MoonlessNight
Fides et Ratio
- Sep 16, 2003
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I think to be a private club, one has to meet certain criteria and applt, then have their application approved. That's how country clubs work. I can walk into a restaurant ooen to the public and expect service, but I can't walk into the dining room of the local country club and expect service if I'm not a member. If a dating site worked like a country club in this regard, it might be exempt from following anti discrimination laws, but if it hangs up it's shingle and welcomes all who want to spend their money, then it likely wouldn't be exempt.
You might want to investigate the history of private clubs which restricted their membership to men, and in particular the number of times that such clubs have been sued.
What you are asking for is for Christian businesses to change their method of business in a way that would probably hurt their bottom line, in the hopes that it might allow them to win court cases (it certainly won't save them from being sued and dragged into court in the first place) when cases have went against people who did exactly what you suggest.
I agree with thatbrian on a level of goals: businesses should be allowed to serve whomever they want for whatever reason they want. I agree that this certainly is not how it works now, but I think that such a situation would be preferable to the current one. The current one requires that Christian businesses jump through all sorts of hoops in order to avoid violating their consciences, and at any point they can be attacked for not really having Christian motivations (since the only reason that they seem to be allowed exemptions are feeble attempts to allow for religious freedom). But if businesses could choose to limit their services entirely for their own reasons, there would be no reason for all the extra stipulations and no risk of being ruled against afterwards anyway.
I do realize that such a world would also allow people to limit service for bad reasons, but I suspect that in today's world of organized boycotts most businesses that did something truly heinous wouldn't last for long, at least not as a major business entity. There was no law which forced Brandon Eich, for example, to step down, and he didn't do anything that a Christian would find objectionable. If a major business did start openly excluding certain races or something similar, I can't even imagine the level of customer pushback.
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