strong and mis-intended from preying on the weak. They were called “peace officers.” Their title has gradually changed and they have come to be called “law enforcement personnel.” Along with that change in descriptor has come a change in mission. Their primary mission has come to be enforcement of government edicts of one sort or another.

These and other factors causes those overseeing the “thin blue line” to perceive very differently those people who do not wear uniforms but do have firearms, perceived from a very unique perspective.

Police administrators appear to be thinking only about how guns in citizens’ hands will affect their relatively small sphere of law enforcement activity, but not about how they will affect everything outside that sphere. In Montana, only about 7/10ths of 1% of the population are actively involved in law enforcement (including game wardens and detention personnel; 2/10ths of 1% with only sworn MHP, sheriffs and police – [mpera.mt.gov] ). Police administrators are a tiny part of that, a minuscule subset of Montana.

Analogies about how this tiny subset sees armed citizens differently than armed citizens see themselves are easy to offer.

Suppose two people look at an empty tube from a roll of paper towels. However, one looks at it end-on, and another looks at it from the side. Each will see, perceive and describe a much different reality.

This may be a better analogy. Some people describe firearms as our “liberty teeth.” Teeth and firearms are surprisingly analogous. They may each be used benignly, defensively or offensively. Teeth may be tools only (for eating), weapons for defending, or weapons for aggression.

My Yellow Lab: When I think of canine teeth, I think of this picture.

My Golden Retriever: When I think of canine teeth, I think of this picture.

I often compliment my Golden Retriever, Lea, on what pretty, large, sharp, white teeth she has. While she can destroy a nearly bulletproof golf ball with these teeth in about 30 seconds, I am NEVER concerned that she will use her formidable teeth to rip out my throat in the night while I sleep. Never! When I think of canine teeth, I think of this picture.

When police administrators think analogously of canine teeth, they may imagine the wolf in the picture at the beginning of the article.”

This illustrates the difference between how most citizen gun owners see themselves and each other, and how Montana’s tiny subset of police administrators may see citizen gun owners. And, this matter of perception difference and perspective may explain some police administrators’ apparent fear of armed citizens.

About Montana Shooting Sports Association:
MSSA is the primary political advocate for Montana gun owners. SAF is a national organization headquartered in Bellevue, WA that works nationally to advance the interests of gun owners. Visit: www.mtssa.org