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A hidden permit is blind, requires common sense of weapons regulations

A hidden permit is blind, requires common sense of weapons regulations

Indianapolis (Wish) – Blind in the Indian calls for health rights after he was allowed to get hidden permission to wear.

Terry Sutherland, who is blind, says that he received a hidden permission to wear to try to call talks about reasonable weapons. He used his white chick when he went to the City Funny building to get a fingerprint for permission, and says that he talked to several people who knew he was blind.

“It just went very smoothly and normally and nobody seemed to think about it. It was amazing. It shocked me more than I expected. I thought that in the last second someone would go: “Wait a moment,” he said.

But it didn’t happen. Now Sutherland claims that the fact that he was able to obtain a hidden permission to wear emphasizes the problem with the regulations regarding the Indiana weapons. Constitutional wearing allows everyone in the country to wear weapons in public, hide or not, without a license.

The Sutherland solution is something that some other states already do: people would have to pass a competence test on the range of weapons before they were allowed to wear a gun in public.

“I think that competences with deadly weapons are an absolute minimum,” said Sutherland.

Guy Relford, a lawyer of constitutional rights, which focuses on the second amendment, questioned the idea of ​​Sutherland.

“We begin to impose restrictions on constitutional law imposed by the government, I always think it is dangerous and inappropriate. This does not mean that people should not be trained, but society always functions better when people exercise personal responsibility and understand their own will that they must be safe and responsible for this weapon, “said Relford.

Sutherland says he is not against the second correction. Before he lost his sight as a teenager, he learned to safely use weapons with his family. He says he just wants healthy weapons recipes that ensure public security.

“If I can have a weapon, why can’t I have a driving license? What’s the worst thing? I could kill someone – said Sutherland.

Sutherland says he sent letters to state legislators to see if they would talk about changes in the regulations, but he did not hear.