Locked, Loaded, and Ready to Caffeinate
By IAN URBINA
Published: March 7, 2010

For years, being able to carry a concealed handgun has been a sacred
right for many gun enthusiasts. In defending it, Charlton Heston, the
actor and former president of the National Rifle Association, used to
say that the flock is safer when the wolves cannot tell the difference
between the lions and the lambs.

But a grass-roots effort among some gun rights advocates is shifting
attention to a different goal: exercising the right to carry
unconcealed weapons in the 38 or more states that have so-called
open-carry laws allowing guns to be carried in public view with little
or no restrictions. The movement is not only raising alarm among gun
control proponents but also exposing rifts among gun rights advocates.

The call for gun owners to carry their guns openly in the normal course
of business first drew broad attention last summer, when opponents of
the Obama administration’s health care overhaul began appearing at
town-hall-style meetings wearing sidearms. But in recent weeks, the
practice has expanded as gun owners in California and other states that
allow guns to be openly carried have tested the law by showing up at
so-called meet-ups, in which gun owners appear at Starbucks, pizza
parlors and other businesses openly bearing their weapons.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/08/us/08guns.html


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