Saltwater60
.950 JDJ
I have mixed feelings on this because private businesses should be able to do as they please but it’s nice to know your rights are protected.
So you Agree with the current law in NY??Bad law. This should be up to the private property owner.
Not sure which NY law you are referring to, there are many laws in NY (too many). I'd agree that private property owners should dictate what happens on their property. My house, my rules so to say. If it was my business I wouldn't ban guns, but if it's not my business then it's not my choice on the rules set by the owner. My recourse as a customer is to take my business elsewhere.So you Agree with the current law in NY??
I think he’s saying private businesses should be able to do what they want on their property. NYS dictates what we can do on all private property unless they say we can have a gun. Very different things.So you Agree with the current law in NY??
So you Agree with the current law in NY??
And over a hundred guns are stolen from vehicles in Nashville monthly due to people obeying those signs.I feel the property owner should be able to determine their own rules. I also agree with SomeSoldier though that if firearms are prohibited then it's the property owners responsibility to protect you. We know signs don't work. Lawmakers also know signs don't work but they don't care. They just want to make laws that restrict us. While I was in Nashville a few years ago EVERY building I went in had a "no firearms" sign on the door. How the hell is that supposed to stop someone from committing a firearm related crime? There are plenty of laws that say you can't attack someone but those are ignored every day. Because of this I can see why they want to take the property owners right to choose away from them.
Yes, those silly libertarians and understanding basic property rights. It's better to use government force to tell owners who they must allow on their property.This retarded reflexively libertarian "muh private property" bullshit is why so-called conservatives have been mostly losing for decades now. Same energy as let them trans and drag the kids, open the borders, free all trade because "freedumb."
The side that wants to win always beats the side that wants to be left alone.
This bill is entirely a GOOD thing if it even goes far enough. Current Tennessee, Texas, and New York law makes criminals out of law-abiding, gun-owning, concealed-carrying citizens quietly going about their business while concealed carrying in places of public accommodation (in New York, unless "muh property" owner opts out). What this law does is basically bring Tennessee's concealed carry law closer to what New York's was up until LAST YEAR. Private property owners could still ban open guns, and trespass and keep out anyone they don't like. What they can't do is criminalize your lawful, permitted concealed possession of a gun for self-protection.
Texas did loosen their carry laws recently by removing the permit requirement and changing the consequences on private property to simple trespass, which is a big improvement but doesn't go as far as Tennessee did (or as New York had been, again, up until LAST YEAR), in that concealed carry on signed property is itself still punishable as trespass in and of itself.
If I'm not breaking any laws or causing any trouble, then whether I'm concealed carrying a gun is nobody's business any more than the thoughts I am harboring in my head, or what's in my wallet. The only reason it should become known that someone is lawfully concealed carrying is if they need to defend themselves with deadly force, in which case they shouldn't be punished after the fact for it.
So, again, youse agree cake bakers must not be forced to bake cakes.Bad law. This should be up to the private property owner.
Forcing a Christian baker to bake a cake celebrating Satan is exactly the same thing as making concealed-carrying cake-shoppers felons and putting them in prison because the baker put up a "no guns allowed" sign in their shop.So, again, youse agree cake bakers must not be forced to bake cakes.
Who is forcing who, hugebrain?Yes, those silly libertarians and understanding basic property rights. It's better to use government force to tell owners who they must allow on their property.
I totally see the connection to drag queens and open borders too. Laws like this would remove rights akin to the owner having the ability to ban them from their property, but hell yeah, more government please!
...Forcing a Christian baker to bake a cake celebrating Satan is exactly the same thing as making concealed-carrying cake-shoppers felons and putting them in prison because the baker put up a "no guns allowed" sign in their shop. Am I libertarian enough?
Same energy as let them trans and drag the kids, open the borders, free all trade because "freedumb."
Oof, you really got me there. What a comeback.
A private property owner has the right to freedom of association with ANY person he or she wishes to or not.Who is forcing who, hugebrain?
If I have a "No Irish" sign in my shop, that might break a civil rights law. If there were no civil rights laws, and Paddy walks in looking and speaking American and I'm none the wiser, he's not breaking any laws. A "No Irish" sign doesn't make him a trespasser or a criminal, and any wrong he's doing to deep-seated Irish-excluding beliefs and ignoring my precious sign is not legally recognizable. It's only if Paddy gets his Irish up and I tell him to leave and he won't that the law steps in. I don't get to write my own criminal laws because "muh private property."
The only reason it's a crime to have a concealed carry on signed private property in a state like Tennessee (or New York as of last year) is because there's a law that says it. It's malum prohibitum, wrong because it's prohibited.
How far do you want this to go? Can the sign say "No Foreskins" and you're a criminal if you have a cut dick cause "muh private property"? How about no concealed tattoos, or no tighty-whiteys?
At least what I write makes perfect sense. My freedom of self-defense is infringed when the state criminalizes my CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT to keep and bear arms. How is your "freedom of association" harmed by my not being criminalized for exercising said right, by concealed carrying while invited onto your property?A private property owner has the right to freedom of association with ANY person he or she wishes to or not.
That far.
Dude, you equated store signage and property rights to drag queens. I'd lay off the ball spiking celebration with the commentary.
You have no more constitutional right to carry a firearm on my private property than you do to come in and blast the latest Lizzo album, claiming "free speech. "At least what I write makes perfect sense. My freedom of self-defense is infringed when the state criminalizes my CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT to keep and bear arms. How is your "freedom of association" harmed by my not being criminalized for exercising said right, by concealed carrying while invited onto your property?
Mind, if I say "Hey buddy I'm carrying my sweet new Sig on my left hip" you can still tell me to leave and never come back, you can bar the door to me because you saw me post on Twitter "Going out armed again today!" or saw me coming out of the gun shop next door ten years ago, or just don't like my hairdo.
But that's not enough for "muh private property," you need to have the scimitar of the state hanging over my head making me a status felon because I exercised my CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT to keep and bear arms when you don't think I should. You're literally putting the criminal law in my pants because I'm on "muh private property."
At least you've made your incoherent, anti-gun libertardian position clear. I wasn't wrong about same energy. You're clearly in the "let them chop off kids' dicks and tits" camp.You have no more constitutional right to carry a firearm on my private property than you do to come in and blast the latest Lizzo album, claiming "free speech. "
And we're back on child genitals.At least you've made your incoherent, anti-gun libertardian position clear. I wasn't wrong about same energy. You're clearly in the "let them chop off kids' dicks and tits" camp.
I'm not wrong, am I?And we're back on child genitals.
Blasting Lizzo causes exactly the same property harm as a pistols peacefully concealed in pants, because extremely libertarian feels.But please go on and demonstrate my incoherence.
Agreed 100%. I do like TN sticking up for 2a rights like they have been recently. It shows in their population increase that it is popular with the crowd they want to attract.I actually didn't hate the old way in NY.
I really give a lot of respect to private property. Private property owners should have the right to decide what occurs on their property.
It used to be you could ignore a no guns sign but if you were spotted printing and they asked you to leave for violating their policy if you refuse you could be charged for trespassing. That's really not a bad compromise IMO. its actually a pretty fair balance between 2a rights and private property rights. There was no risk to the pistol carrier so long as they complied and left if asked to do so.
Maybe that’s why they feel this law is needed then. I had no idea that many places had no gun signs there. It was the same when I went to Glendale AR and they have the law subsection right on the sign showing you it was a law. I was surprised to see this.I feel the property owner should be able to determine their own rules. I also agree with SomeSoldier though that if firearms are prohibited then it's the property owners responsibility to protect you. We know signs don't work. Lawmakers also know signs don't work but they don't care. They just want to make laws that restrict us. While I was in Nashville a few years ago EVERY building I went in had a "no firearms" sign on the door. How the hell is that supposed to stop someone from committing a firearm related crime? There are plenty of laws that say you can't attack someone but those are ignored every day. Because of this I can see why they want to take the property owners right to choose away from them.
You're not wrong about what? You've been wrong on everything so far.I'm not wrong, am I?
Blasting Lizzo causes exactly the same property harm as a pistols peacefully concealed in pants, because extremely libertarian feels.
I don't want to keep jumping on this thread, but since this keeps coming up, you're quoting two basically unrelated bits of the federal US civil rights code that shouldn't be part of this discussion. One is for certain "public accommodations" and the other is for federally funded programs. Neither protects gun owners.Private businesses-subject to what the owners desire is in fact a legally fallacious argument.
These places are treated as places of public accomodation. We must look at a particular section of the law to fully understand.