I don't see anything about everyone carrying a gun in your last post.
You are the one who alleged it was my position in post #181.
I think there are lots of people who shouldn’t carry a gun, but that’s for them to decide for themselves, as well as the governing authorities.
If you’re not going to handle a firearm safely, you aren’t interested in improving your shooting skills, if you don’t maintain your weapon, and you don’t learn and rehearse elementary defense tactics, then I would prefer you not carry a firearm. But that’s simply my preference.
The thing is if you can carry one why can't everyone else who qualifies carry one?
The only thing stopping them might be the laws in their state. It seems like you’re trying to paint me as some sort of elitist, or perhaps someone who thinks they are extra-special because I an authorized to carry a concealed firearm. Believe me, it is not an ego-booster, it is a responsibility.
YOU can't choose who is armed and who is not if they meet the qualifications.
No kidding.
I’m not sure what your point is here. Where did you get the idea that I think I’m some sort of authorizing agency?
I've walked around above 125th street in Harlem at night. Can you imagine what it would feel like if almost everyone you encountered had a gun whether you had one or not?
Actually, I would feel much better walking around any neighborhood with a bad reputation if I knew that most people were armed, and they also knowing that I was likely armed. Of course, in Harlem, it is very likely that anyone in the neighborhood who is armed is involved in criminal activity since it is almost impossible for a regular law-abiding citizen to legally carry in New York City. That means criminals can assume they have an unfair advantage.
The great thing about conceal-carry (as opposed to open-carry or a total ban on firearms) is that anyone could be carrying a firearm and be prepared to defend themselves. Everyone from an aged woman on a walker, to a man in a wheelchair, to a college girl running errands, to a man walking alone through Harlem or Watts at night. Since bad guys don’t want to get shot (they really don’t), they are likely to think twice about attacking anyone they believe might be armed. In effect, everyone in a conceal-carry region benefits from the effect of having a strong conceal-carry program, whether they carry or not. And statistically, you can see the effect as violent crime rates drop.
If everyone walking through Harlem at night is armed, it is highly unlikely that anyone will want to violently attack someone else. They know that the potential victim (or a bystander) will likely have means to oppose their efforts and will look for an easier mark.
As an aside, you seem to associate guns with violence instead of criminals with violence. Law-abiding citizens don’t commit violence with guns except in extreme situations where a criminal has already initiated a violence encounter. Criminals may use a gun to commit violence, but the cause of violence is not the gun.
Cain murdered Abel with a stone, yet God did not pass judgment on the stone. God did not declare stones to be evil.