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On Fri, 22 Sep 00 07:14:17 -0400, Charles <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>  wrote:


WHY I CARRY -
While politicians debate concealed weapons laws, we decided to
ask a few Texans why they are legally carrying guns
By Michael Precker   Dallas Morning News
Published 07-09-2000

More than 200,000 Texans can legally carry a handgun. Under the law that
took effect in 1996, they have undergone training, passed a background
check
and obtained a license from the state allowing them to conceal a weapon on
their bodies almost anywhere they go.

Depending on your point of view, that either makes Texas a trigger-happy
state reverting to dangerous Wild West values, or a place where criminals
had better think twice before victimizing responsible people ready and
able
to defend themselves.

Those conflicting images are frequently invoked in the national debate
over
gun control. And they have become an issue in this year's presidential
campaign, where Gov. George W. Bush is being praised - and criticized -
for
the Texas law that he supported and signed five years ago.

As the political wrangling goes on, we asked area residents who have a
Concealed Handgun License to explain why they carry guns and how the Texas
law has affected their lives.

Many license holders prefer not to be quoted and photographed. Some
distrust
the media to tell their story fairly. Others take the principle of
concealment very seriously.

"The whole idea is not to let the criminal element know who's carrying and
who's not," one man says.

But others were willing to share their stories.

WHO'S CARRYING A GUN?

The Texas Department of Public Safety, which administers the Concealed
Handgun License program, keeps up-to-date statistics on CHL holders in
Texas. Here are some highlights:

* As of June 8, 212,382 people have active licenses. Since 1996 the state
has revoked 1,053 licenses, suspended 373 licenses and denied 3,035
applications.

* There are 20,953 license holders in Dallas County, 16,934 in Tarrant
County, 5,463 in Collin County and 4,730 in Denton County. The ZIP code
75043, which is in Garland, has the most license holders of any ZIP code
in
Texas, with 833. ZIP codes near Houston are second and third, followed by
75150 in Mesquite, with 755, and 75052 in Grand Prairie, with 753.

* Ages of license holders range from the minimum age of 21 (206 people) to
97 (one person). The most common age is 53 (7,014 people).

* Just over four-fifths of all license holders, 171,054, are men. The
41,328
women comprise 19.4 percent of the total.

* More than 91 percent of license holders - 194,581 people - are
classified
as white, a category that also includes Hispanics. Nearly 4.5 percent, or
9,436 people, are black, and 1.3 percent, or 2,833 people, are Asian. The
remainder are classified as multiracial, American Indian, Alaskan native,
other or unknown.

- Michael Precker

"The cops can't be everywhere.'

About the time that Kim and Ray Clawson inherited a gun collection from
her
father, they moved to a new house in a Dallas suburb.

"I really didn't think it would appeal to me," says Ms. Clawson, 42, a
maternity ward nurse at Parkland hospital. "But I figured if we were going
to have them in the house, we needed to know how to safeguard them and how
to use them."

Mr. Clawson, a 45-year-old pilot who flies cargo planes, says there had
been
a couple of murders in the area, "and that got us thinking about our
safety."

"The cops can't be everywhere," he says. "It seemed like a natural thing
to
go out and get concealed handgun permits."

So both Clawsons took classes and received licenses. They enjoy shooting
at
a gun range every few weeks to keep their skills sharp, but don't carry
guns
that often.

"It is nice to know you can have a gun in your car," Mr. Clawson says.
"When
you're someplace you're not familiar with, it's a little comforting to
know
it's there. But if you ever pull it out, you could end up in trouble, and
we
know that."

They're also careful at home, where a gun safe is locked and bolted to the
floor.

"When I come in the house it goes right out of my purse and into the
safe,"
Ms. Clawson says.

Not all of her friends understand. "You talk about your hobbies and
sometimes guns come up," she says. "And they say, "What do you want to be,
Billy the Kid or something?'

"I tell them you really ought to try it sometime. It's really kind of fun.
It's not my only hobby. I garden, I crochet, I bake cookies. But with a
little proficiency [with guns], you feel a little more secure."

"When you're unarmed, that's frightening.'

Dave Zukosky learned to shoot as a kid and always kept a gun at home for
protection. But in 1994, before Texas had a concealed handgun law (CHL),
he
was twice threatened on the highway by people waving a gun.

"The only thing between me and him was two panes of glass and air," says
Mr.
Zukosky, 35, who debugs software at Nortel. "I was obeying the law [by not
carrying a gun], but not everybody out there does. When you're unarmed,
that's frightening."

So when Texas approved concealed handgun licenses, he got one.

"I want to have the ability to protect myself and my family," Mr. Zukosky
says. "In order to do that, I will do what the state says."

He doesn't take his gun to work, where weapons are not allowed, but
prefers
not to elaborate beyond that.

"I don't want people to know if I'm carrying or not," Mr. Zukosky says.
"When I go out, it'll be a brief thought: "Where am I going? Do I need
this?' "

Carrying a gun, Mr. Zukosky says, has made him more careful and more
observant.

"With the privilege of carrying comes a greater responsibility," he says.
"I
used to be more confrontational. I'd get in your face. Now that I have a
CHL, I'm less like that. I don't know what they're carrying and I want to
resolve any confrontations."

Every month or so, he goes to a range to practice.

"Each time I go, I hope and pray I'll never have to use what I practice,"
he
says. "And I haven't."

"I want to protect myself.'

Growing up in Decatur, Helen Rhine could hardly avoid Texas gun culture.
Her
sister got a gun for her 16th birthday.

"But I was more into archery," she says.

Years later, living in Connecticut, she changed her mind.

"My son was in college, my ex and I had split up and I was living alone,"
says Ms. Rhine, 58, who writes software for cellular phone switches at
Alcatel. "I'm a Capricorn and very security-minded. It seemed like another
form of insurance."

She took lessons, joined a gun club and got a handgun permit in
Connecticut.

"When you learn how to handle it and the responsibility, it changes your
attitude," she says. "I've never shot at anything except a paper target
and
I don't want to. But I want to protect myself."

When Ms. Rhine wanted to return to Texas four years ago, the concealed
handgun license law made her decision easier. "I was hesitant before they
passed the law," she says. "I've lived in New York, where you can't have a
gun, and I wouldn't do that again."

She usually carries a gun only after dark, when she has to come home to a
house in a rural area. She also keeps a weapon handy in her bedroom at
night - which does not require a license from the state.

Ms. Rhine jokes about her holster, an elastic and lace undergarment she
made
herself. "There was nothing like this out there," she says, adding,
"Sorry,
you can't see it."

But what's inside the holster is a serious matter.

"To me, a gun is like a fire extinguisher," she says. "I never had a fire
in
the house, and if there's a fire I'll call trained professionals to put it
out. I'd prefer that they deal with it. But if they're not here yet, I
still
have a fire extinguisher."

"I never want to be a victim'

Jana Lang was a young, single businesswoman in Tulsa, living in an area
where a rapist was on the loose.

"My boyfriend bought me a snub-nosed gun, took me out to the range and
taught me to shoot," she says. "The last thing I want to do is shoot
somebody, but I want the right to protect myself."

Ms. Lang, who moved to Texas in 1987, shares that message nearly every
weekend. She teaches Concealed Handgun License classes at the DFW Gun
Range
and Training Center and gives private shooting lessons.

"At first I taught mostly men," she says. "Then they'd say, "My wife won't
come in. But she wouldn't be uncomfortable learning from you.'

"I'm very motivated if I can help somebody protect themselves," says Ms.
Lang, who's 46. "It makes me feel good that I'm contributing to society."

She carries her gun nearly everywhere, including to her weekday job as
executive assistant to the vice president of a bank.

"They're fine with it," she says. "My boss thinks it's neat they have a
bodyguard."

Her boyfriend, she says, concurs.

"He's 6-3, and he has a CHL," Ms. Lang says. "But he never carries because
he knows I'll take care of him."

She laughs at the flippant remark, but she takes her mission seriously.
She
has kicked people out of her class for being reckless or cavalier and
stresses the obligation of gun owners to be safe and responsible.

Ms. Lang says she has never needed to pull her gun, but that doesn't
diminish the importance of having one.

"I never want to be a victim," she says. "Ever."

"I don't even think about it'

Randell Galloway got his first rifle at age 6 and grew up knowing how to
use
a gun. But in 1980, waiting for a bus outside his Navy base in San Diego,
he
was unarmed when a teenager stuck a gun in his face and took his wallet.

He vowed it would never happen again.

"Unless you have it on you, what good is it?" says Mr. Galloway, 41, a
computer manager and e-mail analyst at the University of North Texas. "If
you need it and it's in the safe, it's just an expensive hunk of metal."

When he lived in California, he carried an unlicensed gun and risked a
misdemeanor violation. After he moved to Texas, he kept a packed suitcase
in
his car, so he could tell police he was traveling - one of the
circumstances
under which Texans could carry guns without a license.

Since obtaining a concealed handgun license, he carries a weapon almost
everywhere - "I don't even think about it, I just take it" - except to
work.
The university does not allow guns on campus.

"That's their rule, and I respect it," Mr. Galloway says. "But I think
it's
ludicrous having a gun-free zone. They might as well post a big sign
saying,
"Hey, criminals, we're all disarmed.' "

A couple of years ago, someone took the screen off the front window of his
home and was about to break in. But the would-be burglar saw the barrel
of a
gun and fled.

Otherwise, Mr. Galloway has never needed to unholster his weapon, which is
fine with him.

"You get it in case you need it, not because you want to use it," he says.
"Believe me, when I carry a gun, I'm carrying the weight of the world."


Charles Riggs - Orange Gunsite - DVC!
  "Stop Crime-Be Armed-Fight Back!"
     1st VP KC3 - IDPA(KY) - GOA
    http://www.kc3.org/sheep.htm
     (a parable for our times)
       http://www.gunspot.com
    (firearms discussion forums)


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chas
get your neighbors and family registered - deadline Oct 10.
             then get them to the polls!
Register To Vote or Register Your Firearms; It's YOUR Choice!
      A VOTE FOR ANYONE BUT BUSH IS A VOTE FOR GORE.
Charles L Hamilton    Houston, TX   email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
X-No-Archive: Yes

Please keep replies trimmed. That includes that annoying advertisement above - chas



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