Re: Guns in the Workplace Parking Lot?
- From: "RD (The Sandman)" <rdsandman(spamlock)@comcast.net>
- Date: Wed, 23 Jan 2008 11:39:04 -0600
"Morton Davis" <antikerry@xxxxxx> wrote in
YSUkj.309190$Fc.88981@attbi_s21:">news:YSUkj.309190$Fc.88981@attbi_s21:
"Buck Mulligan" <bkmulligan@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:i1k6p3his9l6h42lfqu9g3a2ggrr304cqd@xxxxxxxxxx
In talk.politics.guns grey_ghost471-newsgroups@xxxxxxxxx (Gray Ghost)
wrote:
Buck Mulligan <bkmulligan@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in
news:dat4p3h4b9ihq0atg6chgh55q024bnlft4@xxxxxxx:
In talk.politics.guns grey_ghost471-newsgroups@xxxxxxxxx (Gray
Ghost) wrote:
Buck Mulligan <bkmulligan@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in
news:n0i2p3hsl4tff8092070dv87d47dbfspll@xxxxxxx:
In talk.politics.guns Al Montestruc <montestruc@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In the first place one's car is one's property and the Employer
has no right to search it, or even know what is in it.
You bring that car onto my property and guess what? You forfeit
your right.
The NRA has its head up its ass on this one.
Buck you're off base here. You are comparing possesion vice action.
I do not give up my rights because I'm on private property, that's
another slippery slope. If it's in a car and not in plain sight it
really is none
else's business. Actions taken with it, however are.
That's the whole point here. Possessing a gun does not you a killer
just like possessing a bottle of hooch doesn't make you a drunk.
It's your actions that matter. And that's all.
Here's the deal. If you come on my property and I don't want guns
on my property than you CAN'T bring them. That's the rule for my
property.
If you're wearing a Brady T-Shirt I'm gonna ask you to leave. If
you have Brady T-shirts in your car I'm going to ask you to leave.
If I THINK you have them in your car I'm going to ask to look and
if you don't let me, that's fine- get off my property.
Slippery slope indeed. Are you telling me that YOUR right to carry
extends to MY property? I don't think so, Tim.
Now, if you were carrying and you were a friend of mine, I wouldn't
care. Come on in and I'll show you the nice little Springfield
Armory EMP I just bought. But if you're someone I don't know, or
someone I don't like, you're NOT carrying on my property, no matter
WHAT rights you think you have. As an example, if you were someone
I didn't like and I thought you might be carrying, I might ask to
search you. If you say no, then you have to leave.
I hope I've made myself clear here. I'm talking about MY rights on
MY property.
This extends to companies. If they don't want you to have a gun in
your car on THEIR property, they are within their rights, in my
opinion. You are within your rights to work elsewhere.
Try putting a "No coloreds" sign up and see how that goes. The
precedent is
set.
I can certainly keep ANYONE off my property I want to, unless they
have a search warrant. I have a "NO DEMOCRATS" sign now that works
pretty well.
Is this illegal?
Let me try and understand your position, Frank. Are you saying I have
no control over you if you voluntarily come onto my property? That I
can't ask you to leave if you're carrying a gun and I don't want you
to?
No guns allowed = Free Fire Zone.
No one is claiming that it is a good policy, just a legal one.
--
RD (The Sandman)
War is absolute hell.....but to give in
to terrorism is much, much worse
.
- References:
- Re: Guns in the Workplace Parking Lot?
- From: Buck Mulligan
- Re: Guns in the Workplace Parking Lot?
- From: Gray Ghost
- Re: Guns in the Workplace Parking Lot?
- From: Buck Mulligan
- Re: Guns in the Workplace Parking Lot?
- From: Gray Ghost
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- From: Buck Mulligan
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