@ThatOneDude said in RL Anger:
Would it have been the "one" thing that now banned that dog from the store based on this perceived unspoken rule?
I regularly go out to eat. I'm allergic to legumes, nuts, and some other things that will kill me if ingested. Is it reasonable for me to demand that all such products are removed from the store and my presence? Is it reasonable for me to demand that all such products are removed from grocery stores at which I frequent?
Going out in public logically requires a person to be prepared to deal with their allergies, if they have them. If I were management, I would tell that one customer to deal with it. Having a dog-friendly store is likely more important to business than the one customer that has a complaint about that policy.
What gives someone the right to have a dog that isn't a service dog with them everywhere?
Nothing.
What of the people with allergies ... They don't matter?
No more than any other customer, I presume.
I'm more curious about this unspoken rule part because I'm sure if the dog did something like bit a child there would most likely be no mention of said rule from the store right?
I guess not? That sounds like an issue between management and their CG / Premises Liability insurance carrier and/or agent.
This is a joke right? This argument in response to the question?
You go out to eat, hence you expect... No you know there will be FOOD there.
So by virtue of most the responses, more so with the food allergy example this means the lady in the store should avoid the grocery store? One that has an unspoken rule to allow dogs? Unspoken or one that "tolerates" dogs. But that doesn't make this fact known through posted policy... Maybe the lady will now never return to that store but does it really make her wrong?
My point with the dog and the store is how is this lady any more wrong for assuming the dog shouldn't be there vs the owner assuming the dog should be there? If you were to ask any logical person ANYWHERE if there are dogs in grocery stores the answer would 95% of the time be "No there are not."
I'm deathly allergic to cats and guess what, I don't go places there are cats. If a cat were in the grocery store I might not say something like that lady did but I don't see how if I did how it would make me "wrong"?
Would you still say I'm wrong if there were laws against animals in grocery stores in my state?