I disagree. If you open a business to the general public, you have an
obligation to abide by a certain set of standards. Those include health and
safety, public accessibility, and, yes, non-discrimination standards. That
is part of being in a community.

I'm ok with private groups doing their own little freaky thing, like
Augusta Golf Club when they didn't allow female members. Dumb, but
whatever.  I'd generally lump in churches under the private club label as
groups that are intended for an exclusive set of people, not generally open
to the public. Dumb, but whatever.

Cheers,
Judah


On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 8:29 AM, LRS Scout <lrssc...@gmail.com> wrote:

>
> She's right, as an individual, and as a private business owner you should
> be able to interact with those you choose.
>
> The communities response should be to not do business with those they find
> abhorrent.  The individual or business will be forced to either change
> their policies, or fail.
>
>


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