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View Poll Results: Should same sex Marrige be legalized?

Voters
128. You may not vote on this poll
  • Yes, in everyway in everyplace.

    72 56.25%
  • No, not ever.

    13 10.16%
  • Yes, but it shouldn't be called marrige.

    23 17.97%
  • Let each individual state/country decide for it's self.

    20 15.63%
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  1. #1
    Just a little OFF
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    South Carolina
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    Quote Originally Posted by IAN 2411 View Post
    However obscenity on a T shirt would probably get a person kicked out if they never complied with a cover it up request.
    So how would you define 'obscenity', then? Are you sure that others would define it the same way? After all, what you consider obscene may not be the same as something I consider obscene.

    This kind of thing plays into the controversy between the rights of a business to be selective about its clientele and the rights of the individual to equal treatment under the law. Can a private business restrict the kinds of clothing worn by its customers? Even if the customer feels he has the right to wear what he wants? Many businesses will not permit people to enter without shirts, or shoes. Are they guilty of discrimination?

    Personally, while I deplore the kind of mentality that would want to cover up such a shirt, I see no problem with a privately owned business having a dress code for its customers. If you don't like it, don't go there.
    "A casual stroll through the lunatic asylum shows that faith does not prove anything." - Friedrich Nietzsche

  2. #2
    {Leo9}
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Posts
    1,443
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    Quote Originally Posted by Thorne View Post
    So how would you define 'obscenity', then? Are you sure that others would define it the same way? After all, what you consider obscene may not be the same as something I consider obscene.

    This kind of thing plays into the controversy between the rights of a business to be selective about its clientele and the rights of the individual to equal treatment under the law. Can a private business restrict the kinds of clothing worn by its customers? Even if the customer feels he has the right to wear what he wants? Many businesses will not permit people to enter without shirts, or shoes. Are they guilty of discrimination?

    Personally, while I deplore the kind of mentality that would want to cover up such a shirt, I see no problem with a privately owned business having a dress code for its customers. If you don't like it, don't go there.
    I do not agree. It is not a dress code, and no one can know what their rules are until they bump into them.

    You cannot logically say that it is a family park, and then tell some people not to have comments on their family on their T shirt.

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