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The Range
Law & Order
Has any otherwise lawful Oklahoman ever been convicted of open carry since the SDA?
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<blockquote data-quote="Glocktogo" data-source="post: 1754142" data-attributes="member: 1132"><p>There are several categories of people in public. I'm sure my rough estimates are not correct, but they probably aren't too far off. </p><p></p><p>You have about 70% of the people who wouldn't know to get out of the way if a bus were bearing down on them. They're in condition white, 24/7. </p><p></p><p>You have about 20% of the people who are in condition yellow(ish). They're generally aware that they're out in public and need to keep an eye out, but they're not really trained on what to look for. Observing a critical piece of key information may or may not penetrate to the control module far enough to spur them to actually deviate from their intended path.</p><p></p><p>You have about 5-7% who are in condition red. They're in a half panic at everything around them. They rarely do more than make hysterical noise, but they sure do get everyone's attention! These nervous nellies will sound the alarm on real threats, but 90% of the time they sound the very same alarm about harmless events, things and people. They generally mistrust everyone, usually from a conditioning standpoint of having been traumatized early in life.</p><p></p><p>Then you have about 3-5% who are in a hard yellow/soft orange whenever they're out in public. They appear calm and casual. They rarely draw attention to themselves, but very little escapes them. When they see a potential threat or vulnerability, they recognize it for what it is and deviate accordingly. They very rarely become crime victims. They do not send off prey signals and they don't go to bad places or associate with bad people. They're usually polite, but can respond with force if necessary. They've likely received some form of Hoplology training.</p><p></p><p>So it doesn't surprise me at all that you were in the presence of 6-8 people and none of them tuned in to what happened. The odds are against that in general.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Glocktogo, post: 1754142, member: 1132"] There are several categories of people in public. I'm sure my rough estimates are not correct, but they probably aren't too far off. You have about 70% of the people who wouldn't know to get out of the way if a bus were bearing down on them. They're in condition white, 24/7. You have about 20% of the people who are in condition yellow(ish). They're generally aware that they're out in public and need to keep an eye out, but they're not really trained on what to look for. Observing a critical piece of key information may or may not penetrate to the control module far enough to spur them to actually deviate from their intended path. You have about 5-7% who are in condition red. They're in a half panic at everything around them. They rarely do more than make hysterical noise, but they sure do get everyone's attention! These nervous nellies will sound the alarm on real threats, but 90% of the time they sound the very same alarm about harmless events, things and people. They generally mistrust everyone, usually from a conditioning standpoint of having been traumatized early in life. Then you have about 3-5% who are in a hard yellow/soft orange whenever they're out in public. They appear calm and casual. They rarely draw attention to themselves, but very little escapes them. When they see a potential threat or vulnerability, they recognize it for what it is and deviate accordingly. They very rarely become crime victims. They do not send off prey signals and they don't go to bad places or associate with bad people. They're usually polite, but can respond with force if necessary. They've likely received some form of Hoplology training. So it doesn't surprise me at all that you were in the presence of 6-8 people and none of them tuned in to what happened. The odds are against that in general. [/QUOTE]
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Has any otherwise lawful Oklahoman ever been convicted of open carry since the SDA?
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