Isn't that what the parking lot law did?joelamosobadiah wrote:I am against the government legislating against one set of rights in favor of another.

Moderators: carlson1, Charles L. Cotton
Isn't that what the parking lot law did?joelamosobadiah wrote:I am against the government legislating against one set of rights in favor of another.
Well... I think that we do. I have read up on how last session's bill changed 30.06 and why that is bad, and I agree with charles that the way that HB 2756 altered 30.06 would be bad news.smoothoperator wrote:You already said the bill would have altered "every CHL law" so I don't think we need any more examples.AJSully421 wrote:I don't remember hearing this before. Can you elaborate on a couple of examples?Charles L. Cotton wrote:Last session's bill was a train wreck! It unnecessarily opened massive sections of the Government Code and Penal Code to anti-gun, anti-carry amendments. The worst part was the amendment to TPC §30.06 that would make it apply to both open and concealed carry. If the OC bill this session has the same provision, it will be DOA.AJSully421 wrote:I also want licensed OC. I liked last session's bill that simply deleted the word "Concealed" from every CHL law. (It also altered section 30.06 and would make any current 30.06 sign instantly unenforceable)
Chas.
Oh, the irony!AJSully421 wrote:If you are somehow offended by my asking sincere questions, then there are hundreds of other threads that you are free to explore.
Nope. The parking lot law kept the employer from restricting me from keeping my gun in MY property (my vehicle). It actually restored rights that my employer was taking away. It still allows the employer to restrict me from taking it off of my property and onto theirs when I leave the vehicle.smoothoperator wrote:Isn't that what the parking lot law did?joelamosobadiah wrote:I am against the government legislating against one set of rights in favor of another.
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Following the same logic, businesses should only be able to prohibit open carry. Why? Because if I'm carrying concealed, my gun is in my property (my clothes, my briefcase) and they have no right to restrict me from keeping my gun in MY property.Keith B wrote:Nope. The parking lot law kept the employer from restricting me from keeping my gun in MY property (my vehicle).smoothoperator wrote:Isn't that what the parking lot law did?joelamosobadiah wrote:I am against the government legislating against one set of rights in favor of another.
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Apples and oranges.tbrown wrote:Following the same logic, businesses should only be able to prohibit open carry. Why? Because if I'm carrying concealed, my gun is in my property (my clothes, my briefcase) and they have no right to restrict me from keeping my gun in MY property.Keith B wrote:Nope. The parking lot law kept the employer from restricting me from keeping my gun in MY property (my vehicle).smoothoperator wrote:Isn't that what the parking lot law did?joelamosobadiah wrote:I am against the government legislating against one set of rights in favor of another.
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While it is apples and oranges, I like that line of thinkingjmra wrote:Apples and oranges.tbrown wrote:Following the same logic, businesses should only be able to prohibit open carry. Why? Because if I'm carrying concealed, my gun is in my property (my clothes, my briefcase) and they have no right to restrict me from keeping my gun in MY property.Keith B wrote:Nope. The parking lot law kept the employer from restricting me from keeping my gun in MY property (my vehicle).smoothoperator wrote:Isn't that what the parking lot law did?joelamosobadiah wrote:I am against the government legislating against one set of rights in favor of another.
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That didn't help in Nevada last session, although the introduction of a CHL holder who was raped on campus may have been too late in the session to have an impact.warhorse10_9 wrote:On the campus carry issue, can we try to keep the discussion focused on personal protection rather than mass shootings. I think all the emphasis that this was about protection during a mass shooting is one of the things that derailed the bill last session. The focus should be kept squarely on smaller everyday acts of violence that campus carry would allow CHL holders to protect themselves from.
jmra wrote:Apples and oranges.tbrown wrote:Following the same logic, businesses should only be able to prohibit open carry. Why? Because if I'm carrying concealed, my gun is in my property (my clothes, my briefcase) and they have no right to restrict me from keeping my gun in MY property.
srothstein wrote:jmra wrote:Apples and oranges.tbrown wrote:Following the same logic, businesses should only be able to prohibit open carry. Why? Because if I'm carrying concealed, my gun is in my property (my clothes, my briefcase) and they have no right to restrict me from keeping my gun in MY property.
I disagree. This can be seen as a question of what container I carry my gun in. Under the current law, if the container is my car, the property owner cannot ban me from carrying at work, but if the container is my briefcase, he can. I only see a difference in the size of the container.
Can you explain why you see some other difference that makes the positions so different?