Texas goes Permitless Carry

Of course, there will be the usual bloody consequences of this. Like Arlene Alvarez.

View attachment 715874

View attachment 715875

Tony Earls, shooter
Tony Earls hung his head before a row of television cameras, staring down, his life upended. Days before, Mr. Earls had pulled out his handgun and opened fire, hoping to strike a man who had just robbed him and his wife at an A.T.M. in Houston.

Instead, he struck Arlene Alvarez, a 9-year-old girl seated in a passing pickup, killing her.
“Is Mr. Earls licensed to carry?” a reporter asked during the February news conference, in which his lawyer spoke for him.

He didn’t need one, the lawyer replied. “Everything about that situation, we believe and contend, was justified under Texas law.” A grand jury later agreed, declining to indict Mr. Earls for any crime.

The shooting was part of what many sheriffs, police leaders and district attorneys in urban areas of Texas say has been an increase in people carrying weapons and in spur-of-the-moment gunfire in the year since the state began allowing most adults 21 or over to carry a handgun without a license.

“It’s shocking,” said Kim Ogg, the Harris County district attorney. “We’ve seen more carrying weapons, which by itself would be legal. But people are carrying the weapons while committing other crimes, and I’m not talking just about violent crimes. I’m talking about intoxication crimes or driving crimes or property crimes, carrying weapons on school property or in another prohibited place,” including bars and school grounds.

Her office provided a sampling of arrests in the last few weeks: a 21-year-old man carrying a pistol and a second magazine while walking through the grounds of an elementary school during school hours; a man jumping from his car and opening fire at the driver of Tesla in a fit of road rage; a woman, while helping her little brother into a car, turning to shoot at another woman after an argument over a social media video.

In the case of Mr. Earls, the man accused of fatally shooting 9-year-old Arlene Alvarez while shooting at a fleeing robber, Ms. Ogg’s office presented evidence to a grand jury of charges ranging from negligent homicide to murder. The grand jury rejected those charges.





Do you understand that according to the Centers For Disease Control research, Americans use their legal guns 1.1 million times a year to stop rapes, robberies, murders, beatings, stabbings, mass public shootings?

Do you understand how big that number is?

How many accidental gun deaths happen each year? Compared to the lives saved through defensive gun use?

In 2020.....535.

Compared to car accidents?

42,339........

Your emotional blackmail to push your agenda doesn't work on informed human beings......
 
Rape is an entirely separate issue, than mere pregnancy. Again, gross false equivalency.
 
Of course, there will be the usual bloody consequences of this. Like Arlene Alvarez.

View attachment 715874

View attachment 715875

Tony Earls, shooter
Tony Earls hung his head before a row of television cameras, staring down, his life upended. Days before, Mr. Earls had pulled out his handgun and opened fire, hoping to strike a man who had just robbed him and his wife at an A.T.M. in Houston.

Instead, he struck Arlene Alvarez, a 9-year-old girl seated in a passing pickup, killing her.
“Is Mr. Earls licensed to carry?” a reporter asked during the February news conference, in which his lawyer spoke for him.

He didn’t need one, the lawyer replied. “Everything about that situation, we believe and contend, was justified under Texas law.” A grand jury later agreed, declining to indict Mr. Earls for any crime.

The shooting was part of what many sheriffs, police leaders and district attorneys in urban areas of Texas say has been an increase in people carrying weapons and in spur-of-the-moment gunfire in the year since the state began allowing most adults 21 or over to carry a handgun without a license.

“It’s shocking,” said Kim Ogg, the Harris County district attorney. “We’ve seen more carrying weapons, which by itself would be legal. But people are carrying the weapons while committing other crimes, and I’m not talking just about violent crimes. I’m talking about intoxication crimes or driving crimes or property crimes, carrying weapons on school property or in another prohibited place,” including bars and school grounds.

Her office provided a sampling of arrests in the last few weeks: a 21-year-old man carrying a pistol and a second magazine while walking through the grounds of an elementary school during school hours; a man jumping from his car and opening fire at the driver of Tesla in a fit of road rage; a woman, while helping her little brother into a car, turning to shoot at another woman after an argument over a social media video.

In the case of Mr. Earls, the man accused of fatally shooting 9-year-old Arlene Alvarez while shooting at a fleeing robber, Ms. Ogg’s office presented evidence to a grand jury of charges ranging from negligent homicide to murder. The grand jury rejected those charges.



Move to Chicago or Wuhan
 
Rape is an entirely separate issue, than mere pregnancy. Again, gross false equivalency.
 
And rape is the cause of what percentage of pregnancies? Rape is act of force. Pregnancy is a temporary, natural condition. Again using the outlier to base your false equivalency on...
 
This is part of the problem, shooting at a fleeing suspect – which should never be done.

Citizens carry guns for lawful self-defense against an imminent threat; absent that threat, there’s no justification to shoot at anyone.


Perhaps you should investigate the laws before you make such an ass of yourself. Oh what am I saying, you're never bashful about making an ass of yourself.

In TX it's perfectly legal to shoot a fleeing criminal if they have your property at night.

.
 
Of course, there will be the usual bloody consequences of this. Like Arlene Alvarez.

View attachment 715874

View attachment 715875

Tony Earls, shooter
Tony Earls hung his head before a row of television cameras, staring down, his life upended. Days before, Mr. Earls had pulled out his handgun and opened fire, hoping to strike a man who had just robbed him and his wife at an A.T.M. in Houston.

Instead, he struck Arlene Alvarez, a 9-year-old girl seated in a passing pickup, killing her.
“Is Mr. Earls licensed to carry?” a reporter asked during the February news conference, in which his lawyer spoke for him.

He didn’t need one, the lawyer replied. “Everything about that situation, we believe and contend, was justified under Texas law.” A grand jury later agreed, declining to indict Mr. Earls for any crime.

The shooting was part of what many sheriffs, police leaders and district attorneys in urban areas of Texas say has been an increase in people carrying weapons and in spur-of-the-moment gunfire in the year since the state began allowing most adults 21 or over to carry a handgun without a license.

“It’s shocking,” said Kim Ogg, the Harris County district attorney. “We’ve seen more carrying weapons, which by itself would be legal. But people are carrying the weapons while committing other crimes, and I’m not talking just about violent crimes. I’m talking about intoxication crimes or driving crimes or property crimes, carrying weapons on school property or in another prohibited place,” including bars and school grounds.

Her office provided a sampling of arrests in the last few weeks: a 21-year-old man carrying a pistol and a second magazine while walking through the grounds of an elementary school during school hours; a man jumping from his car and opening fire at the driver of Tesla in a fit of road rage; a woman, while helping her little brother into a car, turning to shoot at another woman after an argument over a social media video.

In the case of Mr. Earls, the man accused of fatally shooting 9-year-old Arlene Alvarez while shooting at a fleeing robber, Ms. Ogg’s office presented evidence to a grand jury of charges ranging from negligent homicide to murder. The grand jury rejected those charges.



Lol, your lies have fallen apart. Pos.
 
There is blood in the streets, dumb ass.


The most violent places in the world are America's penitentiaries. Even though there are no firearms permitted on any Level 4 yard, the men still have to worry 24/7 about getting their wigs split or even their cheeks busted by a gay rapist.

Pretending as if banning guns will end violence is at best, wishful thinking.
 
The most violent places in the world are America's penitentiaries. Even though there are no firearms permitted on any Level 4 yard, the men still have to worry 24/7 about getting their wigs split or even their cheeks busted by a gay rapist.

Pretending as if banning guns will end violence is at best, wishful thinking.



There was a time when guns did not exist....the strong raped, robbed, tortured, enslaved and murdered those who were weaker.......guns allowed the weak to fight back...

In the 1920s, the governments of Europe enacted all of the policies the anti-gun fanatics want today.......and in 20 years, they murdered 15 million innocent men, women and children...more murdered than by all the gun murder in the U.S. in our entire 246 year history....
 
The most violent places in the world are America's penitentiaries. Even though there are no firearms permitted on any Level 4 yard, the men still have to worry 24/7 about getting their wigs split or even their cheeks busted by a gay rapist.

Pretending as if banning guns will end violence is at best, wishful thinking.
You're trying to compare city streets with prisons. You know that's dumb as shit, don't you
 
From the policies of the democrat party prosecutors, judges and politicians...not from normal people who own and carry guns.
What Democratic party action caused that Sutherland Springs shooting that killed damn near 30 people?
 

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