So how far should a property owners right extend? What else can they prevent me from having in my locked car in their parking lot? If they are some type of environmental freak can they have a rule against aerosol cans in my locked car? If they are an atheist can they forbid my carrying a Bible in my locked car? How about limiting what bumper stickers on my car might say since it is parked in their lot? Where is the limit?
Roadking Larry said:Second if you can cite an example of my keeping any legal item locked in my car causes any harm to the owner of a business that I might park my car on then I might have something to discuss.
Guys, the point is that its not your property... so who are you to demand that the owner not set certain rules for it, or that they must allow you to bring certain property on it?
As the owner of a piece of property, you have the right to kick anybody off for any reason or no reason, so yes, you have every right to kick people off for having aerosol cans, bibles, bumper stickers, or anything else. Or nothing. If you just don't like the way they look, you can tell them to scram.
The property owner owes no duty to you to justify their rule. It could be completely irrational, and it could be a rule against something that does him absolutely no harm... but that doesn't in any way diminish his property rights.
Lack of respect for the property rights of others is one of the biggest reasons our country is in such sorry shape.
And to answer the question about how far your property rights should extend -- they are like all your other liberties; they extend to the point that they do not infringe on anyone else's equal amount of liberty.