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To: O.C. - Old Cracker
Rights, Rights, and Rights

I jumped in on a discussion at TCF regarding this news item. Companies that ban guns put on defensive.

Ronald Honeycutt didn't hesitate. The Pizza Hut driver had just finished dropping off a delivery when a man holding a gun approached him.

Honeycutt wasn't about to become another robbery statistic. He grabbed the 9 mm handgun he always carries in his belt and shot the man more than 10 times, killing him.

Honeycutt faced no criminal charges, because prosecutors decided that he acted in self-defense. But the 39-year-old did lose his job: Carrying a gun violated Pizza Hut's no-weapons rule.

"It's not fair," says Honeycutt of Carmel, Ind., who has found another pizza-delivery job and continues to carry a gun. "There is a constitutional right to bear arms. If I'm going to die, I'd rather be killed defending myself."

Employers have long banned guns from the workplace as part of a violence-prevention strategy, but those policies are being tested as states pass laws making it easier for residents to carry concealed guns - in some cases, crafting legislation that strikes down employers' attempts to keep guns off company property.

What happens in these arguments is that most people wind up focusing solely on guns, with all the attendant concern about fear, violence, hostility, etc. that comes with them. In that context, both sides can point to anecdotes of either workplace violence (see "going postal") or parking lot attacks where the victim either was able or unable to defend herself late at night in a parking garage or dimly lit parking lot in a bad section of town. This is becoming more of a concern in recent years as states pass less restrictive concealed carry legislation. Two states, Oklahoma and Kentucky, have laws specifically protecting keeping guns inside a locked vehicle in workplace parking lots. (Note that Whirlpool has backed off.)

Commenter John DeWitt frames the argument when he writes,

But unlike a number of gun rights activists I believe property rights trump all.

And this is the springboard for the discussion which seems, to me, sadly lacking from the coverage of the issue. The following is a restatement and expansion of my comments at TCF.

MORE...

Indeed, John.

Your right to defend yourself, i.e. your life, is a property right. What is the most dear thing you possess? Your own self. Your own body. Your own life. Just as it is your right to prevent someone from stealing your tangible property (e.g. land, a car, etc.) it is also your right to prevent someone from taking your life from you. Do you think the the term "taking your life" as a synonym for murder is a coincidence? Rights inhere to possession. A fundamental right from possession is control over how a possesion may be used.

This issue is a really good one for understanding rights. It regrettably gets lost in the hollering from both sides, and so a really good airing of the philosophical questions doesn't happen. Instead, we get complaints such as Honeycutt's "It's not fair". How is it not fair, sir? Did someone coerce you into entering into an employment agreement?

Everybody understands that "my right to swing my fist ends where your nose starts". This is a statement of balancing rights based on burden. Is it a greater burden for me to accomodate your rights, or the other way around? Is it easier for you to deal with a broken nose, or for me to not swing my fist?

The parking lot question is a little more difficult, because there's an economic burden in having difficulty finding a job with an accomodating employer. The burden a company would bear in accomodating gun-carrying employees (or customers for that matter) is more difficult to define, but it includes such things as a risk of violence, and all the liabilities which could come from that. Note that some gun-rights advocates are arguing for a law which makes a company liable for damages resulting from an inability to defend one's self, if a company has a no-guns policy.

But the person who is entering the property carrying a gun is the active party, and thus I think that from a philosophical point of view, it's less burdensome for that person to cease the activity than it is for the passive party (in this case the company owning the property) to accede.

Let's assume that the state steps in and passes a law which states that business owners may not prohibit carrying of weapons onto their property. The businesses' property rights have been diluted with no recourse other than the courts for restoration of their rights (in the eyes of the law #&151; I stipulate that the law may never actually take away a right, so there's no need to argue the point). This is a significant burden upon the right to control the use of their own property.

By contrast, the burden on the individual for restoring full exercise of his right to self preservation (via carrying a gun) is to simply leave the property, or not enter in the first place. This is really the same as saying that his rights have never been diluted in the first place, since it is a personal choice to enter such a property (where the owner states guns may not be carried). There is no coercion on the part of the state, or either party, in what is, in effect, a contract between two parties, the terms of which specify under what conditions a person may enter the property. By the act of entering the property, the individual implicitly consents to the terms of the property owner. If you don't consent, don't enter, or leave when you are informed of the terms.

So there are really two rights at work here. Right in property, and right of self-defense. By passing a law restricting businesses' ability to make policy, the state infringes on both.

So in the end, I wind up not liking it when I see gun-rights advocates arguing in favor of infringing on other rights. For when you argue that under some set of circumstances, the state may burden a particular right, you put the others in jeapordy of similar reasoning.

Source

815 posted on 12/15/2004 8:18:55 PM PST by Luis Gonzalez (Some people see the world as they would want it to be, effective people see the world as it is.)
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To: Everybody
Rockchucker, from TCF claimed:

"So in the end, I wind up not liking it when I see gun-rights advocates arguing in favor of infringing on other rights.
For when you argue that under some set of circumstances, the state may burden a particular right, you put the others in jeapordy of similar reasoning."


When just above that he correctly argued:

"Your right to defend yourself, i.e. your life, is a property right.
What is the most dear thing you possess? Your own self. Your own body. Your own life."




He has trapped himself in his own logic.
He agrees that mans most primary right is to defend himself. -- Indeed. the State is charged in our Constitution to prevent infringements on that individual right.


Parking lot property rights do not trump our RKBA's, and it is specious to claim that defending an individuals gun rights would somehow -- "put the others in jeopardy of similar reasoning".
823 posted on 12/15/2004 8:48:35 PM PST by jonestown ( JONESTOWN, TX http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles)
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To: Luis Gonzalez
""Public policy" has nothing to do with the private policies established by a property owner when exercising his property rights on his land."

I posted what is.

" Your right to defend yourself, i.e. your life, is a property right."

It is not. The right to self defense is a sovereignty right. It is based on your right to life which is the most fundamental right and the coequal right of sovereignty over that life's will. The right to sovereignty over one's own will defines Freedom. Freedom exists when the right is honored. Property is external tangible, or intangible objects which are owned. They are under the control of the person who owns them. The person who owns them is the being that has the right to life and the right of sovereignty over that life and all rights that derive from that.

The person, his right to life and soveignty over it's will exist as is, and independently from the input of any other being. All beings come to the same conclusion about that. Property rights are not fixed, but depend on the input from others to define. If there's only one being that exists, everything else is his and he is sovereign over those objects. Once othes exist, they must come up with a scheme to divide those objects amonst themselves for the purpose of usage and sovereignty considerations. To make it short, personal property is owned by the person who holds sovereignty over it. Real property always has as it's ultimate sovereign some form of govm't. That's the scheme that exists.

Real property right never trumps the right to life and right to sovereignty over that life and it's will.

829 posted on 12/15/2004 11:47:27 PM PST by spunkets
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To: Luis Gonzalez
For when you argue that under some set of circumstances, the state may burden a particular right, you put the others in jeapordy of similar reasoning.

That's it in a nutshell, I think. Nice find.

834 posted on 12/16/2004 5:17:09 AM PST by NittanyLion
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