In 2003 Colorado Allowed Concealed Carry on Campuses
In 2003 Colorado Allowed Concealed Carry on Campuses, Only Excellence Has Resulted
Colorado has been transformed into a progressive wasteland as of late.
However, what really stands out in Colorado at the moment is that since the state allowed concealed carry on campuses in 2003 no mass shootings have taken place, and no crime was committed by a permit holder.
Here’s the liberal response: What about the movie theater shooting? To which you respond: Did you read the full article?
From Breitbart:
On April 20, The Washington Post ran a column showing that campus carry has been the law of the land in Colorado since 2003, and the results have not been anything like those currently fighting against campus carry claim it should be.
There have been no mass shootings and, apart from one incident in which a gun was accidentally discharged by a Colorado University employee, there have been no crimes by permit holders.
No one was injured in the accidental discharge, and the employee was fired.
The success of campus carry in Colorado is especially good news for women, who are able to level the playing field by being armed and better able to defend their dignity when under sexual attack.
Every person benefits from concealed carry, but probably no other demographic than women. Remember, the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun, is a good guy with a gun.
How can liberals even attempt to refute this statistical evidence? I don’t know, but I’m sure they’ll try.
From Washington Post:
The U.S. Census Bureau conducts in-person interviews with several thousand persons annually, for the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). In 1992-2002, over 2,000 of the persons interviewed disclosed they had been raped or sexually assaulted. Of them, only 26 volunteered that they used a weapon to resist. In none of those 26 cases was the rape completed; in none of the cases did the victim suffer additional injury after she deployed her weapon.
Moreover, WaPo expounded on the NCVS results by including an in-depth study by Florida State University criminologist Gary Kleck.
Kleck “conducted a much broader examination of NCVS data. Analyzing a data set of 27,595 attempted violent crimes and 16 types of protective actions, Kleck found that resisting with a gun greatly lowered the risk of the victim being injured, or of the crime being completed.
