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The Range
Law & Order
To permit, or not to permit? That is the question.
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<blockquote data-quote="freeranger" data-source="post: 1973672" data-attributes="member: 25733"><p>When the SDA came around I wasn't all that excited about having to "ask permission" to exercise a natural right that the Constitution guarantees. But then again, the Constitution was originally written as a limit on the federal government and not the states, which could impose restrictions until the 14th Amendment came along. I reluctantly went through the SDA class and paid the fee, which the state of OK likely isn't making much money from, and put myself in the good graces of the state. Yeah, it bites. But for me it was a matter of being practical. Today marks another baby step with OC. It's not a perfect world we live in. And government tends to be far from perfect. Sometimes it's wiser to compromise if it means we can move the ball down the field towards the final goal of constitutional carry.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="freeranger, post: 1973672, member: 25733"] When the SDA came around I wasn't all that excited about having to "ask permission" to exercise a natural right that the Constitution guarantees. But then again, the Constitution was originally written as a limit on the federal government and not the states, which could impose restrictions until the 14th Amendment came along. I reluctantly went through the SDA class and paid the fee, which the state of OK likely isn't making much money from, and put myself in the good graces of the state. Yeah, it bites. But for me it was a matter of being practical. Today marks another baby step with OC. It's not a perfect world we live in. And government tends to be far from perfect. Sometimes it's wiser to compromise if it means we can move the ball down the field towards the final goal of constitutional carry. [/QUOTE]
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