JKTex wrote:
HA, I just went over to look around for the first time in probably 3-4 years. First one I see for my town is a bar, properly posting 51% as they are required. 2nd one is an AMC which is the same issue as every AMC, grossly invalid signage. If it's not legit, it's not legit and doesn't need anything further over-read in to it.
Here is a slightly different perspective.
While the bar that you mentioned is legally posted per the TABC, it might not have been required to do so.
- It looks like a bar when you first walk in but the actual bar area is not that much different versus the total square footage of the business than a TGI Friday's or an Outback Steak house are.
- they do serve food and on some nights, their food business is brisk. Without looking at their books, there is no way to tell except the red sign that they don't earn enough money from their food sales to give them blue sign status. I don't accept the obvious without verification because sometimes, the obvious is incorrect.
Regarding invalid signage:
- I make my own determinations where I walk past those signs or not. The specific details about a particular business allows me to assess my own personal risk in walking past the sign. For those signs that reference parts of the TPC that no longer exist, I might be more inclined to carry past than where the sign wording is complete and accurate but the letters are too small.
- in some cases, I have a choice that I can make among stores. A store that posts an invalid sign has signaled to me that they don't want my business and I'd like to know that before I drive there. I prefer to give my business to stores that acknowledge my 2nd Amendment rights like Starbucks did this year. So it isn't a matter of my treating the sign as invalid as much as it is basing my shopping preferences on my own criteria. I won't step foot in an AMC theater as long as Tinseltown exists and I don't care if they print their 30.06 sign on the back of a business card or in 3 foot tall neon letters. The website helps me make those decisions.