Would you allow a stranger to come into your home with a firearm? Does that shed more light on respecting the property owners wishes?
A home and a business are two different entities. In a business, strangers that I have never seen before are expected to come through the door. At my home, not so much. So, to answer your exact question of allowing strangers in my home....
1. Someone comes to the door that I don't know and I did not invite them in some way....they are 99% chance not coming in carrying a firearm or not. And they are 100% not coming in if they are wearing a badge and a uniform.
2. Stranger comes to my door for a reason I know about - such as to buy something I have offered for sale - repairman to fix something I have called for:
a. If they are concealed carrying, how would I know, unless I frisked them? And I am not going to frisk them.
b. If they are open carrying, yes, they can come in with their firearm, no problem.
3. I own and operate the business? 100% firearms welcomed, concealed or openly carried.
I guess my question was asked in a way that we, as gun owners being gun friendly, would answer in only a specific way...my bad.
I was in a Doctors office this morning with my LCP in my back pocket and noticed the lawful sign prohibiting firearms. I thought about it a long time before going back out to my car and locking it up.
Just because the establishment has a sign doesn't make it any less likely that nutcase will walk in and start shooting up the place/ex-wife/former employer etc.
In Texas it's unlawful to carry concealed in a bar (51% rule), a number of other places or anywhere that displays a proper sign.
I often carry anyway but for some reason this time I took it back outside.
How many of you respect those laws in your state?
I guess my question was asked in a way that we, as gun owners being gun friendly, would answer in only a specific way...my bad.
What answer were you expecting? My answer, I thought, was very gun friendly - just not stranger friendly - whether or not the stranger is carrying a gun or wearing a badge and uniform.
Never seen one.But apparently in Florida you don't have to obey the signs and also if you are carrying the right way no one will know you have a gun....
I was in a Doctors office this morning with my LCP in my back pocket and noticed the lawful sign prohibiting firearms. I thought about it a long time before going back out to my car and locking it up.
Just because the establishment has a sign doesn't make it any less likely that nutcase will walk in and start shooting up the place/ex-wife/former employer etc.
In Texas it's unlawful to carry concealed in a bar (51% rule), a number of other places or anywhere that displays a proper sign.
I often carry anyway but for some reason this time I took it back outside.
How many of you respect those laws in your state?
Yes, you must respect other's rights, otherwise you are breaking the law.
JWould you allow a stranger to come into your home with a firearm? Does that shed more light on respecting the property owners wishes?
I'm not a Constitutional expert either so I'll just give a quick explanation.I don't claim to be a Constitutional lawyer so I would appreciate anyone here to explain to me how me exercising my Constitutionally protected right to carry a firearm into a private business is trumped by some non existant property "right".
Well lets see - a person carrying a gun in a place where it is illegal (criminal) to do so to protect themselves from criminals..... kind of ironic, eh?
JWould you allow a stranger to come into your home with a firearm? Does that shed more light on respecting the property owners wishes?
Come on Chen, the discussion is about signs on a business. And I have to ask, would you invite a stranger in to your home to start with? No stranger crosses my threshold.
Every time this question comes up we all start quoting from our individual states laws. I just wish some of these guys would have enough sense to consult their own states laws before they start to bombard the site with questions they could answer them selves.
I'm not a Constitutional expert either so I'll just give a quick explanation.
First of all ...