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This week, from Monday to Friday, the 25,000 members of Students
for Concealed Carry on Campus will carry empty holsters, in sign of protest
against the law that forbids students to carry concealed guns on campus.
The demonstration will be peaceful, assured Nathan Robinson,
a UT senior. Demonstrators are not supposed to carry signs and banners or
disturb the peace in any way. They will only wear empty holsters, T-shirts and
share fliers.
"It's a week-long protest," said Robinson.
"It's not something where you pick a place and stand with picket
signs."
The demonstration comes shortly after the first anniversary
of the Virginia Tech shootings, in a period when nine states are reconsidering
the legislation regarding gun carrying. According to CNN, Utah is currently the
only state that allows students to carry guns at public universities, while Colorado
also allows guns at public colleges except the University of Colorado-Boulder
campus.
Robinson, who is in the process of obtaining a permit to
carry a handgun, said the students do not intend to wear a gun so that they act
as policemen on campus, or hurt somebody. The only reason for carrying a gun at
school is self-defense, Robinson insists.
To obtain a concealed handgun permit, states require
applicants to meet several conditions, including an age requirement, some
written and shooting tests, state and federal fingerprint checks and the
payment of a fee.
The issue is debatable as, while guns could make students
carrying them feel safer on campus, authorities fear they also might encourage
violence.
According to a Tennessee Bureau of Investigation "Crime
on Campus" report released this year, the number of violent crimes decreased
by 7 percent from 2004 to 2007 on the state’s campuses.
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