
Originally Posted by
toreskha
I have an idea that I just figured I'd throw out and see what everyone things. I'm being serious about this, too.
As an example case, say someone in a Google Page Ranking like Illinois or Maryland had applied for a CWP. They were refused. Then, they're attacked and either seriously injured or killed - in a clean-cut situation where a firearm could have saved their life. Say it was a woman who was jogging in the park and was followed for a while, before being attacked and killed by a man who was using nothing more than a broken beer bottle. Obviously a firearm would have been more than a match for her attacker and she would likely still be alive.
What if her family (or she, if she's still alive) were to sue the state that they live in, claiming that she died as a result of the state using the force of law to prohibit her from defending herself in a way that would be considered normal by a "reasonable person"?
It would be interesting to see what happens in a lawsuit like this that indirectly accuses the state of responsibility for the death of one of its citizens. Even if it doesn't get far initially, additional suits launched in the same spirit might help to bring attention to the issue and get people to think differently about it.
Remember the massacre at Luby's in Texas? A woman who was there testified before the Texas legislature that if she had been allowed to carry concealed (car carry for "travelers" was allowed, and because of that, her gun was in the car) she could have stopped the shooter before he had a chance to kill more people.
So, if it worked there, it could work somewhere else too.
Any society that would give up a little liberty to gain a little security will deserve neither and lose both.
Benjamin Franklin