CJD wrote:
For some of them, the expense is more than minimal.
Texas offers highly discounted fees if you are financially unable to pay. Now, if you just "dont want to pay," that's a different matter.
For most, it's out of principle: one should not have to pay for a right guaranteed by the Constitution. Otherwise, it's a privilege not a right. Would you pay $200 for a free speech license? $200 for a no troops quartered in my home license? For a no search without a warrant license? Only those with a no search without a warrant license require a warrant to be searched, all others you may search at will.
They're interesting arguments, but the reality is that rights are not "unlimited." To think such a thing is a simple denial of what a right actually is. States are given the power to determine how to support the basic rights we're given, and federal courts can (and will) work for (or against) states to restrict(or expand) the scope of those rights. We have a legislative system in Texas that can help people expand the scope of rights we currently have. It is interesting to note how one group that seeks to expand rights (let's just call it the TSRA/NRA coalition, if you want to give it a name) has worked in positive ways with legislators, even with those opposed to expanding carry rights, to extend the rights of people that the state has _already certified_ are law-abiding citizens. The House and Senate bills have several sponsors and supporters. Contrast that with the group that seeks to eliminate all prohibitions (let's call it the "Open Carry Coalition"), who has (luckily) managed to find somebody to wrote a bill and (unluckily, if you will) gain almost no sponsors, has repeatedly threatened legislators, even ones that agree with the spirit of their bills, has taken deliberate steps to use intimidation tactics in public places and with police to "get their way", and has even gone so far now to claim that anybody that doesn't side with them is treasonous.
It becomes pretty obvious to anybody WITH A SINGLE SHRED OF COMMON SENSE that, as the saying goes, swinging a skunk around in church is not how you get the congregation to sing your favorite hymn.
I don't fear guns; I fear voters and politicians that fear guns.