To: TYVets
The parking lot is the employer's property but isn't the locked trunk the car owner's property? How does my right to have whatever I have in the locked trunk of my car changed simply due to where I have chosen to drive?
5 posted on
07/23/2004 7:02:44 PM PDT by
Tall_Texan
(Ronald Reagan - Greatest President of the 20th Century.)
To: Tall_Texan
How does my right to have whatever I have in the locked trunk of my car changed simply due to where I have chosen to drive? Many enlightnened states realize this. Oklahoma was the most recent to pass a bill saying employers couldn't have a policy barring employees from keeping guns in their cars.
22 posted on
07/23/2004 7:16:18 PM PDT by
Mulder
(All might be free if they valued freedom, and defended it as they should.-- Samuel Adams)
To: Tall_Texan
The parking lot is the employer's property but isn't the locked trunk the car owner's property? How does my right to have whatever I have in the locked trunk of my car changed simply due to where I have chosen to drive?
This should be no big deal. I live in California, and if I or other workers are going to shoot after work, we just park our cars on the street adjacent to the company parking lot. No one has ever even brought this issue up.
To: Tall_Texan
"How does my right to have whatever I have in the locked trunk of my car changed simply due to where I have chosen to drive?"
Get caught on school property and you're toast.
163 posted on
07/24/2004 4:41:19 AM PDT by
Rebelbase
( A majority of Europeans have lost the courage of their fathers and grandfathers.)
To: Tall_Texan
It would sort of be a "don't ask, don't tell". How did the company KNOW that the guns were in the car? In this day and age a company is not required to allow guns on their property.
What we have here are employees with guns who evidently shot off their mouths, OR there are snitches......
164 posted on
07/24/2004 4:53:23 AM PDT by
JENINMO
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