Ideally the law abiding do have a right to carry an arm any way and anywhere they choose. However, the reality is that Ohio does not recognize the authority of the U.S. Constitution over Ohio law when it comes to the Second Amendment. This means no person can carry a concealed weapon in Ohio without obeying state law. So because state law trumps the 2A they have no right to carry concealed guns and certainly no right to get into a shootout. They, like us, may buy the privilege from the State of Ohio if they qualify and don’t get into drug related gang shootouts which would surly void their permit.casingpoint wrote:All kidding aside, it is the right of the citizens of Toledo, as elsewhere in the U.S., to pack guns without any infringements upon that right, according to a government document I read in college.
If we continue to think we have Second Amendment rights when we cannot exercise those rights I think we are kidding ourselves. Neither the states nor federal government recognize our 2A rights. Heller helped but we have a long way to go to include getting the 14th Amendment incorporated to the states.
My point is that rights vanish the moment the person with the right commit’s a violent crime. That won’t change even if we have our full 2A rights recognized. We will just do away with the thousands of gun laws that only entrap the innocent and are rarely prosecuted when those crimes occur.
This shootout was a crime and had nothing to do with our Second Amendment rights. Get the 14th incorporated and we may have to see if which of the non-felons in the shootout were defending themselves and which were committing a crime by trying to commit murder. The felons were committing a crime regardless. Until then, they are all criminals the way it looks.