Blind CHL applicant

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RPB
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by RPB »

Sooo restrict his rights but only to the extent of mandating hollowpoints, small caliber and a magazine capacity of 5 and a sighted person or dog in the driver's seat. OR make him move to a State where they have Constitutional carry and no licensing nor test required to exercise a rght...because overpenetration could happen just like all students in a classroom could draw if they heard gunfire and ... :evil2:
(Devil's advocate thingy)

My first driver's license was restricted by the officer to Automatic Transmission because the car I took the test in was an Auto trans (my brother had a 4 on the floor Mustang, but I used my parents car) ... were y'alls tests in an Auto trans and you were restricted to an auto trans on your license? no ? perhaps it was because the officer decided I couldn't drive a standard with only one hand; I could/might have a wreck since I only have one hand .... though I never wrecked my brother's 65 Mustang .... I had to go take the test again to get the restriction removed.

If he passes the tests, ok, and personally I'd advise him and also advise more training and give info on caliber/bullet types guns etc ... though he may already have researched, ...you never know (I say this as a kid they didn't want on the baseball team, who later had a .400 batting Avg .... they didn't think I could hold a bat ... and how would a 1-hander deal with a ball in a glove if he needed to throw the ball? .... Well enough to make the all stars on Bellaire's Little League is how :mrgreen: )
Last edited by RPB on Wed Jan 25, 2012 9:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by A-R »

sjfcontrol wrote:I have to wonder what kind of liability an instructor might have, if he should allow a blind (even legally blind) student to take the proficiency test, and some kind of accident (??) should happen, and somebody got hurt or killed. :headscratch

THIS

I would not allow this on one of my classes and my reason plain and simple is the safety of others. Period.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by RPB »

Can WalMart still be sued for selling a gun used negligently, like they once were?

curious

Glad I don't have to make that type decision


Honestly, I'd probably tell the guy I do not feel comfortable giving him the class, but he's probably entitled to take it.
He has just as much right to try to pass a test so he can carry his .32 hollowpoint pistol for self preservation, as I do.
Though If he doesn't pass ... he doesn't pass.

Pre-ADA, Pasadena Police Dept had a sign "We do not hire handicapped people"
After ADA, they physical job requirements pretty much weeded out those they didn't want, and if a handicapped person made the grade, then they didn't hire him for reasons of parting the hair wrong or no reason at all ... but not due to a handicap

If he doesn't pass ... he doesn't pass.
I'd probably inform him of his chances of passing my course before I took his money and he'd probably go elsewhere.


Is he Muslim? Is he a Democrat? that guy near Llano won't teach them ... :rolll
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by The Annoyed Man »

RPB wrote:Sooo restrict his rights but only to the extent of mandating hollowpoints, small caliber and a magazine capacity of 5 and a sighted person or dog in the driver's seat. OR make him move to a State where they have Constitutional carry and no licensing nor test required to exercise a rght...because overpenetration could happen just like all students in a classroom could draw if they heard gunfire and ... :evil2:
(Devil's advocate thingy)

My first driver's license was restricted by the officer to Automatic Transmission because the car I took the test in was an Auto trans (my brother had a 4 on the floor Mustang, but I used my parents car) ... were y'alls tests in an Auto trans and you were restricted to an auto trans on your license? no ? perhaps it was because the officer decided I couldn't drive a standard with only one hand; I could/might have a wreck since I only have one hand .... though I never wrecked my brother's 65 Mustang .... I had to go take the test again to get the restriction removed.

If he passes the tests, ok, and personally I'd advise him and also advise more training and give info on caliber/bullet types guns etc ... though he may already have researched, ...you never know (I say this as a kid they didn't want on the baseball team, who later had a .400 batting Avg .... they didn't think I could hold a bat ... and how would a 1-hander deal with a ball in a glove if he needed to throw the ball? .... Well enough to make the all stars on Bellaire's Little League is how :mrgreen: )
RPB, I actually understand the rights issue, and I am sympathetic. But, also playing devil's advocate, if we are going to make caliber specific limitations for the blind as a sop to public safety, then why not make caliber restrictions for the aged because they're too feeble to handle heavy recoil? It isn't that I want a totally blind person to be disarmed. I actually want them to be armed. That's why I mentioned a good knife in my previous post. BTW, a .22 will go clean through somebody with no problem. I've seen through and through gunshot wounds of the chest and abdomen caused by .22LR bullets a number of times, so you just don't know what is going to happen—even with a smaller caliber. I believe that a person who is in the background while a self-defense shooting is happening in the foreground should be able to have a reasonable expectation that the shooter won't shoot in their direction. Someone who is totally bind is unable to make that distinction. So, it really does become a public safety issue. When a blind man shoots a perp in self-defense, and his bullet over penetrates and kills an innocent bystander he couldn't see, he's going to have a negligent manslaughter charge on his hands because you aren't allowed to willy-nilly kill bystanders while defending yourself. In that case, wouldn't a knife had been the much better choice?
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by apostate »

RPB wrote:If he doesn't pass ... he doesn't pass.
That's the bottom line to me. If he can see well enough to successfully complete both the written and shooting proficiency examinations, I'm not sure what legal grounds DPS would have to deny his application. However, if an instructor doesn't want to pass a blind student, I suspect that could be easily avoided, especially if there's no "reasonable accommodation" clause in the CHL law.

At the risk of opening another can of worms, suppose he took the online class and got a nonresident license from Old Virginny. I don't see anything in the reciprocity law that would prohibit him from carrying a handgun in Texas.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by RPB »

apostate wrote:
RPB wrote:If he doesn't pass ... he doesn't pass.
That's the bottom line to me. If he can see well enough to successfully complete both the written and shooting proficiency examinations, I'm not sure what legal grounds DPS would have to deny his application. However, if an instructor doesn't want to pass a blind student, I suspect that could be easily avoided, especially if there's no "reasonable accommodation" clause in the CHL law.

At the risk of opening another can of worms, suppose he took the online class and got a nonresident license from Old Virginny. I don't see anything in the reciprocity law that would prohibit him from carrying a handgun in Texas.
I was already in bed and just thought of that, so I got up to mention that. THAT's why I'd be sure to talk to the guy about ballistics. the small caliber get a .25 acp type over-penetration issues etc, etc anyway for my own conscience's sake. same as I'd inform him he'll in all likelihood fail before taking his money. I think people deserve a chance to pass or fail, if they fail, there's other options. (NOT that I'd suggest other options to him, if he's motivated, he can do his own research)

I once took a job at a plumbing Co. digging ditches because the guy didn't want to hire me, said I couldn't work a shovel with only 1 hand (I had all my life and previously dug holes at a landscaping company and buried pipe sprinkler systems etc) I agreed that I'd work 2 weeks and if he didn't like my work to fire me. I dug him the prettiest ditches for 2 weeks, he complimented me, I quit toe up the paycheck and took a job as Asst Mgr of a big box hardware store like Home Depot.

TAM,
If it were up to me, the guy would have a couple 2-shot Pepper blasters and Tasers ... but He needs to learn about over-penetration, and shoot/don't shoot communication with his wife being his eyes because I'd expect him to try to "overcome obstacles" such as not getting a Texas license. Overcoming (perceived) obstacles is just sumpin them stubborn handicapped people tend to do. Sure Martial Arts/ Knives and other weapons are good. The supposition hat the blind does not know that another person is behind the target though is an assumption.
LOL @ myself resorting to comic book logic ...Daredevil, the blind superhero ...If one can accept that a blind person "sees" objects by how sound vibrates off them, and another can throw a straightened paper clip as a deadly weapon.
Like the blind "Master" in Kung Fu series With David Carradine always baffled me, ... I mean I couldn't do what those guys do blindfolded

But seriously, why couldn't a blind person sense, hear, or know somehow that another person was behind the target without using his eyes? How do they know a car is behind the bus when crossing a street? I dunno. I would ask a blind concert guitarist I thought was cute back in the 70s, but she wasn't interested in me. She lived alone and got around downtown Houston and Montrose just fine to play her various gigs, grocery shop etc, though she couldn't drive or see the frets or strings on the guitar.

She could not see one inch in front of her face. I dunno how she found her guitar every day, maybe she hummed and heard the wood resonate :headscratch
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by urnoodle »

The question isn't only whether this gentleman can qualify for a CHL, it's whether he would be able to get one. To me its not a matter of whether he is capable of passing the qualifying tests, its a matter of whether he should have a CHL. If a BG is running towards him at the same time as a child is running to get out of the way, a sighted person would know which is which. Often the acute hearing of the blind is leveraged as the compensator for lack of sight.

When I was in college one of my professors did mock trials based on real cases. One was a lawsuit filed by a blind woman who sued her employer for discrimination because she was removed from the safety squad. She insisted her hearing was so acute that it compensated for her lack of sight. The employer won the lawsuit. The plantiff's attorney supported her argument by siting scientific studies done to prove that the blind develop more acute hearing due to the lack of sight. The defendants attorney stated that although the plantiff's finding were accurate, her attorney failed to mention that the study also determined that in high stress enviroments with many competing sounds, a blind persons hearing is no better than average hearing. That her lack of sight put her at a disadvantage in an emergency situation.The defendants attorney further supported his argument by siting an impromtu drill, where the plantiff failed to identify employees talking in a restroom that she checked due to the chatter of employees leaving the building. If it was a real emergency, those employees may have perished.

Long story long...I am sympathetic to his plight. My concern is public safety.
apostate wrote:
At the risk of opening another can of worms, suppose he took the online class and got a nonresident license from Old Virginny. I don't see anything in the reciprocity law that would prohibit him from carrying a handgun in Texas.
I'm sure I'm not making any friends by saying it... sometimes the human desire to prove a point often overrides the damage it may cause by proving it.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by E.Marquez »

Oldgringo wrote:That's kind of an interesting first post, or is it just me? :roll:
I participate in Gun forums, street, dirt and track motorcycle forums, back when I was heavily into 4wheeling and off road racing same.. those forums as well. Anytime a “new” member came in and started with a train of thought or question, whose answer or offer of a way to get around or past law, regulation,when if taken directly, or out of context, could be used as a poster child sound bite by the “Anti xx” group that opposed that forums activity….. I balk at participating.

To the OP, I hope that is not you.. but my life experience says to error on the side of caution.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by gigag04 »

Trolling aside, I bet a blind person could develop/hone the muscle memory to put holes through paper. He/She would probably need the same gun, same range, same bay, and same target pattern, but I bet they could pass - given enough practice. I've seen a man play chords and strum on a guitar using just his toes...so muscle memory can avail much. I wouldn't rule anything. And if TxDPS didn't ask if he was blind, I see no reason to tell them.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by Purplehood »

I still don't get Drive-up ATM's with Braille on them. Maybe I are just not that bright. Did I overlook the results of his shooting qualificatiion in this thread?
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by E.Marquez »

gigag04 wrote:Trolling aside, I bet a blind person could develop/hone the muscle memory to put holes through paper. He/She would probably need the same gun, same range, same bay, and same target pattern, but I bet they could pass - given enough practice. I've seen a man play chords and strum on a guitar using just his toes...so muscle memory can avail much. I wouldn't rule anything. And if TxDPS didn't ask if he was blind, I see no reason to tell them.
Absolutely agree, it can be done... with corrections as he learns that bay position, target location, that one weapon.. It's not much different then point shooting for any of us.. With the exception, we can see and make our own corrections and can accommodate a different location.
But I absolutely agree, any shooter could learn to go without site to a shooting bay, retrieve the weapon and point shoot well enough at a known practiced target and hit it sufficiently to pass the CHL shooting test.

That’s the mechanics of it, the could he.. the should he is another topic.
Last edited by E.Marquez on Thu Jan 26, 2012 9:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by Purplehood »

I imagine that if the guy ever actually has to shoot someone that the Lawyers will descend like locusts... not to impugn any Lawyers on this board!
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by Keith B »

gigag04 wrote:Trolling aside, I bet a blind person could develop/hone the muscle memory to put holes through paper. He/She would probably need the same gun, same range, same bay, and same target pattern, but I bet they could pass - given enough practice. I've seen a man play chords and strum on a guitar using just his toes...so muscle memory can avail much. I wouldn't rule anything. And if TxDPS didn't ask if he was blind, I see no reason to tell them.
You bet they can. I have a friend who has been totally blind since age 1 due to a genetic eye issue. No light, no nothing. However, he is probably the most un-blind blind guy I have ever met. He has honed his hearing and listening skills so that they are probably at least 20 times that of a sighted person IMO.

As for muscle memory, he is a phenomenal musician, and can play just about any instrument he picks up or sits in front of. You can lead him through a house or area one time and he will have the path to traverse and avoid objects pictured in his mind (however he pictures things having never been sighted) down the first time.

As for shooting, I let him fire one of my pistols and a rifle one day. Admittedly, I placed the pistol in his hand and pointed it at the target for him, but he hit paper. Wasn't in the bull, but hey, not bad. I would bet with practice if you pointed him down range, told him the height to hold it, and then told him where his bullets were hitting that he could pass the CHL test.

Not sure there is anything he couldn't do if you let him. We have always joked that the only reason he didn't drive is they don't make long enough white canes. :lol:

On a thread drift side note, I used to play music gigs with him periodically when his regular friend/driver wasn't available. He played a lot of one-man band venues at VFW halls, hotel lounges, etc with a MIDI keyboard and some other instruments. He owned his own cargo van for hauling gear his gear.

One night we were coming back from a gig about 30 miles north of where we lived around 2:30 in the morning. He apparently had a tail light out on the van and we didn't know. I got lit up and I commented that I wasn't speeding, so wasn't sure why we were being pulled over other than a white van with blocked out windows at 2;30AM. I pulled over and he immediately said 'Trade seats with me.' I was reluctant,but since i knew we hadn't done anything wrong I did. As the State Trooper came up, Chris turned to him. Chris has glass eyes, and while they were good ones, you can tell they are not real. The trooper looked kinda funny and asked for his license (didn't need insurance and registration in those days.) Chris says 'I'm blind, so I don't have one'. I am doing all I can to keep from laughing, but must have been grinning. The trooper shined his flashlight in Chris' face and then over at me and I bust out laughing and I told him what we had done. Luckily the trooper had a sense of humor, started laughing and then asked for my license. He asked where we had been and were going and then said he had stopped us do to a tail light out. Chris promised it would get fixed that day and we were allowed to go on our way, but not until the trooper said 'Can't wait to get to break with two other troopers and tell them I stopped a blind guy driving a van.' :lol:
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by The Annoyed Man »

RPB wrote:
apostate wrote:
RPB wrote:If he doesn't pass ... he doesn't pass.
That's the bottom line to me. If he can see well enough to successfully complete both the written and shooting proficiency examinations, I'm not sure what legal grounds DPS would have to deny his application. However, if an instructor doesn't want to pass a blind student, I suspect that could be easily avoided, especially if there's no "reasonable accommodation" clause in the CHL law.

At the risk of opening another can of worms, suppose he took the online class and got a nonresident license from Old Virginny. I don't see anything in the reciprocity law that would prohibit him from carrying a handgun in Texas.
I was already in bed and just thought of that, so I got up to mention that. THAT's why I'd be sure to talk to the guy about ballistics. the small caliber get a .25 acp type over-penetration issues etc, etc anyway for my own conscience's sake. same as I'd inform him he'll in all likelihood fail before taking his money. I think people deserve a chance to pass or fail, if they fail, there's other options. (NOT that I'd suggest other options to him, if he's motivated, he can do his own research)

I once took a job at a plumbing Co. digging ditches because the guy didn't want to hire me, said I couldn't work a shovel with only 1 hand (I had all my life and previously dug holes at a landscaping company and buried pipe sprinkler systems etc) I agreed that I'd work 2 weeks and if he didn't like my work to fire me. I dug him the prettiest ditches for 2 weeks, he complimented me, I quit toe up the paycheck and took a job as Asst Mgr of a big box hardware store like Home Depot.

TAM,
If it were up to me, the guy would have a couple 2-shot Pepper blasters and Tasers ... but He needs to learn about over-penetration, and shoot/don't shoot communication with his wife being his eyes because I'd expect him to try to "overcome obstacles" such as not getting a Texas license. Overcoming (perceived) obstacles is just sumpin them stubborn handicapped people tend to do. Sure Martial Arts/ Knives and other weapons are good. The supposition hat the blind does not know that another person is behind the target though is an assumption.
LOL @ myself resorting to comic book logic ...Daredevil, the blind superhero ...If one can accept that a blind person "sees" objects by how sound vibrates off them, and another can throw a straightened paper clip as a deadly weapon.
Like the blind "Master" in Kung Fu series With David Carradine always baffled me, ... I mean I couldn't do what those guys do blindfolded

But seriously, why couldn't a blind person sense, hear, or know somehow that another person was behind the target without using his eyes? How do they know a car is behind the bus when crossing a street? I dunno. I would ask a blind concert guitarist I thought was cute back in the 70s, but she wasn't interested in me. She lived alone and got around downtown Houston and Montrose just fine to play her various gigs, grocery shop etc, though she couldn't drive or see the frets or strings on the guitar.

She could not see one inch in front of her face. I dunno how she found her guitar every day, maybe she hummed and heard the wood resonate :headscratch
I've been a guitar player for 48 years. I am well aware of what it takes to play a guitar, and total blindness is no obstacle. I also know enough about both the guitar and CHL to say that this is not even a valid comparison.

The fact of the matter is that this is a lose/lose situation. If the instructor (our OP, who I note has only posted three times since [strike]trolling[/strike] joining) goes ahead and teaches the blind person the course, he opens himself to potential liabilities from the state and from the family of the innocent bystander shot dead by the blind man during a self-defense shooting.

The blind man faces potential manslaughter charges for shooting innocent people any time he uses his gun in legitimate self-defense.

And then there is the innocent bystander who doesn't get to go home to his family that night.

Then, there is the cop who understands the blind man's need to defend himself in a righteous shooting but who has to arrest the blind man on manslaughter charges for the death of an innnocent bystander. Etc., etc., etc.

The whole thing IS a can of worms. I know what I would do if I were the instructor, but the law doesn't currently state with any specificity that you can't offer a blind person a CHL course. So if you, as the instructor, refuse to instruct a blind person, then you may be guilty of violating some kind of federal anti-discrimination law. (Please note that I am using the term "blind" to mean "completely blind." If a person can distinguish shapes in the background, moving or not, then I think that is sufficient to make an informed shoot/don't shoot decision.)

Balanced against that is talk, from myself as well, of detering a citizen from exercising his fundamental right to keep and bear arms. That is a losing proposition as well. That person does have an absolute and enumerated right to keep and bear arms.

At what point has wisdom entered this conversation? RPB, I appreciate the stubborness you refer to, and the desire to prove to the (for lack of a better term) "able-bodied" that you are not limited by your physical handicaps; and I think that is an admirable quality.........if tempered by wisdom. Stubborness for its own sake without a legitimate goal is not a good justification for anything. "I'll show you" has been the cause of many more disasters in history than it has victories. There has to be a legitimate goal of that stubborness, or else it is just stupidity.

I try to let wisdom be the overriding arbiter of my own behavior....not always with success, but at least I have that standard I try to live up to. Wisdom dictates that I don't drink and drive. Wisdom dictates that I don't spend money I don't have. Wisdom dictates that I stay out of rough neighborhoods and high-crime areas to the degree that it is possible to do so. Wisdom dictates that I keep my savings in banks and not in my mattress. Wisdom also dictates that I don't give driving lessons to the blind.

To me, and this is just my opinion, but wisdom dictates that if a blind person were to ask me to teach them a CHL class, I would try to talk them out of it AND offer them what I think is a better alternative: martial arts training with an emphasis on using a knife. If they insisted on the CHL, then I would likely refuse. Why? Because at the end of the day, I have to live with the consequences of my actions. If a blind person wanted me to teach them how to shoot, I would do that in a heartbeat. If a blind person wanted the experience of assisted hunting, I would support that (although I am in no position to provide such a service myself). If a blind person wanted to have a gun for self-defense use inside of their home, I would support that and be happy to help them make a good selection of firearm.

But......I would categorically refuse to enable a blind person to pass a CHL course and carry a gun on the street.....because my wife and son and I might have to be walking down that same street on the day the blind man needs to shoot his gun in self-defense. And by the way, whatever the legal arguments, I would not in fact be stepping on his rights by doing so, as he is certainly free to try and pursue it with someone else. But I'm not going to be part of that because I think it is dumb and extremely unwise.

Also, I think that much of this is moot. I suspect that the person's blindness would turn up during the DPS background check and he would be denied his CHL anyway......AND he would be out the $140 to the state plus whatever the instructor charged him. So this whole thing is an exercise in futility.

Now, I'm not going to be one bit surprised to see this thread show up on the Brady Bunch site with the headline "CRAZY GUN NUTS ADVOCATE BLIND PEOPLE CARRY GUNS," while they try to get legislation through Congress limiting the rights of the blind.

Some things are just better left alone. This is one of them. The OP, "comfortinarms," has posted exactly three times since joining. All three posts are in this thread, and he hasn't posted at all since the day he joined, two days ago. He has shown no interest in any other topics on this board. Hopefully he will come back and prove to be an active and contributing member of this board. If he doesn't, then I think we can take this entire thread as a trolling exercise. I'm done contributing to it.
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Re: Blind CHL applicant

Post by Oldgringo »

The Annoyed Man wrote:
RPB wrote:
apostate wrote:
RPB wrote:If he doesn't pass ... he doesn't pass.
That's the bottom line to me. If he can see well enough to successfully complete both the written and shooting proficiency examinations, I'm not sure what legal grounds DPS would have to deny his application. However, if an instructor doesn't want to pass a blind student, I suspect that could be easily avoided, especially if there's no "reasonable accommodation" clause in the CHL law.

At the risk of opening another can of worms, suppose he took the online class and got a nonresident license from Old Virginny. I don't see anything in the reciprocity law that would prohibit him from carrying a handgun in Texas.
I was already in bed and just thought of that, so I got up to mention that. THAT's why I'd be sure to talk to the guy about ballistics. the small caliber get a .25 acp type over-penetration issues etc, etc anyway for my own conscience's sake. same as I'd inform him he'll in all likelihood fail before taking his money. I think people deserve a chance to pass or fail, if they fail, there's other options. (NOT that I'd suggest other options to him, if he's motivated, he can do his own research)

I once took a job at a plumbing Co. digging ditches because the guy didn't want to hire me, said I couldn't work a shovel with only 1 hand (I had all my life and previously dug holes at a landscaping company and buried pipe sprinkler systems etc) I agreed that I'd work 2 weeks and if he didn't like my work to fire me. I dug him the prettiest ditches for 2 weeks, he complimented me, I quit toe up the paycheck and took a job as Asst Mgr of a big box hardware store like Home Depot.

TAM,
If it were up to me, the guy would have a couple 2-shot Pepper blasters and Tasers ... but He needs to learn about over-penetration, and shoot/don't shoot communication with his wife being his eyes because I'd expect him to try to "overcome obstacles" such as not getting a Texas license. Overcoming (perceived) obstacles is just sumpin them stubborn handicapped people tend to do. Sure Martial Arts/ Knives and other weapons are good. The supposition hat the blind does not know that another person is behind the target though is an assumption.
LOL @ myself resorting to comic book logic ...Daredevil, the blind superhero ...If one can accept that a blind person "sees" objects by how sound vibrates off them, and another can throw a straightened paper clip as a deadly weapon.
Like the blind "Master" in Kung Fu series With David Carradine always baffled me, ... I mean I couldn't do what those guys do blindfolded

But seriously, why couldn't a blind person sense, hear, or know somehow that another person was behind the target without using his eyes? How do they know a car is behind the bus when crossing a street? I dunno. I would ask a blind concert guitarist I thought was cute back in the 70s, but she wasn't interested in me. She lived alone and got around downtown Houston and Montrose just fine to play her various gigs, grocery shop etc, though she couldn't drive or see the frets or strings on the guitar.

She could not see one inch in front of her face. I dunno how she found her guitar every day, maybe she hummed and heard the wood resonate :headscratch
I've been a guitar player for 48 years. I am well aware of what it takes to play a guitar, and total blindness is no obstacle. I also know enough about both the guitar and CHL to say that this is not even a valid comparison.

The fact of the matter is that this is a lose/lose situation. If the instructor (our OP, who I note has only posted three times since [strike]trolling[/strike] joining) goes ahead and teaches the blind person the course, he opens himself to potential liabilities from the state and from the family of the innocent bystander shot dead by the blind man during a self-defense shooting.

The blind man faces potential manslaughter charges for shooting innocent people any time he uses his gun in legitimate self-defense.

And then there is the innocent bystander who doesn't get to go home to his family that night.

Then, there is the cop who understands the blind man's need to defend himself in a righteous shooting but who has to arrest the blind man on manslaughter charges for the death of an innnocent bystander. Etc., etc., etc.

The whole thing IS a can of worms. I know what I would do if I were the instructor, but the law doesn't currently state with any specificity that you can't offer a blind person a CHL course. So if you, as the instructor, refuse to instruct a blind person, then you may be guilty of violating some kind of federal anti-discrimination law. (Please note that I am using the term "blind" to mean "completely blind." If a person can distinguish shapes in the background, moving or not, then I think that is sufficient to make an informed shoot/don't shoot decision.)

Balanced against that is talk, from myself as well, of detering a citizen from exercising his fundamental right to keep and bear arms. That is a losing proposition as well. That person does have an absolute and enumerated right to keep and bear arms.

At what point has wisdom entered this conversation? RPB, I appreciate the stubborness you refer to, and the desire to prove to the (for lack of a better term) "able-bodied" that you are not limited by your physical handicaps; and I think that is an admirable quality.........if tempered by wisdom. Stubborness for its own sake without a legitimate goal is not a good justification for anything. "I'll show you" has been the cause of many more disasters in history than it has victories. There has to be a legitimate goal of that stubborness, or else it is just stupidity.

I try to let wisdom be the overriding arbiter of my own behavior....not always with success, but at least I have that standard I try to live up to. Wisdom dictates that I don't drink and drive. Wisdom dictates that I don't spend money I don't have. Wisdom dictates that I stay out of rough neighborhoods and high-crime areas to the degree that it is possible to do so. Wisdom dictates that I keep my savings in banks and not in my mattress. Wisdom also dictates that I don't give driving lessons to the blind.

To me, and this is just my opinion, but wisdom dictates that if a blind person were to ask me to teach them a CHL class, I would try to talk them out of it AND offer them what I think is a better alternative: martial arts training with an emphasis on using a knife. If they insisted on the CHL, then I would likely refuse. Why? Because at the end of the day, I have to live with the consequences of my actions. If a blind person wanted me to teach them how to shoot, I would do that in a heartbeat. If a blind person wanted the experience of assisted hunting, I would support that (although I am in no position to provide such a service myself). If a blind person wanted to have a gun for self-defense use inside of their home, I would support that and be happy to help them make a good selection of firearm.

But......I would categorically refuse to enable a blind person to pass a CHL course and carry a gun on the street.....because my wife and son and I might have to be walking down that same street on the day the blind man needs to shoot his gun in self-defense. And by the way, whatever the legal arguments, I would not in fact be stepping on his rights by doing so, as he is certainly free to try and pursue it with someone else. But I'm not going to be part of that because I think it is dumb and extremely unwise.

Also, I think that much of this is moot. I suspect that the person's blindness would turn up during the DPS background check and he would be denied his CHL anyway......AND he would be out the $140 to the state plus whatever the instructor charged him. So this whole thing is an exercise in futility.

Now, I'm not going to be one bit surprised to see this thread show up on the Brady Bunch site with the headline "CRAZY GUN NUTS ADVOCATE BLIND PEOPLE CARRY GUNS," while they try to get legislation through Congress limiting the rights of the blind.

Some things are just better left alone. This is one of them. The OP, "comfortinarms," has posted exactly three times since joining. All three posts are in this thread, and he hasn't posted at all since the day he joined, two days ago. He has shown no interest in any other topics on this board. Hopefully he will come back and prove to be an active and contributing member of this board. If he doesn't, then I think we can take this entire thread as a trolling exercise. I'm done contributing to it.
Yep, my thoughts exactly.
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