Dan Kone
Well-Known Member
I get what you're saying and it doesn't sound that unreasonable from our perspective today. But if you go back to the south at the time of civil rights legislation, it was necessary. If we are talking about most areas of the country today, sure, what you're saying might be true in some areas. But it wasn't true when talking about the south in the 60's. The theoretical arguments you guys are making isn't what was going on in the south. Whites only businesses were thriving and most of the goods/services black folks had access to were substandard.Exactly its not necessary and people should protest it, not have the government use force. Society does not grow by force and coercion. Just look at the ridiculous pot laws. Some of the people here are using the same argument to stop it as you do. They think its wrong but even though it isn't ursuping others rights pot should be illegal.
When Ron Paul argues against the civil rights act that is a segregationist argument, because without the government stepping in, the result was segregation. Think about what you're really arguing here. Don't think only about the modern implications, but also the implications of the time when it became law. Do you really believe segregation was justified based on property rights?