Precautions
While Traveling In An Armed Land
A
Canadian recently posted the following message in which he expressed
his concerns about traveling on his motorcycle in the United States:
As a
group of us are planning a trip through Wash, Oregon and Calif along
the pacific coast and further inland in May, (without any guns and
only a small knife to cut our BBQ'd steak.) Are there any
precautions that we should be taking or places that we should avoid?
The
question was asked in good faith. Though this is not a particularly
exhaustive answer to the man, I posted it here because I believe it
expresses sufficient 'pearls' that some readers might avoid a very
dangerous situation as a result of having read it.
For as
long as I've been riding (almost 40 years) I have been aware that many
of my riding buddies travel with a gun somewhere on their bikes. Only
recently has the practice of some been to carry the weapon within
reasonably easy access, particularly some of the women - in 'fanny
packs'. Almost always they are carried safely stowed away in their
luggage.
[Let me
make it clear that it is legal in about 28 States to carry a concealed
handgun, provided you are licensed to do so - (most applicants for
those licenses over the past year have been women.) But it is illegal
to carry a concealed gun without a permit in every State other than
Vermont. Nevertheless, the fact remains that they are everywhere.]
In
nearly 500,000 miles of riding I have NEVER seen a motorcyclist show a
gun IN PUBLIC, let alone threaten to or actually use one. At campouts
I have seen them transferred into tents for the night, and on hiking
trips I have seen them holstered (in plain sight of all of us, but
away from the public.) In other words, it is reasonable to assume that
traveling motorcyclists in the USA are carrying a weapon, and this is
not new news. Now I'm not talking about members of some motorcycle
gang, I'm talking about ANY motorcyclist who is out on the road - from
school teachers to judges. Certainly not all of them, but you simply
cannot know which do and which do not.
Are
there precautions to take? Certainly!
Do not get into an altercation with a biker.
Do not threaten a biker.
Do not touch a biker's machine without permission. (Not likely to
get you shot, but bad form.)
Do not believe that ONLY biker's are carrying weapons! Virtually
every cab driver, every long-haul rig ("18-wheeler")
driver, MANY private automobile drivers, and MANY MORE pickup-truck
drivers are also carrying weapons. (In other words, assume they
all are.)
Since
you are now advised that you should assume that virtually anybody you
encounter on the road is carrying a weapon, then it is obvious that
these precautions apply at all times, not just when bikers are around.
What this leads to is the often quoted (in Texas) conclusion that
"an armed society is a polite society."
Finally,
and this might strike you as being totally in jest - it is not:
If you can't keep from using a one-finger salute when angry,
consider amputating your middle fingers!
At least
in the USA most bikers treat other bikers like family. You avoid
confrontations, generally, with family. Right?
[As an
aside, Canada has the third most heavily armed population of all
nations in the free world. In fact there are some studies that suggest
that there are as many weapons per person in Canada as in the United
States - though they have far more rifles and shotguns, and fewer
handguns.]
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