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Augusta National is a private club and there are two ways you get in....you get invited or you win the Masters. Actually winning the Masters may only give you playing rights and not an actual membership. This guy's restaurant is not a private establishment where he can choose who comes in and who doesn't based on his beliefs....his business license does not afford him the right to scrutinize based on his personal beliefs, that I guarantee you. Like I said, I understand the owner's disgust, but.... |
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[quote=Samarta]
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If the man owns the restaurant, he can refuse to serve anyone he wishes to so long as it doesn't fall under discrimination statutes. Therefore, as long as he's not refusing to serve him based on his race, religion, ethnicity, sexual orientation (in certain states), etc then he can do whatever he wants.
Hell, he can wait until the middle of Mother's Day brunch when half the meals are served and kick everyone out on Sunday if he just feels like the restaurant is being put under undue burden. As not PC as it may be (and as much of a champion I may usually be of those sorts of things), he can refuse service to someone just because he doesn't like them at any hour of any day of the year with no legal consequences unless someone can prove he did it out of discrimination based on a protected class. Being O.J. Simpson is not a protected class last time I checked. Thank God, too. |
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I agree 100% and as I said, this isn't about O.J. at all, nor do I think it's about race....my opinion simply is that once he takes out a license to own a public establishment, he cannot decide to serve or not to serve based on his personal beliefs...and had this been anyone but O.J., (who is an egotistical ass on top of being a double murderer, but had sense enough to leave without incident) they would have been on every tv channel is Louisville telling their story and then some civil action attorney lurking in the shadows would come out, draft up a lawsuit, and if the owner doesn't settle or file bankruptcy, they go to court and the owner loses. |
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[quote=timmgirvan]
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You can think it was wrong all day long, but the fact remains that he was well well well within his legal bounds to do what he did. |
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This is about standing up for what is right & not living in fear of litigation, or "taking the chance of being sued" as others have said. Do the right thing! If OJ's slimy lawyer sues and wins (which I doubt), so be it. At least you can sleep at night with your spine intact. The owner did the right thing. End of story.
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So I'm standing in line to pay for my cup of coffee yesterday morning at the office and one of our attorneys happened to be in the other line...we started talking about an issue at work, but as we finished, I thought about this thread....so I asked her about it and what was right and what was legal....(she said that I was like the 5th person to ask her about it).....she said it's kind of a double edged sword....yes the owner has the right to run his restaurant to ensure a safe and comfortable environment for his patrons. On the other hand, if a patron is not doing anything to jeopardize that safe and comfortable environment then they have the right to eat there. Now where the gray area comes in is what is deemed safe and comfortable....but she did say, he can't just because......I swear guys, I think O.J. is a pos and I absolutely understand why this guy did what he did...was he right legally? I guess we'll never know....if I was a patron and asked to leave just because, I would damn sure find out....did he stay true to his principles? absolutely.....This was a good debate...
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the owner was on live with nancy grace early in the week. he explained that in the 80's oj was in and had his picture taken and autographed for the owner. oj would stop when in town from that point on and the picture hung in the restaurant until the the murders. the owner said he removed the picture before the trial even started.
the owner went on to say that oj had been at least twice, that he was aware of, since the trial. the owner stated that had he been there either time, he would have asked oj to leave and not come back at those times. to me they had some sort of "personal relationship" and the owner chose to end it at this time. i'd have applauded him for what he did. it's his right to refuse service in HIS restaurant. personally, i'd have had NO problem telling him to GET OUT ! and would hope i'd get to physically remove him, from MY restaurant.
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"Always keep your heads up and act like champions." Coach Paul Bryant |
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just read that oj and lawyer will not be suing the restaurant owner.
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Books serve to show a man that those original thoughts of his aren't very new at all. Abraham Lincoln |