Yet another discussion on open carry vs concealed or don’t be a jackass

By | September 14, 2012

I know… I know… every time you turn around, you see the people bickering about whether you should open carry or concealed carry, but I rarely see one argument for open carry… normalization of guns in the public eye.

A brief background on myself: at various points in my life, I’ve been associated with goths (before, during, and after the Columbine shooting… and yes, I have a black trench coat), scifi con geeks (you’d be amazed at the crap scifi con goers have gone through), white hat (ok, maybe grey hat) hackers, LARPers, those weirdos that dress up for ren fair, and probable a few other sub-cultures that the main stream has looked down upon/vilified at one point or another.  Sure, a few of these groups just have to put up with being made fun of, but others have had the cops called on them because they looked funny or were “obviously up to no good.”  Heck, there have been times that being a goth meant that some folks were trying to figure out ways to force psych evals onto you.

One thing that all of these groups have learned is that it’s best when people around you decide that what you’re doing is within the realm of “normal” and “safe” to them.  This won’t happen with gun owners that only carry concealed.  Sure, you blend in with everyone else, and no one notices you, but that also means that no one sees you as a responsible gun owner.  We have to remember that there’s a lot of folks that get the entirety of their knowledge from TV.  You know, that place that makes it sound like all guns must be registered for our safety, and anyone wandering around a store with a gun tucked away is automatically either a bad guy or a cop.

The only other way they find out is from us.  There are folks that take that to mean that they should wander the streets trying to cause a scene and then scream that they don’t have to ID themselves to the cops because they’ve done nothing wrong, or that the cop doesn’t have reason to inspect his semi-auto that looks a hell of a lot like a full auto that folks commonly see in action movies or that SWAT typically carries.  Yes.  These people may be technically right, but they’re also, to use a technical term, jackasses.  Being a jackass means that even when you’re right, you still lose.  Maybe not right then, but you just gave credence to the belief that gun carriers are either up to no good or jackasses with something to prove.

Naienko was someone that believed this when I first met her.  She wasn’t against gun ownership, but she saw guns as dangerous items that need to be respected at all times.  Which, to her, included keeping them locked in a safe until you planned on using them.  The only people she knew that carried guns were people that she felt shouldn’t own them.  They were the loud brash types that carried one because it made them feel more manly etc.

Then she started hanging around Wizard and I.  While I didn’t carry a gun(and don’t all the time now), I have carried multiple knives for a long time.  Including at least one that would be suitable for down and dirty fighting.  Wizard has pretty much carried a pistol on him since the day he got his permit.  He often carries a fairly full sized pistol on his hip which, even though he uses a IWB holster, is visible when he’s hanging out and relaxing.  That right there has changed her mind about people carrying guns.  Not right away, but it went from “I don’t like it because these are the types that carry,” to “well, you and Wizard are good, but I don’t know about the rest,” to finally “oh, ok… there are cool people that carry and jackasses, just like any other group of people,” as the number of known non-jackasses that carried increased.

This is how you change people’s minds.

Don’t get me wrong.  I’m not advocating that everyone carry OC and CC is horrible.  If that’s the way you’re comfortable in carrying, good for you, that’s fine.  I’ve gone the CC route for one reason or another in the past, and I will again.  If you’re comfortable with OC’ing, taht’s great too.  I’ve gone that route for one reason or another as well, and will again.  What I am saying is that OC has its advantages, and one place that it does is long term and you might never notice.  If everyone CC’d, then no minds will be changed.  OC’ing creates opportunities to do so.

Just remember, if you decide to open carry, don’t be a jackass.  I’m not saying you have to go to extremes and let people trample you, but be on your best behavior.  It might just influence the right person the next time a gun rights bill comes up.

8 thoughts on “Yet another discussion on open carry vs concealed or don’t be a jackass

  1. Wolfman

    While I get lightly weary of making the same point on all these, and similar, posts, I think this is a point worth reiterating. When you OC, you are an example; the choice is yours as to whether that example is good or bad. I personally prefer to wear ratty old jeans and sleeveless t shirts with my tattoos visible. I don’t dress that way when I OC. I wear clean, respectable clothes and act in a clean, respectable manner (ok, I am still a bit whimsical, and I cant resist riding the shopping cart like a 9 year old, but still). I do this because I want to portray gun wearers as other than the over-stereotyped beer swilling rednecks or crazy separatists. This is certainly not to say that I fail to be a member of either group, as these labels can, indeed, be applied to me. You have a strong point, oddball, that you dont change a culture from the outside- you get the culture to accept you into it, and change comes from the inside. Keep up the good work. For what its worth, my wife started from the ‘guns are bad, mkay’ viewpoint, and now doesnt even notice, most of the time, when I am wearing my sidearm (a full size SR40).

    Reply
  2. Steve in TN (@sdo1)

    Columbine had nothing to do with Goth or the Trench Coat Mafia. That was a media invention. (Chapter 27, Columbine
    by Dave Cullen)

    Reply
    1. oddball Post author

      You’re absolutely correct, but that wasn’t the message being blasted by the mainstream media when it happened. My friends and I took a lot of grief over that incident from folks that decided that since we were goths, we were obviously going to snap at any moment and either kill ourselves or others around us and needed serious psychological help.

      Reply
  3. Linoge

    Hm. From your opening sentence I get the impression you do not read my site terribly often ;).

    Joking. Mostly. But, yeah, unfortunately, that argument very rarely comes up, and typically those who hate open carry are quick to dismiss it with a wave of the hand and an upturned nose, to which I question whether or not the normalization of open carry is their goal or not? If no, the conversation serves no point, and if yes, what other method do they propose?

    Reply
    1. oddball Post author

      It’s not so much the normalization of open carry that is the goal of what I described. It’s the normalization of guns… period. There’s more and more folks every day that grow up in the city and don’t have any knowledge of guns other than what they see on TV. If the people you meet don’t see that you’re carrying while being a nice guy, chances are that they never will think that nice guys carry. I know we’re on a pretty major upswing as far as rights go, but a lot of what we’re now having to fight against is due to ignorance of the masses in the past. Purely concealed carry does nothing to change that ignorance.

      See also: silencers, switch blade knives, and nun-chucks.

      Reply
  4. McThag

    Two questions.

    1. Ostro or Visi?

    2. Where were YOU when _WE_ were sacking Rome?

    Reply
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