It's illegal to publish an ad for these types of services in the first place. Does it really matter beyond that? That said, discrimination in and of itself is not illegal to begin with. Only when it is regarding certain things such as hiring practices and government assistance. There are specific laws written regarding such areas. Aside from that, it may be bad taste and highly offensive to some, but it's not illegal. At least not on a grand scale. There may be some areas that have more strict local laws. Originally Posted by VegasJenPublic accommodations are included in the things where discrimination is illegal. That covers most businesses. But you're right that since the hobby is illegal, one can hardly seek legal recourse for a provider with an nba policy.
Is it illegal to publish a ad for services which discriminates because of race, or targets one particular group? If this particular type of advertisement is consistently being published, can the Equality and Human Rights Commission can take court action against the publisher or provider? Originally Posted by larryheadboardSo let's hypothesize here and say this lady has a serious fear of you because you are a 120 y/o eight foot tall green skinned Martian with three eyes. However:
So let's hypothesize here and say this lady has a serious fear of you because you are a 120 y/o eight foot tall green skinned Martian with three eyes. However:HE got to meet the woman of his fantasy. HE accomplished his goal.
--You threaten her with a discrimination charge
--She drops her "No 120 y/o eight foot tall green skinned Martians"
--You see her
--She cringes and is clearly uncomfortable and frightened the entire time
--Performance, chemistry, and conversation are all horrid
--She is looking at the clock every minute, hoping it will race forward
--She posts on the lady's forum that she (honestly) had a wretched time and you made her feel afraid the entire time
So what did you really accomplish? Originally Posted by Old-T
If this hobby were legal, stationed in a brick & mortar building, and operated as a public (not private) business...then it would be very illegal to deny services to anyone based solely on gender, race, religion and all of the rest of the protected classes.A useful illustration of the difference between "legalization" and decriminalization.
But until that day comes, there ain't much you can do about it. Originally Posted by DakineOne777
HE got to meet the woman of his fantasy. HE accomplished his goal. Originally Posted by papadee
A useful illustration of the difference between "legalization" and decriminalization.Agreed
A "legalized" sex worker works as the government says she must. She's working in a virtual brothel, with Uncle Sam as Head Madam. She has that famous psychotic-looking dude with the white chin beard and the tall red-white-and-blue hat as her pimp.
With decriminalization, she works as she pleases, and her work isn't something she can be arrested for.
Neither one's actually going to happen, so it pretty much doesn't matter. But if "legalization" happened tomorrow, I'd hope that some of the women would remain illegal (and free). And those would be the ladies I'd do business with ... on principle. Originally Posted by James1588
Is this your way of scaring the girls in to dropping their NBA policy? Originally Posted by ProlongusYeah, I think it is. The irony is this -
HE got to meet the woman of his fantasy. HE accomplished his goal. Originally Posted by papadeeI wonder about that. Yes, he met her. If that is all he cares about, true. But I suspect the sex would be bad and the atmosphere toxic as well. It would seem the only way to enjoy that is if the client was borderline into a rape fantasy.
Is it illegal to publish a ad for services which discriminates because of race, or targets one particular group? If this particular type of advertisement is consistently being published, can the Equality and Human Rights Commission can take court action against the publisher or provider? Originally Posted by larryheadboardLawrence, you make an excellent point - Can't wait to see which one of this country's barristers takes your case (and your money) and runs with this all the way to the Supreme Court!!