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Sir_Knight
Guest
Have been listening to what I have been saying? I am not challenging their CIVIL authority in this matter. As property owners they have an absolute right to make this decision. I am questioning how someone who is suppose to defend life can deprive people of their ability to defend their lives. I see that as a moral conflict.The solution to this is very simple, Sir Knight. Put your interpretation to the test and see what results. Go to Mass in that diocese and carry your gun against the specific guidance of the Bishop, then accept the consequences of your actions. Those will most likely be your arrest for a felony and subsequent loss of all your guns and the civil right to carry one. Please explain how doing that would enhance your ability to protect yourself and any other grave duties you might have to protect innocents?
If he can conceal his dog and nobody knows that the dog is present (no barking, no panting, etc), what is the problem?Suppose you have, as my neighbor does, a trained attack dog (former military police dog) and this dog is specifically trained to respond to an armed attack. So far, no one including local deputies who have tried can draw a weapon within 19 feet of the dog and bring it to a firing position without the dog having them by the shooting arm, the throat, or the genitals, all of these tested using protective padding of course. Maybe you would favor my neighbor having a right to bring his dog to Mass on the grounds that he’s doing his best to live up to your interpretation of the CCC? Where do you stop? Machine guns okay for FFL holders?
Because schools are extensions of the government and the government can not be sued for laws that they make. Again, this discussion isn’t about the civil aspect of this but about how those who are suppose to protect life are denying people the ability to protect their own lives.The point of it is, as Br. Jay has so pointed out, that the Bishop has the authority to decide the question. The Bishop has spoken, and he says no. He doesn’t have to explain why he says no, but it could possibly be the extremely low incidence of churches being attacked by rogue gunman. History shows us these rare occurrences are generally related to motives of robbery or personal beefs with one or more individuals. Some nut who has it in for the pastor is not likely to randomly open fire indiscriminately in a Mass. More likely he’s going to target the person or person he’s got the beef with. Last year when a pastor was gunned down, it was done when the person knew the pastor would likely be there, but NOT a church full of the faithful. In the cases of robbery, they are interested in the money, not in adding 25-to-life or more to their sentence if caught.
These instances are real data, and as such deserve consideration. We have had far more school shootings than church shootings, yet no state has deemed the problem so severe that it has decided to lift the ban on guns in schools. Interestingly, no legal challenge has ever survived that attempted to hold the schools responsible for a bad safety decision in banning guns. So it isn’t just the schools that see it that way, but the courts have reiterated their right to enforce the ban without meaning they fall into the jeopardy of being reckless or negligent by denying immediate means that could possibly counter such an attack.
So because of their irrational fear of in-animated objects, people should give up their right to self defense?Some people are simply put off by the presence of a gun, period. They don’t care if the person is well-trained, legal to carry, or not. They simply don’t want to be around them. They have rights, too.
And what about if people lose their lives because of this? Will they provide the lost income to a family that lost a husband and father?I believe the Bishop and his staff have likely considered all these angles and with all things considered, do not feel the ends justifies the means. You say this makes them “targets,” and maybe so, but they are still only one of many other targets out there. If and when these “targets” do in fact draw the attacks you assert they could, then possibly the Bishop would rethink it. More than likely, they would pay to have a uniformed police presence then to open the door to personal concealed carry.