ChiTownScion
Call Me a Cab
- Messages
- 2,247
- Location
- The Great Pacific Northwest
Precisely because so many religious and other reactionary crackpots are against these unisex bathrooms, I find myself in agreement with those companies and stores that designate them. It's akin to the boycott of Pepsi products that was organized because certain mercenary religionists had their noses thrown out of joint because the company accorded health care coverage to the same sex partners of their employees: Diet Pepsi immediately became my soft drink of choice (Although it's a bit academic: Coca Cola accords the same coverage to its employees who have same sex partners. ). Or the legality of same sex marriage: I wish that I could say that I changed my mind on the issue because the better angels of my nature convinced me to take a higher and more noble road, but the fact is that when all is said and done, I don't like bullies or bullying, even when that bullying is gift wrapped with a thin veneer of purported religious conviction. The best way for me to align myself with individuals is to treat them so unfairly that your outrageous conduct becomes the central issue.
And I don't believe that I'm alone in this outlook. Drawing it into historical comparison, the violent over-reaction of police and strikebreaking goons against steel, automotive, and mining companies in the 30's likely did as much, or more, to change public opinion in favor of collective bargaining rights as anything else. And although they certainly didn't intend to do so, the Bull Conners and Lester Maddoxes of the 1960's did as much (by their despicable conduct) to advance the Civil Rights Movement as anyone else did, because common, ordinary people who ordinarily would not have had a strong opinion one way or the other were put into the position where not having an opinion simply was no longer an option.
And I don't believe that I'm alone in this outlook. Drawing it into historical comparison, the violent over-reaction of police and strikebreaking goons against steel, automotive, and mining companies in the 30's likely did as much, or more, to change public opinion in favor of collective bargaining rights as anything else. And although they certainly didn't intend to do so, the Bull Conners and Lester Maddoxes of the 1960's did as much (by their despicable conduct) to advance the Civil Rights Movement as anyone else did, because common, ordinary people who ordinarily would not have had a strong opinion one way or the other were put into the position where not having an opinion simply was no longer an option.