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Heller goes to the airport

Posted on July 02, 2008 by Gideon

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In this latest installment of “Heller goes to…”, in which we follow the zany adventures of Heller v. D.C.*, the lovable Supreme Court case, as he makes his way through the country, Heller decides to go to the airport to see what the fuss is all about.

He decided to take a trip to Atlanta, GA - one of the nation’s busiest airports. After all, he now has a right to be possessed. It’s in the Constitution and what better place to exercise one’s Constitutional rights than an airport!

In addition, the state of GA had just passed a law making it legal to carry a concealed weapon while on public transportation and other fine places where other people congregate, so they can all compare their pieces and be happy.

So off went good old Heller to the airport:

City officials in charge of the airport declared it a “gun-free zone” when a law allowing people to carry guns on public transit and other places took effect Tuesday. Gun rights supporters, including a state legislator who helped pass the law, quickly filed a lawsuit in federal court challenging the designation.

Rep. Tim Bearden, a Republican from Villa Rica and a former police officer, is a plaintiff in the lawsuit. Bearden sponsored the state law.

He had told a newspaper he would carry a concealed weapon to the airport Tuesday when he picked up his family. But he told The Associated Press by telephone Tuesday morning, “There will be no reason for any confrontation at the airport.”

The airport authorities were naturally upset, since the country has been in a state of orange alert for the last 7 years and airports lead to planes and well…you know the rest.

Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin said citizens can’t bring guns into the terminal and argued that airports remain attractive targets for terrorism.

Allowing citizens to carry firearms “would create an environment that would endanger millions of people,” she said.

So let me get this straight. I have to endure hours of long lines at airports and invasive and intrusive searches and answer all sorts of ridiculous questions so we can be “safe”, but all of that security takes a back seat to some yahoo who doesn’t feel manly enough without his gun tucked in his shoulder holster (or wherever the kids are carrying it these days) and has to carry it to the damn airport?

It’s also quite an interesting argument to make - that an airplanes are “public transportation”.

Oh you silly Heller, you! Always getting into crazy situations!

*Yes, I realize that this GA law is not a product of Heller. I am using the Heller name as a surrogate for the right to bear arms and any and all state laws designed to make such possession legal

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4 Comments »

Comment by Windypundit
2008-07-02 10:23:53

Eh, there’s nothing special about the airport other than the planes. As long as the bad guys can’t get the weapons on the planes, who cares whether people have guns at the airport?

It’s not much of a right-to-carry if every other place is off-limits. The airport is public property, like just like the bus stations, streets, and sidewalks.

 
Comment by LJS
2008-07-02 11:04:34

And everyone seems to forget that it is already legal for citizens to transport firearms on airplanes (secured, unloaded, and with the right TSA paperwork). Presumably there are already folks transporting firearms into airports to check them as baggage. As far as I know, there’s never been an actual crime committed by some hunter or collector using this system. (There have been a few folks bagged on possessory violations when their flight got diverted and they had to pick up their firearm from baggage claim in an unexpected location for which they didn’t have the right paperwork.)

You seem to assume that gun owners are yahoos who view their firearm as a substitute for their reproductive organs. Substitute that for, say, a domestic violence victim who carries for her self-defense and is picking up a relative at the airport and is concerned that her ex might coonfront her in the parking lot, or when she gets home. (Yes, in many states one can leave an unattended firearm secured in a car when going into a prohibited area like a court or school, but I consider it a darned bad idea to leave unattended guns around, even if locked up.) Or someone meeting someone at the airport who has to travel their by public transit at a little-traveled hour and is realistically concerned about crime enroute.

As a defense attorney, I’ve had several clients who’ve been arrested, prosecuted, and jailed for innocent violations of firearms licensing laws — I would very much like to have fewer of those clients by making the licensing laws relatively simple and common-sense.

 
Comment by Anton
2008-07-02 12:30:09

Gideon, please. Envision yourself a citizen, and not a Subject. DC v. Heller won’t bother you as much that way.

 
Comment by Georgia Firearms Licensee
2008-07-06 21:21:25

Thanks for including your picture. I’m sure that wasn’t meant to represent me. Truth is, pal, although I’ve had the license to carry since 1994, I really didnt start carrying on a regular basis until the Brian Nichols affair of March 2005. Those 3 days of uncertainty, brought home the fact that ultimately, the state will not bear ultimate responsibility for my safety, I will. And since the airport is not secure before the checkpoint, you are deluding yourself if you assume your safe there.

 
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