Charles L. Cotton wrote:gljjt wrote:This will self resolve. After LE goes to the same business that has clearly non-compliant signs to act as their enforcer a few times, I'm sure LE will suggest the business owner put up the correct sign as their response will change. Might tell the owner to tell the customer tho leave!
This is exactly what will happen. Some open-carry supporters have referred to business owners not following the law when they post a legally insufficient 30.07 sign. The law does not require them to post proper 30.07 signs, nor does the law prohibit a generic "no open-carry" signs. Any generic "no open-carry" sign is merely a warning to people that they can expect to be asked to leave if they enter with their gun showing. There's nothing illegal about that; it's simply the way the business chose to let folks know their gun policy.
Anyone who enters a business with a legally insufficient 30.07 sign runs the risk of being told "no guns" rather than merely "no openly-carried guns." If/when that happens, then that person has been given notice under §30.06 and 30.07 so they better not enter the property again with a handgun.
Chas.
Exactly.
My wife gets frustrated with me because I have a direct way of making a point. And my reply to her is that I am simply communicating what needs to be done about some subject and that it goes without saying that it should be delivered in a compassionate, Christian, but unmistakable way so that at the end of the matter proper communication has been delivered.
My point with this subject is similar. We need to hold businesses accountable for their non-compliance to the same degree we are held for ours. Yes we have the right to walk past a non-compliant sign and we should be able to, indeed we are able to. But that is not the best way to solve the problem.
The problem needs to be addressed...everywhere we see it...(read these words carefully) in a mature, proper, effective way. Not an in-your-face, catch-me-if-you-can, I'll show you, you can't make me sort of way. That will probably require support from legislation, discussions with owners, police departments, local DAs, etc.
If we don't address the issue eventually a gun-buster sign will become the defacto 30.07 sign because 'we don't want to make waves'.
We need to make waves, in a professional, mature way and solidify the right we have been given by the state of Texas.
One school of thought is to not bring to much attention to this or it might generate more .06s or .07s. That's is no way to stand up for our right. How is that different from the policy that we shouldn't offend Radical you know whats lest we give them a recruiting tool?
The other school of thought is that expecting and requiring .06 and .07 compliance is not too much to ask.
I fall into the later. There is still work to be done and we should do it...professionally, maturely, calmly, but with resoluteness. Causing a scene is not the way to go. Taking your money elsewhere when you have a RIGHT to the public accommodation by law and according to the law (ie, if they want me to leave then I should expect it to be done by law) is a temporary and probably ineffective way to secure our right.
Then there is the thought that if it is non-compliant and we complain for a change, the change will be to a compliant sign equaling the same result. My answer to that is that is this. If you don't want me in your establishment, show me and the rest of the law abiding gun-carrying citizens the courtesy of respecting the very law you use as your tool to keep me out . They expect us to follow the law, IMPECCABLY, and they should be held to the same standard. We are the only ones with an interest in this. No one else has a dog in the fight.
Professionally, non confrontationally, maturely, resolutely, and always showing gun carriers in the best light.
To quote Forest..."and that's all I have to say about that".
tex