How about if a straight person gets refused entry into a Gay Bar (which apparently happens fairly frequently) would it be OK to sue the Gay Bar.
If that gay bar is advertised as public and commercial enterprise then yes; however, the person that does this will be need to find a lawyer who is willing to spend time to get access to said bar and be willing to be publicly known. In winning he will have the right to go to a bar where he will be allowed entry, served in an environment where the patrons will all hate him. Sounds worth it to win a moral victory to get entry somewhere you don't want to be in the first place.
Same is true for a male escort. If some closet case really wants to have a night with a man (money is exchange for time and company only) and feels discriminated against for being straight? Then yes, he can sue for the privilege of a night of satisfying mutual fun.
I've never been refused entry when I've been with men or women (or both). Maybe you should just be more polite if you want to get in?
My opinion is NO they shouldn't be able to sue, because if gays feel better amongst themselves and don't want straights in the bar, then I'm OK with it and can even understand their position.
Generally speaking, that's why places like "Women Only" gyms can get away with it. What man wants to go to a gym with equipment designed for women? With mostly women? You look like an idiot for challenging. Where challenged - states have held that women only gyms are not legal. I think Alaska may be an exception if I recall.
Also, often, it's not a gay or heterosexual distinction. A lot of gay male bars don't want lesbians. Why? Because gay men are still men.
I think the road to your house is public, does that mean that the central goverment authority can tell you what and what you cant do at home?
Yes they can tell you what you can and can't do at home. It's not an anarchy, yet. You can't build a meth lab, you can't rape children amongst other things. I'm not sure I understand the logic of this argument - I don't see how this is related in any way - we can extend the slippery slope argument to everything.
There are things they should control and their are things they shouldn't. They can't (shouldn't) tell me who or what I do in my home if it's not damaging to society at large.
I think it that it is a shame that it got vetoed, it would be better for people that hate gays to just come out of the closet and let us know, then we can decide if we want to do business with them or not.
I think they will still let it be known. You know as well as I do that if you went to a business and the owner said he hated gays/blacks/whites/baldies/women or whatever group you belonged to you'd likely walk. I don't think any law says you can't tell the customer your views as long as it doesn't include actual discrimination of service.
would you support the government legally compelling black business owners to serve Klansmen? Yes or no?
Yes. Being a member of the clan is not enough and they are legally compelled. If the behaviour was typically KKK towards the black owner (rude, threatening, offending or scaring other customers etc.) then yes, service could be refused on those grounds but there has to be a "reason". You can refuse entry for those without shirts and shoes.... not sure about no sheets.
Being in the KKK is not a protected class in most states so there is no legal case for discrimination in the same way that there is for sexual orientation, gender, etc.