The Indiana amendment prohibits service providers from using the law as a legal defense for refusing to provide goods, services, facilities or accommodations. [More]
If we do not have the right to freedom of association, we have no rights at all. Such a right is clearly at the heart of the implied social contract between a nation and a government of limited, enumerated powers.
How is it, I wonder, that Earl Warren, etc., were able to create a hundred other bogus "rights," all calculated for maximum socially corrosive effect, out of "emanations and penumbras," but no one anywhere will stand up for this or even speak the words? Of course, to ask the question is to know the answer.
Heterophobic bullies.
ReplyDeleteIf we do not have the right to freedom of association, we have no rights at all. Such a right is clearly at the heart of the implied social contract between a nation and a government of limited, enumerated powers.
ReplyDeleteHow is it, I wonder, that Earl Warren, etc., were able to create a hundred other bogus "rights," all calculated for maximum socially corrosive effect, out of "emanations and penumbras," but no one anywhere will stand up for this or even speak the words? Of course, to ask the question is to know the answer.