Dan- your link is not working.I posted this in the "picnic" thread, but here it is again:
From Wisconsin:
http://www.wisinfo.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=200990808037
Posted Aug 8, 2009; 7:00 PM
Gun owners' picnic aims to educate public, assert rights
BY ANDY NELESEN
anelesen@greenbaypressgazette.com
About 40 men ? and a handful of women ? gathered at Ted Fritsch Park Saturday to enjoy burgers and hot dogs and celebrate the right to bear arms.
Most carried a holstered sidearm; some didn?t. All were offering the same message: We are carrying firearms because the law says we can, and we have the right to defend ourselves.
?We?re here to spread the word that open carry is legal and bring some attention to it,? said Dan Cumings, 33, of Green Bay. He had a .357-caliber revolver holstered on his right hip.
Tiana Silva of Appleton said she wore a handgun Saturday simply because she can. Her pink holstered Taurus 9mm semi-automatic handgun was as much an fashion statement as a self-defense implement.
?I support the Second Amendment and this is one way to do it,? she said.
The open carry issue was pushed to the forefront in recent months when state Attorney General J.B. VanHollen issued an opinion which said carrying a firearm in an exposed holster is not illegal.
Green Bay police reported no problems with the event. Caution tape marked the areas of the park deemed off limits to those carrying firearms ? including the park shelter?s bathrooms.
Saturday?s picnic was a blend of camaraderie for those supporting gun rights and education anyone interested. Some wore classic cowboy-style leather holsters and long-barreled revolvers while others carried the latest in compact resin semi-automatic handguns in hi-tech plastic holsters.
?People keep getting hit with propaganda and disinformation,? said Henry Rahr, 48, of Appleton. ?We are out here and want to let people know what the facts are. It?s a matter of educating people that those of us who do carry are responsible, law-abiding citizens.
?This is a group of people celebrating together the right to open carry.?
Ed Faral, 41, of Green Bay, hopes that open carry gatherings help reduce the fear some associate with handguns.
?I think a lot of that is due to a lack of education ? a lack of familiarity,? Faral said. ?I hope that events like this make firearms in public more ordinary ? not extraordinary.?