RoyGBiv wrote:You asked... then you answered. It's a valid question and a realistic answer.VMI77 wrote:I don't understand why so many gun owners are willing to concede their right to bear arms under a theoretical concept of property rights that doesn't exist in America.
....a matter of political compromise necessary to get concealed carry passed.
Honestly, I don't have a lick of problem with private property owners posting 30.06. It's THEIR castle, even if they open it to the public for business. I can choose to do business elsewhere. I also think private property owners should have the right to post their property "Whites only" or "No Jews" or... whatever. I can choose not to do business with them either.
The only time this becomes a problem requiring government intervention is if there is something I am REQUIRED to do that "forces" me to do business with such a private establishment... For example if L1 posted a "White's Only" sign when L1 is the only place I can go for CHL fingerprints...
I essentially agree with you. I took some short cuts in my post so I didn't make the point I was trying to make completely clear. I don't have a problem with the compromise that was made --30.06 signs-- to get concealed carry passed. It's a reasonable compromise and I simply don't do business with anyone who posts such signs. As it it, it has worked out pretty well because I hardly ever see 30.06 signs.
I was attempting to say that treating the question of a property owner prohibiting concealed carry as if it is strictly a matter of principle....the principle that a property owner can set all terms for the use of his property....is the application of theory/philosophy over reality. If theory matched reality it would make sense for gun owners to respect the concept that a property owner can prohibit concealed carry since adhering to principle would also ultimately be one of the best protectors of their own rights. However, the rights of property owners are abridged for a number of reasons that have nothing to do with actual rights, so it doesn't make sense to me as a gun owner, with an actual right articulated in the Constitution, to accept abridgement of my right when property owner rights are abridged to satisfy the mere desires of others, or for social and political reasons that are not actual rights recognized in the Constitution.
In other words, I see no reason to just accept that in a negotiation for balancing competing rights, gun owners should concede an actual Constitutional right a priori when concessions are made to others for strictly political reasons that mostly originate from the philosophy of collectivism. Now, as a matter of practical reality, yes, 30.06 was probably necessary to get concealed carry passed, and in the existing political climate it is a concession that makes sense. I still don't think I'm explaining myself very well, but I hope I'm little closer to conveying what I mean than in my previous post.