Monday, December 30, 2013
The CCW choice is not to be cool...
Sunday, December 29, 2013
What's your reason to conceal carry???
A well educated firearm supporter knows the facts!
Saturday, December 28, 2013
Your life....Your Choice!!!
Friday, December 27, 2013
Choose your instructor carefully!!!
Don't forget the REAL reason why you choose to conceal carry!!!
Thursday, December 26, 2013
Six tips for avoiding becoming a victim this holiday season
DALLAS, December 18th, 2013 — The holiday season is often a joyous time filled with celebrations, gift-giving and vacations. Unfortunately, the month of December is also often marked by a spike in property crimes, theft and assault.
Whether you live in a large city or quaint suburb, criminals are on the move seeking easy targets. While engaging in holiday activities, including travel, shopping and home celebrations, practice these common-sense practices to protect yourself and loved ones.
1. Do you know where you are?
Several studies show that social predators select victims based on their lack of situational awareness. Knowing your surroundings help you anticipate threats. Practicing vigilance at all times doesn’t make you paranoid, but smart. Using GPS or a map, know your route before departing a safe location and avoid areas that are questionable.
Busy parking lots and unlit shopping centers and garages are ideal strike-points; be aware. Document your parking location so you don’t forget while shopping and choose areas well-lit and well-guarded. Don’t enter or park in poorly lit areas or take so-called shortcuts through sketchy neighborhoods.
Be wary of vans, trucks, campers, and other vehicles with heavily tinted windows parked next to you.
Distracted, busy shoppers and lost tourists are often ideal choices for pick-pockets, purse snatchers and other criminals. Know where you’re going. Don’t be a statistic.
2. Walk smartly, swiftly
A primary factor criminals consider when choosing a target is their victim’s gait, walking speed and perceived confidence. Walk without distraction. Make direct, polite eye contact with passersby and project assertiveness.
Don’t let others stop you for directions, regardless of how impolite you feel. Approaching a victim for meaningless questions is a common pre-attack method. Keep walking and avoid strangers.
Your safety is not subject to polite social courtesy.
Always have your keys ready to enter your vehicle and home. If you carry mace or another weapon to arm yourself, know how to easily access it.
Think someone is following you? Trust your gut. Cross the street, speed up your pace, or walk into a store. If you sense danger, don’t feel ashamed. Get to safety quickly and conscientiously.
This is your best defense. Also, see #6.
3. Stay off your cell phone, but keep it charged and close
You can’t move with ideal awareness while texting and walking. Some assume talking on a cell phone makes them safer because the other party will know if they’re in trouble, but this is not the case. Good targets are distracted and unaware, face-down in Twitter or a text message.
Stop Pandora, take out your ear phones, put down your cell phone and walk with purpose to your destination.
Having your cell phone out also presents an opportunity for thieves to snatch it and run.
Charge your phone. Cell phone towers track your physical location. Should something happen to you, your well-charged cell phone can save your life. In the event of a robbery, an attack or your presence near another individuals’ attack, your camera, video or phone call to police can completely alter a dangerous situation.
4. Who knows your whereabouts?
Someone should know where you’re going and your target time of return. If something does happen to you, they can alert authorities more quickly. Don’t post your shopping adventures and vacation destination online until after you’ve returned from that location, if absolutely necessary even then.
Social media helps criminals orchestrate everything from flash mob robberies to sexual assaults. Weigh your need to alert the world of your every move with your personal safety. Don’t give criminals an easy target.
5. Secure yourself and property
Lock your doors and windows. When entering your vehicle, check your backseat and once inside, depart. Don’t check your phone, fix your makeup or search directions behind the wheel. Get moving. Be sure to move any packages or shopping bags to your trunk. Tinted back windows aren’t a failsafe. Place purchases in your trunk.
Never leave your purse or expensive items visible in the front seat of your car.
Ladies, carry your purse close to your body while walking. Long straps are ideal for snatching. Shorten your straps or leave your purse in your trunk, carrying with you only what you need in your jacket or front pockets: an ID and your credit card. Men, try to place your money in your front pocket, not back. Try to avoid wearing expensive jewelry while shopping or carrying large sums of money.
When you leave home, don’t leave presents and packages visible through windows. Lock doors, set alarms and bring animals into your home. Dogs are aprimary deterrent for home invaders.
Don’t place boxes for expensive items on your lawn. Drop them at a dumpster away from your home or break them down so that their previous contents are not discernible.
6. Arm yourself
Police Departments across the country are issuing tip sheets for holiday safety, but the most important element to your security is often omitted. If you are licensed to carry a firearm, protect yourself.
If not, perhaps consider this ultimate defense.
Though one should never take aggressive action unless in a life-threatening situation, it is your right to defend your home and property. Know your state’s laws and your rights to self-defense, and act wisely.
While out-and-about, always have your weapon-of-choice, whether that be your concealed carry, mace or otherwise, ready for defense. Ask yourself often, “what would I do if …” and mentally prepare yourself for self-defense.
Most holiday home invasions happen between 6 p.m. and 6 a.m.; secure your property, have a plan and act within the accordance of your safety. Your personal welfare is your responsibility alone.
http://c.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/citizen-warrior/2013/dec/17/6-tips-avoiding-becoming-victim-holiday-season/
Wednesday, December 25, 2013
What is your conceal carry story???
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Sunday, December 22, 2013
State police to offer paper concealed carry applications
SPRINGFIELD — In a quick reversal, the Quinn administration said Tuesday it will begin accepting paper applications for concealed weapon permits beginning in July.
Just days after saying the Illinois State Police would accept only online applications when the signup period for permits begins Jan. 5, officials said they have reached an agreement to offer paper applications.
The switch was announced at a meeting of the General Assembly's Joint Committee on Administrative Rules after lawmakers and others began complaining last week that some Illinoisans who want to carry loaded weapons in public either don't have access to computers or are unsure of how to use them.
"Many of us are hearing of the hardship that would be imposed on many, many of our constituents," said state Rep. David Leitch, a member of the committee.
The Peoria Republican said he wanted paper applications to be ready to go March 1, but State Police officials said the July 1 date is the soonest they can begin offering a paper alternative to the State Police website.
"As I sit here today, I cannot commit to March 1," said Suzanne Bond, chief legal counsel for the State Police.
"It would be difficult for us to do it at this time," added State Police Chief of Staff Matthew Davis.
The State Police have been scrambling to create a system for permitting, training and regulating the new weapons law since last summer when a federal appeals court ruled that Illinois' ban on carrying concealed weapons was unconstitutional.
An estimated 400,000 are expected to flood the new system in the first year.
Todd Vandermyde, Illinois lobbyist for the National Rifle Association, said the July 1 date is too far away.
"I think they are going to be pushed to do something sooner," Vandermyde said. "It's a sign of progress, but it shows how incompetent they are."
State Sen. Pam Althoff, R-McHenry, asked agency officials to make it clear to applicants that they can sign up on computers at libraries and at some of the hundreds of firearms trainers who are participating in the new concealed carry permitting process.
"We will be happy to bolster our website," Bond said.
http://qctimes.com/news/local/government-and-politics/illinois-state-police-to-offer-paper-concealed-carry-applications/article_9a21fda6-c7c3-55fa-8c7f-05addf420c6f.html
Saturday, December 21, 2013
Illinois CCW Training @ Your Location
Friday, December 20, 2013
The Five Big Gun Control Moments of 2013
BY: CJ Ciaramella
Following the December school shooting at Newton, Connecticut, that left 20 children dead, Democrats and advocacy groups vowed to pass new gun laws in 2013.
The gun issue had long been considered political poison for Democrats, but for the first time gun control groups had the money to compete with the National Rifle Association. Billionaire New York City Mayor Mike Bloomberg pledged $12 million to gun control efforts. Americans for Responsible Solutions, the group of former Rep. Gabby Giffords, raised $11 million in four months.
2013 was the year gun control groups went on the offense—but the results were decidedly mixed.
1. Senate fails to pass gun control legislation
After negotiating for months, Democrats and moderate Republicans produced an amendment in April that would have expanded background checks for firearm purchases and strengthened laws against illegal gun trafficking.
But the bill fell four votes shy of the 60 needed to proceed. Four Democrats voted against the measure.
“This amendment would have criminalized certain private transfers of firearms between honest citizens, requiring lifelong friends, neighbors and some family members to get federal government permission to exercise a fundamental right or face prosecution,” the NRA said in a statement.
“As we have noted previously, expanding background checks, at gun shows or elsewhere, will not reduce violent crime or keep our kids safe in their schools.”
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (R., Nev.) shelved the bill. However, Reid has said he will reintroduce it when he has the votes to pass it.
Gun control advocates said their defeat would lead to a public backlash that would ultimately turn the tide against the NRA.
The backlash has yet to emerge.
2. President Obama: ‘A pretty shameful day in Washington’
Following the defeat of new gun laws in Congress, a visibly angry President Barack Obama, flanked by families from Newtown, chastised senators who voted against the bill.
“Families that know unspeakable grief summoned the courage to petition their elected leaders not just to honor the memory of their children but to protect the lives of all of our children,” Obama said. “A few minutes ago a minority in the United States Senate decided it wasn’t worth it.”
The NRA did not shrink from the attack.
“[Obama’s] attacking the NRA, he’s attacking our members, he’s attacking citizens and senators of the United States, threatening them and all the rest,” NRA President David Keene said in a radio interview. “I think that’s really not a seemly way for the President of the United States to respond to a legislative defeat.”
Meanwhile, gun control organizations poured their newfound wealth into a campaign against vulnerable senators who voted against the gun legislation, intent on making examples of them in the 2014 elections.
“We’ll get through this day, take down the bill, and get senators prepared for the fact that they are going to be dealing with this issue everyday for the foreseeable future until they resolve it in the way the public wants,” Mayors Against Illegal Guns director Mark Glaze told BuzzFeed.
3. Colorado recalls two senators for gun control votes
On the state level, gun control advocates enacted sweeping new firearms restrictions in New York, California, and Maryland. However, similar legislation in Colorado ignited a recall effort against two prominent state senators.
What started as a grassroots campaign ballooned into a national proxy fight between pro and anti-gun lobbies. Gun control supporters, backed by Bloomberg, dropped more than $2 million into the race.
Despite the influx of outside money, Colorado voters ousted the two senators in the state’s first ever recall election. Although the new gun control laws are still on the books, the recalls sent a message to politicians that gun owners were still a force to be reckoned with.
“One thing is clear from the Morse defeat: Mike Bloomberg is political poison,” NRA spokesman Andrew Arulanandam said in a statement to theHuffington Post.
4. McAuliffe wins in Virginia
Democratic gubernatorial candidate Terry McAuliffe beat Republican Ken Cuccinelli in November to become Virginia’s next governor, despite an “F” rating from the NRA.
Gun control supporters pointed to the victory as proof that the NRA was no longer invincible.
“If you think about this, Virginia is the home state of the NRA. That’s where their headquarters are,” Bloomberg told CNN’s Jake Tapper. “If I had said to you twenty years ago that that a Democrat that is ‘F’ rated by the NRA …could win governor, you would have laughed me out of the room.”
However, hot-button social issues, not guns, dominated the race. Polling showed voters were moved more by attacks on Cuccinelli’s stances on abortion and homosexuality than his gun record.
Nevertheless, McAuliffe’s win gives gun-control supporters a bully pulpit in an increasingly purple state.
5. As momentum fades, gun control groups vow to press on
With 2014 approaching, gun control advocates will likely look back on 2013 as the year that could have been. Nevertheless, gun control groups say they aren’t giving up the fight.
“It took six years, seven votes, three presidential administrations to pass the Brady law,” the Brady Campaign’s Brian Malte told the Washington Post. “And we’re not going away; we’ll be here until we finish the job. We don’t want it to be that long, but we’ll do whatever it takes. We’re going to see it through.”
Any attempt at reviving the Senate legislation next year is going to be a heavier lift than last time. Public support for new gun laws has dipped back to pre-Newtown levels.
According to a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, 52 percent of Americans say they favor stricter firearm laws, while 38 percent think gun laws should remain the same. That number is down since February, when 61 percent of those polled favored new gun laws.
Meanwhile, an analysis of gun laws passed in the year since the Newtown shooting found that two-thirds of those laws loosened gun restrictions.
Thursday, December 19, 2013
Utah and Arizona CCW class - $50
Wednesday, December 18, 2013
Chicago...???
Sheriff: Concealed carry process 'fraught with problems and holes'
By Steve Schmadeke, Tribune reporter
Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart on Tuesday took aim at the state's concealed carry law that takes effect next month, calling it a “monstrosity” that is “fraught with problems and holes” and vowing to object to permits being issued to those arrested even once in the last seven years for domestic violence, gun possession or gang crimes.
Dart wouldn't rule out going to court to seek an injunction to block what he called an “absolutely absurd” approval process, saying the law will result in permits being issued to people who shouldn't have them.
“This is not something I'm going to blindly go along with, saying, ‘All right, they've done it again to us in Springfield, another law that doesn't make any sense and we're just going to stand back and do it,'” Dart told reporters at the sheriff's police headquarters in Maywood.
“How many more incidents do we need to see where people shouldn't have guns?”
The law tasks Illinois State Police with overseeing the permit process but gives county sheriffs, state's attorneys, local police and the attorney general's office the power to object to a permit being issued. When objections are made, a review board will decide if the permits will be issued.
Illinois is the last state in the U.S. to allow residents to carry concealed handguns. While the law takes effect Jan. 1, the first permits are expected to be issued in early April, a state police spokeswoman said.
Richard Pearson, executive director of the Illinois State Rifle Association, criticized Dart's concerns and said background checks already being run by state police are sufficient to keep “bad people” from getting a permit.
“I think that it's a good chance for Sheriff Dart to get some press,” he said.
While Dart wants to bar permits to Cook County residents with a single arrest for domestic violence, gun possession or gang crimes, Illinois law has a less stringent standard. State police are required to file an objection if an applicant has five or more arrests in the last seven years or three or more arrests on gang-related charges.
In a Monday letter to the sheriff made public by Dart, state police director Hiram Grau said the sheriff must file his objections individually, not make a blanket objection as he hoped.
Nearly 360,000 Cook County residents are licensed to own a gun. Dart said he believes maybe half of them will apply for a concealed carry permit.
He said the process for running a background check on applicants is flawed, with law enforcement agencies — including state police — banned from searching a more comprehensive national database called LEADS.
Without that tool, Dart said he will be left searching his own databases on arrests as well as jail records. Other agencies won't be told if any objections have been filed on a permit, aides said, and they will have to do their own investigations into applicants even if state police have already determined it won't issue that person a permit.
“(It's a) horrifically unworkable (system) that clearly puts local law enforcement on the hook,” the sheriff said.
He said the screening for mentally ill applicants is also woefully inadequate and flags only those who have been committed to a hospital for psychiatric treatment or been found by a physician to be a danger to themselves. Dart said that when a “bad event” happens, neighbors will wonder why police issued a permit to a person who was clearly mentally ill.
“When you throw in the mental health component here, it's like what in God's name were these people thinking?” Dart said of state lawmakers. “They were in such a hurry to get something done.”