I find your expectation that people will weed out discrimination in businesses by themselves without any government intervention naive to the extreme.
If it had been left up to "the people" in the 1800s, we would have had slavery for quite a while afterward. And frankly the South may well still have segregation.
If it was up to the much-idealized "American people" people could still be fired from their jobs for no other reason than their sexual orientation, and gays could be denied the right to visit their partner of 30 years in the hospital.
If you are going to run a public business, then that is not your private property. You have declared yourself open to the public, therefore you have to serve the public. And yes, "the public" does include people you don't like.
I don't like having to cater to the welfare leeches who come through my line at K-Mart and try to use their food stamps for things that aren't necessities and that they're not approved for. And half the time they demand a manager, and half the time the manager lets it slide through. As far as I'm concerned, if you're going to try to use food stamps to buy alcohol, then you don't need to eat.
But guess what? It's not up to me.
And there is no reason why I should have to drive twenty miles out of my way, when I might be on a tight schedule, just to get something I could have gotten 5 minutes from my house, just because the store owner is dumber than me and doesn't like that I'm white, or how I'm dressed, or because he thinks I'm gay, or because he's a Martian who doesn't serve humans. He does not have the right to inconvenience me. His business exists to serve me. If it's not willing to do that, it is not fulfilling its purpose.
I will return to this
But I really hope you don't believe that someone's business exists to serve you and not the owner of the business.
I have to agree. I'm not quite sure where this new-found attitude of trumpeting a completely hands off government and pumping up your own merits came from Norm, but it's a bit off-putting. I have a ton of respect for you, but some of the things you've been pushing lately are just not wise.
The fact of the matter is that the government DOES need to intervene in certain issues. (Whether anyone likes it or not.) This ideallic american public that you speak of does not exist.
It stems from a greater understanding of economics, human nature, philosophy, history and taoism.
What began as a shift from conservatism to libertarianism has shifted all aspects of my life. It has shifted my personal philosophy from one of altruism to one of of utilitarian-objectivism, my personal faith from Christian to Deist-Taoism and my economic foundation from ignorance to capitalism.
My passion is freedom, liberty.
America is the nation of freedom. Taoism is the religious form of freedom. Objectivism is the philosophy of freedom. Capitalism is the economic form of freedom. The internet (which I contend is the most important invention since America) is the medium of freedom (it creates a free market of human opinion).
As my knowledge increases, my radicalism increases.
I simply don't confuse "freedom" with utopia. I understand that the brilliance of humanity is the fact that we can be either good or bad. I believe that good is good not simply due to superficial human understandings of good, but a higher natural morality. If you run around killing people, you are more likely to be killed. If you run around being nice to everyone, you are more likely to live a long life.
The same is true in business. If you are an evil businessman, you will get your comeuppence. It's not naive, it's true. Whenever a company has a bad reputation, it's being less successful than it could be (which is not to say it's not successful as is). Nike's profits went down when accused of child sweat shop labor. BP's profits went down when they spilt oil into the gulf. A local restaurant known for treating their workers like **** has less customers than the same food being served at the same location treating their employees well.
To me, this is all common sense. Not simply in how it "should" be, but in how it is.
At least I am aware of the fact I am a far right wing wacko extremist-for-capitalism. Being aware allows for two things: one, I can prevent being extreme from being a political liability and two, more importantly, I am necessarily cautious about being wrong (again, my favorite historical figure and the man who I seek to emulate is Alexander Hamilton. Hamilton, in spite of his talent, brilliance and significance, was wrong. It's the most important personal lesson I have learned - that great men, with great intentions can still be greatly mistaken).
That's why I believe in the practical application of Constitutionalism over "true" Libertarianism. While a Libertarian would advocate against the ability of anyone to regulate industry, a Constitutionalist would allow government to do so if authorized by a "higher law" (meaning a law that is placed beyond typical politics - to better understand the concept, consider the difference in a Constitutional Amendment - which requires bipartisan, national support - compared to your average House bill). In my ideal 21st Century government, if a state like Massachusetts wanted to have their own Civil Rights Act, enact Universal Healthcare and revoke Private Property in exchange for some crazy socialist scheme - I would support their ability to attempt it. I just want a state like New Hampshire to be able to decide for their state that they want a libertarian government. Political competition is the best method to ensure efficiency in government. When the Federal Government has a monopoly on government, we all lose. Seriously lose.
Now my ideal 22th Century government would be Anarco-capitalism, but that's another post for another day
