more of same
Yadda, yadda, yadda .....
Again, all smoke and mirrors and no substance. I'm still waiting for the first 'been-there-done-that' report of an encounter with a LEO while packing an 'antique'.
In ANY encounter with a LEO for ANY reason, attitude will be a factor - yours and his. Things can and do go sideways PDQ. You can get kicked in the head by a cop having a bad day. We hear about it in the media on a regular basis. Things have changed out there with regard to the police and the public around guns.
We've all had incidents and can relate historical anecdotes about how friendly and convivial contact with LEOs USED to be in the good ol' days.
The recently deceased 49 year old physically and mentally handicapped son of friends was brutally taken down by three RCMP at gun point just over a year ago.
His crime? Some citizen called in a 'man-with-a-gun' having seen him playing with a 'Star Wars' plastic pistol outside his brother's mobile home. He didn't have the gun on him when he was taken down. The trauma is thought to have been a factor in his early death.
Now, imagine a scenario in the boonies where a LEO has every reason to expect people to be armed - with rifles and/or shotguns. Not knowing the law concerning 'antiques', you try to educate him. I respectfully submit that this is not the best time and place for such enlightenment.
So, gentlemen - prove it. We all wait with bated breath to hear the outcome.
BTW - I was out hunting yesterday for the first time. A chubby black bear ran across the trail 12 yards in front of me from right to left. I was looking left and uphill and didn't see him until he ran into my line of vision. The point? Had he decided to blind side me, he would have knocked me (__*__)-over-tea-kettle! The .45 Colt Uberti 'Lightning' rifle I was carrying wouldn't have done me a bit of good, a holstered pistol even less.
Yadda, yadda, yadda .....
Again, all smoke and mirrors and no substance. I'm still waiting for the first 'been-there-done-that' report of an encounter with a LEO while packing an 'antique'.
In ANY encounter with a LEO for ANY reason, attitude will be a factor - yours and his. Things can and do go sideways PDQ. You can get kicked in the head by a cop having a bad day. We hear about it in the media on a regular basis. Things have changed out there with regard to the police and the public around guns.
We've all had incidents and can relate historical anecdotes about how friendly and convivial contact with LEOs USED to be in the good ol' days.
The recently deceased 49 year old physically and mentally handicapped son of friends was brutally taken down by three RCMP at gun point just over a year ago.
His crime? Some citizen called in a 'man-with-a-gun' having seen him playing with a 'Star Wars' plastic pistol outside his brother's mobile home. He didn't have the gun on him when he was taken down. The trauma is thought to have been a factor in his early death.
Now, imagine a scenario in the boonies where a LEO has every reason to expect people to be armed - with rifles and/or shotguns. Not knowing the law concerning 'antiques', you try to educate him. I respectfully submit that this is not the best time and place for such enlightenment.
So, gentlemen - prove it. We all wait with bated breath to hear the outcome.
BTW - I was out hunting yesterday for the first time. A chubby black bear ran across the trail 12 yards in front of me from right to left. I was looking left and uphill and didn't see him until he ran into my line of vision. The point? Had he decided to blind side me, he would have knocked me (__*__)-over-tea-kettle! The .45 Colt Uberti 'Lightning' rifle I was carrying wouldn't have done me a bit of good, a holstered pistol even less.