Circled Square wrote:Because this is my opinion, on all these issues, on discrimination, on anything. Let businesses be bigoted shitheads, they can have the right to do so...who cares? Like honestly? It's not as if say, Joe's bakery doesn't serve Gay people, well they can go down to Bob's Bakery, who do serve Gay people. It's like meth being legal. Would you start doing meth if it was legal? No. Non-violent protest of anybody should be legal, in my opinion. Don't shoot them on sight lmao but you should have the right to not serve somebody.
Would you not let Gay people into your business just because you can legally? No!
So let me get this straight: you would also support a law that legalised crystal meth? Just because you don't have to do it if you don't have to? I see the point you're making, but it's a pretty terrifying one. Out of curiosity, are you an anarchist? Because that's the route this line of thinking seems to be leading down.
It's true that usually doing bad things will usually bring some kind of negative consequence down on the person who does these things. And that often society will punish those who commit these terrible acts without the need for state intervention. But that doesn't mean laws banning these crimes don't serve a purpose.
To use the meth comparison: if it was legalised, it would become easier to find. There are probably many people out there now who would do the drug but don't have access to it. Or who would do the drug more if they had more access to it. And if meth was easy to come across, more people might be persuaded to take it due to curiosity or being easily influenced. There would likely be more competition between dealers and it would become cheaper, which would make it even more dangerous. More people get addicted, more people get sick, more people die.
And sure if someone's buddy gets killed after taking meth, they might not buy from that dealer again. They might even beat the shit out of him. The evil shit he did will probably come back to bite him in the ass. But people are still dead. You can't tell me that forbidding the sale of the drug in the first place isn't preferable.
And it's the same with this Indiana law. Sure business men will likely be punished if they choose to be assholes. They might lose some business. But why encourage people to be assholes in the first place? Sure gay people can go eat at Bob's Bakery, but they're going to be upset that they were turned away from Joe's Bakery just because of their sexual preference. It could ruin their whole day. Why encourage that behaviour? What possible good could come from it?
Lets not forget either, that while Joe might be a cunt, he's not the one who decided it was okay to treat gay people this way. Indiana's government decided it was okay. Those who are being discriminated against aren't going to just think "that Joe is a right bastard, I'd rather not give him business anyway". They're going to be thinking about how their own government hates them and thinks of them as lesser people. That's not a problem you can solve by eating at Bob's.
So no, this law is just bad and those who campaigned for it should feel bad. The end.