I think you meant to say, "had any of the students in any of the class rooms been able and willing to carry, and responsibly handle a firearm, and not been thwarted by legislature, then there's a decent chance that the incident could have ended much more quickly."had any of the students in any of the class rooms been able and willing to carry, and responsibly handle a firearm, but been thwarted by legislature, then there's a decent chance that the incident could have ended much more quickly.
I agree with you that we really can't know what would have happened had some of the students been carrying that day. As far as the claims go that there would be more overall shootings, both accidental and deliberate, if everyone were packing, I think that's a red herring. Again, Virginia allows you to carry a concealed weapon, if you have a permit. If you don't have such a permit, you must carry a weapon out in the open, if you're going to carry one at all. You don't need a concealed-carry permit to carry a gun; you only need one to hide it.
Well, the next time I see a civilian openly carrying a weapon someplace other than at a firing range will be the first. The obvious conclusion is one of the following:
- Lots of Virginians have concealed-carry permits and walk around with hidden weapons;
- Lots of Virginians don't have concealed-carry permits, and walk around without hidden weapons.
- Lots of Virginians have concealed-carry permits and don't walk around with hidden weapons.
It is easy to legally get a gun in Virginia, only a little more difficult to get a concealed-carry permit. If the predictions that allowing everyone to carry a gun around would result in another Blacksburg every other day were true, we would have seen it happening already.
But we haven't.
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