Posted on 10/31/2015 5:41:18 PM PDT by SteveinSATX
Donald Trumps assertion at Wednesdays Republican presidential debate that sickos take advantage of gun-free zones to kill people is complicated, it turns out, by the fact that many of his own hotel properties does not allow weapons, even if properly permitted.
Given that the remark happened on the fly during a debate and that Mr. Trump himself, by his own admission, only carries a firearm occasionally could explain the discrepancy between Trumps political beliefs and corporate policy at some of the properties that bear his name (as discovered by Reuters sleuthing.)
Yet Trumps primer on how Second Amendment rights and safety concerns underscores a difficult and evolving paradox for many US business owners: Retail outlets are wrestling first-hand with increasingly liberalized US gun laws, such as the permit-less constitutional carry law that became law this month in Maine.
(Excerpt) Read more at csmonitor.com ...
What you just did was explain the value of Situational Ethics.
Everything seems to “depend on the situation” because “it’s not that simple”.
No thanks.
“I think these questions go back to whether the right to defend oneself supersede property rights. The right of a property owner to control what happens on his property?”
Pretty much. In general I think of it as a conflict of rights (or a conflict of asserted rights which may or may not be really held) which in this discussion involves property rights.
But the situation is important.
If you kill me because you don’t like my face it’s murder on your part.
If you kill me because I’m trying to kill you because I don’t like your face it’s not murder but justifiable homicide.
Either way I’m dead, but whether it’s murder or justifiable homicide depends on the situation in which I got dead.
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