Quote from wjk:
To be honest, I haven't given a great deal of thought to this issue. After I left the Nav I started a music business. I operated a band for 10 years. Over half of the musicians I sub-contracted were black. For 8 years, I had a Latino vocalist up front. We were welcomed in virtually every establishment we played in, both black and white, bars and eating establishments alike. If I didn't think anyone in my band was going to be welcomed in a club, I wouldn't have booked it, even if the law said the band members had a right to be there or not.
I understand your point regarding private property, but realistically, I don't think any of the 100's of places I played would turn down business regardless of skin color. Many of the establishments were actually casinos. The establishments we played always had mixed audiences. Perhaps that's why I never gave it much thought from your perspective. I don't believe the lack of such a law would make much of a difference in this day and age.
your mistaking me for a racist, I do not condone racism nor do I want to see private establishments discriminating based solely on race, gender etc. But it is their right to do so. Not protecting these rights has already and will continue to create new problems. Namely and most importantly, the loss of individual freedom.