• Having trouble using the site?

    Contact support
  • Not receiving emails?

    We're currently aware of an issue with our email provider and working to fix it as quickly as we can! Appreciate your patience here!

    View thread

Maggie’s Motivational Pic Thread v2.0 - - New Rules - See Post #1

You are using word salad and made a misleading statement - "Not totally 2A but a lot of it is", when I read that it means that a lot of it is totally 2A and that could be my misunderstanding. NONE of those counties are 2A when a cause has to be given for a carry permit. No application for carry is 2A with shall issue coming in a close second. In a "proper cause" scenario you have no idea if the submitter will even show "proper cause".

Now who's doing the "word salad?" You really need to stop gaslighting just to support your agenda and face facts. Even with the "proper cause" restriction, it is still quite possible to get a permit in NYS... more so in the counties that are "green" on the map I presented. I know several residents who have them. It does happen. Less so in the "yellow" counties on the map, and almost not at all in the red counties. But it does happen. Mostly, it happens when the applicant has a connection to their county judge. That's how it worked in my former State. If you knew your county judge well, you could get one. They are the final arbiters.

So no, it doesn't happen everywhere, but it does happen most everywhere, even with this restriction. One just has to find ways around it. Biggest way, befriend your county judge.
 
New York, plain and simple, is hostile to 2a.

GEpU02GWMAAmbHD.jpg
 
Now who's doing the "word salad?" You really need to stop gaslighting just to support your agenda and face facts. Even with the "proper cause" restriction, it is still quite possible to get a permit in NYS... more so in the counties that are "green" on the map I presented. I know several residents who have them. It does happen. Less so in the "yellow" counties on the map, and almost not at all in the red counties. But it does happen. Mostly, it happens when the applicant has a connection to their county judge. That's how it worked in my former State. If you knew your county judge well, you could get one. They are the final arbiters.

So no, it doesn't happen everywhere, but it does happen most everywhere, even with this restriction. One just has to find ways around it. Biggest way, befriend your county judge of
Now who's doing the "word salad?" You really need to stop gaslighting just to support your agenda and face facts. Even with the "proper cause" restriction, it is still quite possible to get a permit in NYS... more so in the counties that are "green" on the map I presented. I know several residents who have them. It does happen. Less so in the "yellow" counties on the map, and almost not at all in the red counties. But it does happen. Mostly, it happens when the applicant has a connection to their county judge. That's how it worked in my former State. If you knew your county judge well, you could get one. They are the final arbiters.

So no, it doesn't happen everywhere, but it does happen most everywhere, even with this restriction. One just has to find ways around it. Biggest way, befriend your county judge.
Of for fucks sake, no one is trying to gaslight your stupid ass, you sound like a female. You made poorly worded statement and I asked for an explanation and you have one which was utter bullshit. Now fuck off.