All well said, and all points well taken. To a degree this is already happening. Twice, already, I've avoided open carrying into a business with a "No guns" sign. The alternative is the possibility of a face-to-face with the police, who may exhibit varying degrees of sympathy. Thus, as you said, it became a defacto 30.07. Catch-22.thetexan wrote: 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'.
The other school of thought is that expecting and requiring .06 and .07 compliance is not too much to ask.
Additionally, many business owners will be afraid to approach an armed stranger and will call the police, thus turning the police into a defacto "verbal notification service."
Word is getting out about signage. MDA members, politicians and others are already going around posting and/or passing out signs to businesses, and online sign-printing business are already popping up (e.g. nocarrysigns.com).
This is only getting started. I suspect a legislative approach is going to be needed. Would anybody care to suggest what kind of language could be in a proposed bill that would address this situation? This sort of thing has to be started EARLY - contacts and visits made, drafts written up, etc. before the next session's committees start meeting.