ericlw wrote:i thought the reason people were getting out of state licenses was it covered some states that the texasl chl doesnt?i didnt think it was to get "around" texas license process.
That is only one of several motivations. I have a Utah CFP, but I had my Texas CHL first. I didn't get my CFP until a little more than a year later. I got my CFP for the following three reasons, in no particular order of importance to me:
- At the time that I first got my CHL, there was a good deal of delay in processing time (mine took about 75 days or so). Not knowing if this would be an ongoing issue or not for the long term, I got a CFP so that I would still be licensed to carry in Texas if continuing delays caused my CHL to expire while my renewal was processing.
- Getting the CFP gave me reciprocity with an additional three states. I intend to do a lot of traveling when I retire, and the more states I can carry in, the better.
- In the event that, God forbid, I should ever be involved in a defensive shooting, it is likely that my CHL would be at least temporarily suspended pending the results of an investigation. I hoped that I would be able to continue to carry for self-defense purposes under the authority of my CFP. There are some who think that a Texas CHL suspension automatically invalidates my CFP, but there are reasonable arguments against that idea, based on the notion that the incident is not under Utah's jurisdiction and that my CFP is not under Texas's jurisdiction, and thus my CFP remains valid during that time. That is certainly open to debate, and I am not a lawyer, and I'm willing to admit that I might be wrong about this. I would depend on my lawyer's advice at that time, rather than on Internet speculation based on hypothetical incidents - meaning no disrespect to the lawyers on this board -.
Now, all of that said, my personal self-identity as a person who is licensed by a state to carry a gun is as a Texas CHL holder. I am proud of Texas, and I am proud of my CHL. I love it here, even though I am not a native. I intend to stay here. Texas was the first state which, in its wisdom, decided that I could be trusted to carry a gun. I am extremely grateful for this - even though I take "
shall not be infringed" literally.
You can make all the arguments you want about whether or not the state has any business regulating the RKBA at all (and I tend to be very libertarian in that regard, myself), but the fact of the matter is that all of that is a "wish sandwich" - no meat, only bread; not even any mayo. The boots on the ground reality is that the state has asserted
its right to regulate my behavior with regard to the RKBA, and the state
will throw my sorry butt in prison for violating its laws - unconstitutional or not. And so, until the political landscape changes, and Texans overwhelming decide to implement some kind of Arizona/Vermont style attitude toward the RKBA, I
still have to deal with Texas law. That's just the reality of the whole thing.
So, with the future goal in mind of removing such restrictions, I
obey Texas CHL law, and I
don't try to work any "end arounds." And that is what people who teach CFP classes as an
alternative to CHL are doing. They are encouraging people to circumvent the law by the skin of their teeth. It's like encouraging someone to cook their books as an alternative to paying taxes. Worse yet, they're doing it for profit. It's a deadbeat attitude, and I have no place in my heart for any of that. Those folks are making a
grave mistake, and it is going to cost
all of us in the end by imposition of the burden of
additional laws we'll all have to deal with because of the irresponsible actions of a few immoral dolts.