I have had a concealed Carry Permit for years, but during Covid, I missed the date for renewing my permit and it went past the grace period, so I rolled with constitutional carry, but travelling out of state/ buying firearms I would prefer to have the permit.
I finally decided to pull the trigger

The class started out with a presentation of a prepaid legal defense plan.
The instructor opened the class with a video taken at a hotel parking lot where a 24-year-old punk emerged with full body armor (North PHX off Happy valley Road) and just started attempting to stack bodies up. He shot at a car that pulled in, killed the driver and the other three occupants high tailed it out of there.
By the time it was done, and a cop took the trash out the trash had expended over 200 rounds of ammo.
The instructor said: Ok, you are there, you have a permit, and you have your sidearm, what would you do?
I immediately said that I would get away as fast as possible (keep in mind, no one was close to the guy...the only people fleeing were across the parking lot).
I heard about four or five voices behind me say "I would shoot him"
The instructor never did say what the proper response would be and went on with the class explaining what is a justified, and what is an unjustified shoot, and the legal ramifications someone will find themselves in should they find themselves in the gravest extreme. etc, etc, etc...
The class ended with him doing the hard sell on prepaid legal defense insurance that was really pricey, I am familiar with other organizations that provides expert testimony by household names should they be needed and plans that seem pretty solid.
Anyway... he never did say what the best response would be...if you are facing a guy across a parking lot and he has a long gun in semi-auto, tactical helmet, body armor, and I have a pistol I am going to boogie out of there and let the boys in blue handle it...exacting a long shot to the face, at night, with a handgun under stress can happen, but I am not in a hurry to bet on that skill set if I have the opportunity to get out of Dodge.
Anyway...some of the answers and questions made me cringe, it was obvious based on the responses, that so many had no clue, and probably did not do any learning prior to the class. if I was teaching the class I would have said, "OK you are getting your permit, the next thing that you need to do is get some training by professional instructors muy pronto and educate yourselves." But...he never said that, and in my opinion did a disservice to the class.
A high ratio of the class were handing over their applications and credit cards, I sure would not want to be underwriting that crowd.