So the right to discriminate trumps all? The fact that I'm an equal citizen and that my money is just as good as the next person's has no weight? How sad for you.
What right to discriminate?
There's a right to do as one wishes with one's property, a right to freedom of association, a right to privacy. There is no right to violate any of those -- but that's exactly what anti-discrimination laws do.
My "fantasies" are simple illustrations to demonstrate how wrong you are.
No, they're fantasies born out of a belief that all people are so irrational and evil they'll resort to violence merely because they object to someone exercising his rights. The fact that roughly half of all Americans own firearms and many of them go about armed as a habit shows that to be a fantasy.
And you feel no sense of guilt? Really?
If someone threatens my life and I prevent that, why should I feel guilty?
And if someone threatened the lives of my customers and I prevented that, shouldn't I feel proud?
Anyone who draws a gun on me has declared that he doesn't believe in the right to life, or liberty. That makes him, literally, an outlaw, outside the law, not deserving the protection of the law. He has, in fact, invited me to play by his rules, so if I shoot and kill him, all I've done is accepted his invitation. So by his terms, I played fair, and for society, I've done everyone a favor.
Where did I suggest that anyone had the right to steal your products from you? Now who's fantasizing?
That's the principle you're maintaining, that it's legitimate to make someone else do as you wish with what is his.
"I saw it all happen. . . you pulled the gun to threaten him, and he pulled his to defend himself! He wasn't trying to steal anything, he was trying to buy your product at a fair profit!" (Which IS legal!)
You're confusing legality with rights.
If he's on my property, and I don't want him there, he's stealing just as much as the guy who gets a free bus ride. If you want a different definition of property, we can talk about that -- but if it's private property, it's private property, regardless of whether it's a business, a home, a church, a bath house, a cemetery....
Being prevented from discriminating as a business does not prevent the individual owner from their right to be as bigoted as they want (within the law). Your argument here is akin to those who insist that giving gays the right to marry somehow infringes on their right to worship as they please. Your reasoning suggests that the business has the same rights as any individual. Individuals have civil rights. Businesses do not. And an individual who owns a business does not get to extend his civil rights upon that business.
So by owning a business, someone becomes a second-class citizen. The operation of a business is an extension of the person, if it's a private business. Though your argument could have merit applied to publicly-held corporations, since they have invited all the public to become their owners.
By your argument here, it would be legitimate to have a government censor for media -- the people at the media can hold their opinions, but they don't have to be allowed to print them. And you could license churches -- the people at the church can believe what they want, but they don't have to be allowed to exercise those beliefs.
I in no way suggested that the business must be subjected to anything illegal. I was not promoting thievery. I was promoting fair trade between two human beings.
It's stunning to me that you seem to hold that opinion without the faintest hint of guilt. That the right to discriminate is more important to you than basic human equality. . . sad.
But you aren't talking about "basic human equality" -- you're saying that by virtue of owning a business, some people are second-class citizens.
As I noted before, this is really rooted in the concept of property -- I started a new thread about that.