I don't have to scream it if the courts are saying it for me
so if you agree with whataburger, wtf are you talking about with opinion validation
I don't have to scream it if the courts are saying it for me
Do you have to? No. Do you do it anyways? Yes.
Maybe it's not political for WB, but they'd just prefer Not to have a bunch of ty neck-beards carrying long guns and scaring restaurant patrons for the sake of drawing attention. It likely an economic decision, not a political one.
This is Texas mother er, I shower with my gun!
I ain't 'bout to let no liberal yankee fancy burger joint tell me I can't bring my gun. naw.
You realize Whataburger is headquartered in San Antonio, right?
Is that a yes or a no? you don't seem to be very well informed tbh.
I don't understand why Red Robin had to get all political when they prevented a doctor from performing an abortion on its patio today...
No I don't. I have no dog in the fight and I don't care about changing some random poster's internet mind. I'm just here for the entertainment.
pls let me have a gun
cuz I feel like a loser and a coward when i don't have it
but when I do carry it, I feel like I'm a tough guy, espcially when I carry a fun AND walk my pitbull
This, tbh. The you need a gun at whataburger for anyways? Gonna get into a shootout over chicken strips?
Sad to see Whataburger sell out to the lib agenda.
Maybe they just don't want guns in their restaurants.
Open-carry at a place like Whataburger is bad for business. People dining in there greenly don't want to see other patrons showcasing their guns. It makes many people uneasy.
I'm a gun owner, but I don't want to pay to take my kid to eat around armed strangers any more than I want to take him to a restaurant where homeless people are allowed to beg for food. There's a time and a place for guns as much as there is for charity. I'm also a capitalist, and believe businesses have the right to protect the brand, product, and customer experience they've spent millions perfecting. "No shirt, no shoes, no service," and "no loitering" policies are a common example of business owners trying to improve customer experience by engendering the perception that their establishments are sanitary, family-friendly, and safe. There's also the issue of insurance that businesses have to reckon with: if an business has no policy regarding weapons on its premises or goes so far as to encourage its patrons to be armed, the exposure to lawsuits biz owners face will skyrocket, resulting in crippling insurance rates that will drive prices up and customers away. "No skateboarding on company premises" policies are an example of businesses trying to reduce their exposure to lawsuits. In other words... chill.
It's sad to see Whataburger not open any restaurants in southern California.
Yeah... I remember the good ol' days when everyone was packing heat when they went to a fast food restaurant. The firing ranges on the playground. The gun racks next to the coat racks. The free gun with a Kid's Meal. Good conversation over french fries with folks about where you bought your gun, why your gun is special to you, how many guns you have, which gun you're going to buy next, your kid's favorite gun, what kind of gun Jesus probably owned, etc. Those were the days, until the whiny lib s came in and destroyed our gun-soaked fast food paradise.
A Whatachicken without a gun laying next to it is like a cousin without your in her.
I have a carry license - had one for years, but anyone upset about Whataburger not wanting OPEN carry in their restaurants is just being that way.
put it in your pants, and enjoy a burger. words to live by, tbh.
Are you really not getting that What a burger has the right to refuse service to anyone for any reason?
ever shot anybody?
ever un-holstered your gun for a perceived threat?
do you carry everywhere? or just when you're going to a dangerous place, like a black church?
Last edited by boutons_deux; 07-10-2015 at 11:31 AM.
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