I have my VA resident permit and UT non-res. This combo allows for carry in 39 states. I carry wherever legal. I do so simply to be prepared. I wear a seatbelt even though I don't anticipate a crash. I have an in-vehicle extinguisher even though I hope to never deal with a fire. I keep an inReach on my belt when I'm out alone, though I never want to send an SOS. Like the shovel I bring to the beach or the socket set I take everywhere, a gun is just a tool. It's better to have it and not need it than need it not have it. Fortunately nothing on two legs or four has ever given me pause during our adventures.
I am a proponent for national reciprocity. You don't drive to a neighboring state and worry whether you're driving illegally. You should not have to worry if you're carrying illegally, either. It confounds me that, should I drive past an invisible line here in my home state and find myself in Maryland, I've now become a criminal. But maybe I don't even realize I'm into MD and continue driving. In short order, I cross another invisible line and enter DE. Now I'm a good guy again. The same guy with the same gun in the same holster is is considered law-abiding in 78% of states. Why not the other fraction?
I am a proponent for national reciprocity. You don't drive to a neighboring state and worry whether you're driving illegally. You should not have to worry if you're carrying illegally, either. It confounds me that, should I drive past an invisible line here in my home state and find myself in Maryland, I've now become a criminal. But maybe I don't even realize I'm into MD and continue driving. In short order, I cross another invisible line and enter DE. Now I'm a good guy again. The same guy with the same gun in the same holster is is considered law-abiding in 78% of states. Why not the other fraction?
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