O
Ophelia23
Guest
‘These people’?
“THESE PEOPLE”?
You seem to be labouring under the misapprehension that gay people are somehow objectively worthy of being discriminated against, as though by their very nature they are to be reviled and rejected, as if they were another species even and not human.
If you believe that a business owner has the moral right to refuse service to “these people” he knows to be homosexual (since it is not possible to tell just by looking at two persons of the same gender who are not acting in a sexual fashion what their sexual orientation is, then he must have either had more knowledge or made an unfounded assumption), then in a small town, as this appears to have been, would the food store owner be within his moral rights to refuse to sell food to “these people”?
Is the water company within its rights to refuse to supply water and sanitation services to “these people”?
Is the bus company within its rights to refuse to carry “these people” on their vehicles? Or make them sit only in specific types of seat?
Is the car dealer within its rights to refuse to sell them an automobile?
Is everyone who dislikes homosexual sexual activity within their rights to refuse to conduct business with anyone whom they believe to be homosexual, regardless of the outcome?
Your position can only logically lend itself to the proposition that you wouldn’t lift a finger to object to discrimination on those bases… and that if it meant that a homosexual starved to death or died of thirst or was hounded out of town then that would be a-ok by you. Obviously nobody would be physically laying hands on such people or personally assaulting them. No individual would be causing an injury. But where would you stop? At what point would you tell someone that their prejudice and discrimination was actually going too far and was causing harm? When the person was homeless? Hungry? Thirsty? Sick? Clothed in rags? Ostracised?