Maryland
Related: About this forumA white restaurateur told a black customer not to wear an 'I can't breathe' shirt. Protests and a
A white restaurateur told a black customer not to wear an I cant breathe shirt. Protests and a boycott followed.The closure of the local watering hole maybe temporary, maybe not started with a bright yellow T-shirt inscribed with three words: I cant breathe.
Daryl Rollins bought the shirt in the wake of George Floyds killing in police custody in Minneapolis. Rollins, who is black, said he had never personally experienced discrimination until a recent Friday, when he wore the shirt while waiting in line at the Fish Market of Maryland in Clinton.
You cant wear that shirt in my establishment, Rollins said owner Rick Giovannoni, who is white, told him, insisting he take the T-shirt off or turn it inside out.
The episode struck a nerve in Prince Georges County, a majority-black suburb of Washington where residents have long complained that they do not have the quality restaurants and retail establishments that thrive in neighboring jurisdictions.
Read more: https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/md-politics/fish-market-maryland-i-cant-breathe/2020/07/09/c25b7c42-c062-11ea-9fdd-b7ac6b051dc8_story.html
underpants
(186,481 posts)Public accommodation covers who you are not what you do. Its his restaurant so if he thinks his customers wont like it or he isnt on board he has every right to tell him to leave.
FBaggins
(27,633 posts)He has a right to, for instance, ban t-shirts with political messages on them...
... but he doesnt have a right to your patronage. Protests/boycotts are not limited to legal infractions
Ferrets are Cool
(21,952 posts)underpants
(186,481 posts)I was just making a point that he could do it.
Ferrets are Cool
(21,952 posts)Squinch
(52,594 posts)have the right to demand people wear masks in their stores.
BUT, the community has the right to make sure Mr. Giovannoni loses all of his customers and goes out of business.
See above
BComplex
(9,049 posts)So I'm not sure what conspired later on.
By posts above, I can only assume the locals shut down his restaurant in a boycott.
lambchopp59
(2,809 posts)Outweigh the "right to refuse service" in this case IMO.
Bearer of the message likely seeking civil discourse on the subject, got the equivalent treatment of "go drink from the jim crow fountain".
Especially in the highly charged environment about this these days?
Oh, hell no.
Let's reverse the scheme here. If I told a "Trump 2020" hat wearer to remove that in my establishment, I'm violating that person's first amendment rights, regardless how uncomfortable the person's obvious viewpoints made me feel. As long as the MAGAt remained within civil behavior during his business there.
ret5hd
(21,320 posts)3Hotdogs
(13,375 posts)The government can. A person can't.
A business may be a different matter. When Katzenbach won the civil rights case, it was based on the Interstate Commerece clause. Discrimmination causes less commerce. The government is 'posed to promote commerce.