It seems that the price of that liberty is "armed guards at town hall meetings", which is not heard of in the UK as far as I know.
Better phrased as "the price of that liberty is armed guards at
some town hall meetings."
There is no standard, and I have no idea what the common practice is. My experience which includes several small to medium towns (30,000 + population) encompasses these practices:
1. No "armed guards" in the sense that it implies hired security
2. Standing request to have a sheriff's deputy present
3. Situation-dependent request to have a sheriff's deputy present
It is my impression that #3 is most common. Open meetings, generally no armed personnel, but the option to have an armed officer there when trouble is expected.
acuity said:
In think armed guards would be viewed as a very oppressive policy here that severely discomfited people and was a curtailment of civil liberty that effectively placed the public under suspicion of intent to commit lethal acts.
I can understand that, but I suspect that it as much a function of the public knowing that firearms are available
only to the guard as it is a function of the guard's presence itself. Given that the "guard" in this story were likely either bailiffs or a sheriff's deputies and given that they were likely armed with revolvers, the general feeling toward it is one of nonchalance. Certainly the shooter felt less impressed by the weapons than he did by the council decisions.
acuity said:
I can't think why it would be welcomed unless people really believed they needed such protection, and that it was the lesser of two assaults on their liberty (the other assault being a potential threat of murder etc).
Per above, I think the norm is to have armed presence by exception. Could be wrong, though. I don't think the mere presence of armed security is widely seen as an assault on liberty at all.
For all the talk about the ability to resist an oppressive government, Ami's tend to trust armed law enforcement to act in the best interest of the community.
acuity said:
So do you think that the price of this oppression/implied suspicion (you may of course not see it as oppression at all) for easy gun access is a good one?
Situation dependent. I personally have no problem with the presence of armed officers at town hall meetings, even highly armed ones. I tend to get wary of behavior before weaponry.
acuity said:
(Note I am completely neglecting the small risk of being shot up in public as weighing in on the question here)
Much appreciated.