Wonder Woman: Is The Civil Rights Act of 1964 an affront to sovereignty, privacy, dignity, and property rights? And does it exist primarily to keep an army of litigators employed?
In a nod toward female empowerment the Alamo Drafthouse chain of movie theaters plans to offer several screenings of the soon-to-debut Wonder Woman film to female customers only
reports
Benny Huang on the
Constitution website.
The company has released a statement saying:
“Apologies, gentlemen,
but we’re embracing our girl power and saying ‘No Guys Allowed’ for
several special shows…”
This is blatantly illegal.
Not that it should be. Alamo Drafthouse is a private company
and should be free to discriminate till the cows come home. The
women-only screenings nonetheless violate state and local law in
multiple localities. An Alamo cinema in Brooklyn, for example, will be in violation of New York State law
which declares it to be
“an unlawful discriminatory practice for any
person, being the owner, lessee, proprietor, manager, superintendent,
agent or employee of any place of public accommodation, resort or
amusement, because of…sex…directly or indirectly, to refuse, withhold
from or deny to such person any of the accommodations, advantages,
facilities or privileges thereof…”
Similar laws can be found in other
cities and states where Alamo Drafthouse is holding its flagrantly
illegal screenings.
The reason Alamo Drafthouse is getting away with illegal sex
discrimination is because the word “sex” in nondiscrimination laws
has morphed before our eyes. Some government entities are now
interpreting “sex” to mean “sexual orientation” which is almost always a code word for sexual conduct. It’s also being interpreted to mean “gender identity”
or “gender expression.” What this means in practice is that laws that
were intended to protect women are now being interpreted to protect men
who have sex with men as well as men who think they’re women. The only
thing that “sex” apparently doesn’t mean these days is its actual dictionary definition.
Consequently, businesses now feel free to discriminate on the basis of
sex and no one does anything about it…as long as it’s only men who are
being discriminated against, of course.
Isn’t it about time to admit that private sector nondiscrimination
are ridiculous? I think so but I’m apparently in the minority on this
issue. Almost everyone claims to revere these laws, even conservatives.
Most righties support them laws in principle but resent their arbitrary enforcement—and rightfully so. Alamo Drafthouse is proof that
the government discriminates in its application of nondiscrimination
laws. A law that clearly and unambiguously prohibits discrimination
based on sex is only invoked to protect one sex. What’s equal about
that?
Nonetheless, a broad consensus exists that private sector
nondiscrimination laws are both righteous and necessary. We Americans
love them so much that we’ve enacted them by the boatload and created
almost as many enforcement agencies to back them up. If a person is
refused service he may be able to file simultaneous complaints with the
city, county, state, and federal governments. This legal barrage often
results in the business owner’s unconditional surrender even if he
wasn’t harboring an illegal thought when he decided not to do business
with this person. Capitulation is just easier.
Even among conservatives I find myself swimming against the tide on
this issue. I’ve tried in vain to explain to my fellow conservatives
that they shouldn’t brag about more Republicans than Democrats
voting for the Civil Rights Act of 1964. It’s true but it’s also a
horrible black mark on the party’s record. A few Republicans understood
what a monstrosity this law would become and opposed the statist (and racist!) Lyndon Johnson in his efforts to pass the bill. Their names were Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan—perhaps you’ve heard of them?
Politicians certainly don’t speak out against the Civil Rights Act, even conservatives and so-called libertarians
like former New Mexico Governor Gary Johnson. It’s political suicide. I
know of only one elected official currently holding office who has ever
criticized it—Rand Paul—and he quickly walked it back.
The Civil Rights Act of 1964, like all private sector
nondiscrimination laws, is big government at its worst. It appears to
exist primarily to keep an army of litigators employed. It is
selectively enforced against disfavored groups and it is often warped
with new “interpretations” that are at odds with its text and original
intent. It is an affront to sovereignty, privacy, dignity, and property
rights. It’s a crap sandwich that the whole country has been choking on
for more than fifty years. It needs to be struck down as
unconstitutional and we need to teach our children to be ashamed that it
ever existed in the first place.
The Wonder Woman kerfuffle makes me wonder where all of the
nondiscrimination hardliners have gone. Former Congressman Barney Frank,
for example, ought to be the first to file a complaint with one of our
many wasteful, redundant “civil rights” bureaucracies because he
has zero patience for people who discriminate. Or at least that’s the
position he pretended to hold during the debate over Indiana’s religious freedom law.
Barney Frank operates under the false impression
that there’s some kind of law that requires businesses to serve
everyone. Said Mr. Frank:
“When you open a business, you are being given
a set of privileges and protections from the society to make some money
and in return the obligation has always been under basic common law
that you serve the general public, that anybody who behaves well can be
served…”
Actually, there is no such law and it would be unconstitutional
even if there were. Businesses can decline any economic transaction
whatsoever as long as they provide a proper government-approved
justification. I think that “I don’t want to” should suffice but the law
says that’s just not good enough.
It’s important to really hear what Frank is saying here. He’s not saying
that there ought to be a law compelling businesses to serve everyone.
What he’s saying is that such a law already exists and has
existed since time immemorial. He’s trying to pass this off as some kind
of great American tradition, as if forcing businesses to serve the
general public without exception has been part of our social contract
for generations. This is the big lie that surrounds and pervades the
debate over private sector nondiscrimination laws. They want us to
believe not only that business owners are bondage servants with no right
to pick and choose which economic transactions they will engage in but
also that it’s always been this way.
I have encountered Frank’s argument roughly a zillion times while
debating private sector non-discrimination laws. The argument is that
business owners, simply by going into business, have already agreed to
“serve the public” which includes absolutely anyone walks in the door.
In essence, that means that they have already waived any rights they may
have under the Constitution to protect themselves from government
coercion. Any business owner who later decides that he doesn’t want to
do business with a particular customer or fulfill a particular order is
somehow going back on his word and shirking his duty to the public. This
is absurd. Business owners don’t make any such promise to “serve the
public” nor should they be required to. They can serve those members of
the public they want to serve—or at least that’s the way it should be.
It’s a two way street; just as customers can choose which businesses to
patronize, businesses should be able to choose which customers they will
take on. That’s freedom—and it scares the living crap out of some
people.
Another candidate for the Hypocrite of The Year award is opinion
commentator and militant lesbian Sally Kohn. In 2015, she wrote a column
in which she argued that maximum freedom comes through maximum
government coercion. “Everyone deserves equal treatment, and businesses
should be forced to serve everyone,” was the sub-header.
The gist of Kohn’s column is that nondiscrimination laws are
eminently fair because they bind everyone just as they protect everyone.
Anyone who doesn’t like these laws must be accustomed to discriminating
without being discriminated against. They’re scared because they feel
their privilege slipping away. She tries to pretend that she’s very
consistent, pointing out she supports laws that work both ways. Yes, she
believes that a devout Mormon couple should be forced to rent a hotel
room to a radical lesbian feminist but she also thinks that the same law
should apply in the reverse scenario. Kohn writes: “The point is that
businesses should serve everyone the same and not discriminate. Once
upon a time it was lunch counters. Now it’s wedding cakes.” Yes, then it
was movie theaters and Sally Kohn was AWOL. She didn’t force her
morality on the movie theater owner the same way she would a devout
Christian bakery owner because—let’s face it—her supposed consistency
isn’t that consistent.
But mine is. Businesses shouldn’t have to serve anyone and they
shouldn’t have to explain themselves to the government. I don’t care if
it’s lunch counters, wedding cakes or movie theaters. Economic
transactions should be made on a voluntary basis. Period.
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