Owen Sparks
member
- Joined
- May 27, 2007
- Messages
- 4,523
The only way this rule is legally binding is that you knowingly agree to it as a condition of using the range. They can't just spring it on you as a surprise after you have paid to shoot.
certaindeaf said:Geez, so if you park your car in their parking lot it becomes theirs? Pretty much the same thing.. foolish.
Who said anything about "discarding"? The temporarily leaving of one's property is the thing at issue/similar. It's quite obvious to me you don't understand the concept of conceptualization.. look it up why don't you.You obviously don't understand the meaning of "discard" if you think that they're the same thing.
But you are correct in your assumption that if you discard your property on property that belongs to someone else, then they assume control and ownership of it. That's why there are procedures to get titles on abandoned vehicles.
Miriam-Webster has a free online dictionary here that will help your reading comprehension:
http://www.merriam-webster.com/
You obviously don't understand the meaning of "discard" if you think that they're the same thing.
Yeah, it's a long list but it is posted in several locations at the range. The shooters have a responsibility to read and understand. Also, new members who like me use a yearly membership have the full range rules read to them rule by rule and explained to them before they cough up money for membership.Dang. That is a huge lsit of rules.
I wonder what % of shooters read them all?
I'm curious, though. What constitutes a "high power rifle"?
High power rifles may be shot with soft point or hollow point ammo and 1 round in magazine at a time. Target must be back the full 75 feet.