so your son is not allowed in stores because he is gay, and you are allowed in those stores because you are not gay, thus you both have equal rights?
Yes, we both have equal rights.
We are both equal in the sense that neither of us has the right to force a business person or any other person to interact with us, especially on their own property.
We also are both equal in that we, as individuals, have the right to be free from others forcing us to interact with them if we chose not to.
Those rights are reciprocal and apply to all other people.regardless of gender or race.
Forced human interactions are wrong, do you agree or disagree with that?
You've also call something a right when it isn't a right. None of us have the right to access another person or trade with them, absent that other persons consent. Otherwise it isn't trade. Trade rests on agreement between parties, not edicts by one of the parties.
You've confuse a granted privilege with a right. To exercise a right you don't need anyone else to approve or disapprove. To exercise a privilege, you must first be granted that privilege.
To have the privilege of another human interaction, first requires the consent of the another human being.
If a bigot says he will interact with me, but not my son, he is consenting to an interaction, with me, granting me a privilege to interact with him. I am free not to interact with him though. Neither of us has the right to force this interaction. We both have the right to refuse the interaction.
If a bigot says he will not interact with my son, where would my son get the right to force an interaction, since forcing human interactions is wrong?
I realize in order for you to understand what I am saying, your comprehension skills and logic would need to rise several notches.
Also, you never answer any questions. That means you're losing....again.