
But I wasn't the owner of the establishment so it wasn't my choice.
If someone wants to refuse business for personal reasons then they have the right to do so. Just as the couple had a right to complain about it.
( , Tue 22 Jun 2010, 10:53, Reply)

...personal reasons would be "I don't like you, you're a cunt" as opposed to "I don't like you, you're a gayer". You can discriminate against cunts, but not against homosexuals or people of races you find objectionable. That's kind of the law, but is also just wrong.
( , Tue 22 Jun 2010, 11:01, Reply)

this is a difficult area. the guy is a nazi but has human rights that he would deny to others if he got into power.
let him in, if other guests leave due to this, sue him for loss maybe? is this even possible?
( , Tue 22 Jun 2010, 11:06, Reply)

If you open your house up to the public as a b&b then it would be breaking descrimination laws to ban people because they're gay.
In my eyes there's no difference between this & the "No Dogs, No blacks, No Irish" signs that occasional b&bs sported in the 50s.
Except nowadays there are laws in place to stop this.
( , Tue 22 Jun 2010, 11:46, Reply)

Irish Wolfhound shit on the front porch
( , Tue 22 Jun 2010, 14:34, Reply)