by RobertNashville » Mon Jun 07, 2010 7:01 pm
Is Austin Peay "posted" or is it just common knowledge that guns aren't allowed on campus?
Assuming you do carry and leave your gun in your locked vehicle, do they have any standing to demand to search your vehicle (i.e.; do students give agree to such things as part the conditions of being accepted as a student)?
If the school and grounds and parking lots aren't specifically and legally posted to disallow firearms then I would suspect that the worst the school could "do" to a student would be to expel him/her but in reality, unless they can expel the student for refusing to let them search the student's vehicle, I don't see how the issue would become an issue (i.e., unless you broadcast that you have a gun in your locked vehicle; how would they even know to ask to search in the first place???).
I guess this is why I made my initial post - rational, reasonable people know that a gun sitting in a locked vehicle is not going to harm anyone; guns don't suddenly get up and start shooting people anymore than a hammer will get up off a tool bench and start pounding nails (I will add, however, that I do have a "safe" in my vehicle to hold my firearm on those occasions when I leave it to lessen the chance of it being stolen). Since such firearms aren't a threat, there is no rational reason why anyone who can legally possess and/or carry a firearm shouldn't be able to leave his/her weapon in a locked vehicle anywhere a vehicle is parked including parking lots of workplaces, stores/shopping malls, school grounds, college campuses, government buildings etc. even if those buildings/facilities are posted against carry/possession of firearms in those facilities.
Such a change to the law seems to me to recognize and protect both the rights of individual citizens to the tools to protect themselves while allowing businesses/employers, etc their property rights.
Let's hope this gets addressed this upcoming session!
Robert
-My Basset Hound is smarter than your honor student and 52% of the voting public -