Small buisness should. A small buisness should have the right to turn down a customer because its against their religion or creed.
However, once a buisness becomes international, once it becomes a board and something bigger than itself, it should become a public entity with certain obligations to service constitutional rights, not recive them.
Example:
Facebook claims Floridas new law censors their right to free speech, because Facebook sees itself as having the rights of a person. It doesnt, it shouldnt.
Walmart shouldn't have the right to turn away people who haven't been vaccinated.
Could a mom and pop shop? Sure. Its their right.
Yet some places would starve without access to mega corporate shoping centers. If Walmart, Target, and dollar stores banned together to deny service to a demographic, that would be catestrophic.
Idk. Im uncertain on how the law actually works, its just an observation I felt like sharing.
Thank you for this. I think I get it now. I was actually referencing this in some talks with friends over the weekend, so we all learned something :P
Basically, the feds artifically lowered intrest rates means their loaning out money the economy (our capital) can't really afford. Eventually, they'll have to either print more money to compensate, face a backlash of inflation(?), or both. In the end, that 20 year low intrest loan isnt enough to sustain their projected expenses because its a lie that has repercussions.
The value of that loan will crumble and never hit its inteded target. The value of that money just isn't really there.
Yeah, the fed has the power to print money, which is a huge power, but they don't have the power to print up real goods and services. They don't have the power to print up houses, steel, wheat, or other things. So one way or another, they are issuing checks that the economy can't cash. They can delay the day of reckoning some, but the more they do, the more it fucks everything up.