n5wd wrote:Pig Renter wrote:I was just wanting to get y'all's take on laws prohibiting employers from banning guns in locked vehicles in their parking lots.
...I also feel that the employer's or parking lot owner's property rights be being violated. I feel that if someone owns property they should be able to set their own rules, whether we agree with them or not.
Let's say that an employer posts a sign at the parking lot entrance saying "No Methodists or Baptists allowed." Would you be in favor of that kind of property restriction?
How about "This company prohibits any person from espousing their beliefs with regards to politics, or any political candidate." How about that?
The problem with laws that restrict a property owner's ability to control their own property is that it usually winds up affecting someone else's rights.
"Let's say that an employer posts a sign at the parking lot entrance saying "No Methodists or Baptists allowed." Would you be in favor of that kind of property restriction?" - In favor of? No, not in a principled or logical sense. But in a legal sense, absolutely I would. Maybe I'm too far across the line on this viewpoint, but I've always felt that once someone steps onto another's property they are doing so because the owner allows them that privilege and must respect their rules, no matter how insane, ridiculous, immoral, or illogical those rules are. Forget Methodist or Baptist for a second. Suppose I come to a persons home and they tell me I can be in their yard but only if I'm left-handed, blond haired, and don't have any tattoos. And I must have my left nostril pierced. Should I be able to tell them they don't have that authority? I know that's a ridiculous analogy but I view it the same way.
Keep in mind, no where in the Constitution are our rights "granted" to us as some have stated. They are enumerated, or listed basically, and include rights in which the
GOVERNMENT may not infringe (government, not private property owners).