1993-05-24 - Police protection

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From: jet@nas.nasa.gov (J. Eric Townsend)
To: bcox@gmu.edu (Brad Cox)
Message Hash: 9857d62cb6d037b58ba6694a7bd6ce9ad5bf6d4831cd166384d821a43528c622
Message ID: <9305240134.AA23462@boxer.nas.nasa.gov>
Reply To: <9305232050.AA29804@gmuvax2.gmu.edu>
UTC Datetime: 1993-05-24 01:35:17 UTC
Raw Date: Sun, 23 May 93 18:35:17 PDT

Raw message

From: jet@nas.nasa.gov (J. Eric Townsend)
Date: Sun, 23 May 93 18:35:17 PDT
To: bcox@gmu.edu (Brad Cox)
Subject: Police protection
In-Reply-To: <9305232050.AA29804@gmuvax2.gmu.edu>
Message-ID: <9305240134.AA23462@boxer.nas.nasa.gov>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Brad Cox writes:
 > and ammo). Similarly for most US rural states; Oregon, South Carolina,
 > Texas and Arizona come to mind. So do shooting ranges and guns shows most

Just so you know, gun control laws in Texas are about as strict as
those in Calif.  On the other hand, Louisiana has an "open-carry" law
(with exceptions for banks, bars, and a few other places).

I'm not sure if I felt safer in Louisiana or California.  I know that
we were a bit more polite in Louisiana, but then again, it was a more
rural state where *everybody* was poor, not just members of a couple
of ethnic groups.






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