jmra wrote:Taypo wrote:Maybe something is getting lost in the Internet here, so I want to make sure I'm not missing something.
You go into a private business openly carrying, you are asked by an employee to leave and you feel like you're entitled to speak to someone else because that employee wasn't a manager or owner?
Technically it has to be someone with the authority to speak for the organization. Typically this would be a manager or owner.
If it were me and I had temporarily lost my mind and OCed in a store I would leave if anyone with a name tag told me OC was not allowed.
There is no typically when it comes to small business, which is the point I'm trying to make. If you walk into a 7-11 at 2am, there's probably neither a manager nor an owner present. Same with any number of small businesses, yet it appears as though some of the folks here seem to believe that they have the right to stand where they are and demand to talk to a boss.
If you want to make a phone call after the fact because you don't feel like the "box boy" was correct, go for it. Personally, I'd take my money elsewhere if OC was that important to me.
I think the worst possible thing any of us can do is draw attention to ourselves at this point. Standing in a store arguing about your right to open carry because the person who asked you to leave wasn't powerful enough for you is just that - negative attention.