Dak
mentat
I agree. So your position is, because it will inevitably happen anyway (i.e. anything is potentially harmful to individuals in some way), we should reduce everything to the individual and let them fend for themselves. We have no means by which to culturally mediate the disagreements among individuals? The minimal social impact of the owner's personal opinions becomes more culturally valuable than the broader social impact he's inflicting upon others "because: self-ownership."
This is where self-ownership becomes dogmatic and ridiculous. Where it precludes the possibility of collective action.
EDIT: this is a fitting response: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/02/...ve-fggots-gets-internet-push-as-best-gay-bar/
Doesn't look like it precludes collective action/mediation to me....
If we are going to get dogmatic on something, self-ownership looks like the one thing to get pretty dogmatic on. There's no workably pleasant alternative. No one is dying in the street because he won't allow them to increase his profits. Additionally, although we can't put a dollar value on the unpleasantry of being unwelcome in a given establishment (I've never been in the cool crowd, so I need a million dollars!), we can estimate the dollar value that the owner is being charged for his bigotry. Average check size X ( number of customers lost + number turned away) = Cost of bigotry. It's not like he's "getting away with it". And of course, he can win the best Gay Bar Award. Looks like he's having a pretty outsized broader impact and it's not to his benefit - and doesn't require us to hold a gun to his head.
