Madison320
Member
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2012
- Messages
- 6,028
It depends on what you mean by "support".
I might agree or disagree with it, but I would not oppose it (in the sense of regarding the use of force against the ostracizers to be justified) unless others were being forced to participate in the ostracism against their wills.
I do not "support" (in the sense of "agree with" or "approve of") excluding or ostracizing people from a place of business on the basis of the color of their skin, and would regard such a policy as "problematic". I would counter-ostracize businesses which implemented such a policy by not giving them my custom, by encouraging others to do the same, and by criticizing those who did not. But so long as such businesses did not try to force others to implement the same policy (via Jim Crow laws, for example), I would oppose and would not "support" (in the aforementioned sense) the use of force against them in order to make them change their policy. Nor would I "support" (again, in the aforementioned sense) the use of force against those who did not choose to participate in the counter-ostracism of such businesses.
The sanctions Madison320 refers to are like those Jim Crow laws. They force others to participate in ostracism against their wills, and that is why they are morally objectionable. That the targets of the enforced ostracism may be "problematic" does not change this.
Also the US government should only be punishing crimes on US soil. A proper libertarian government would only retaliate against the initiation of force within its borders. We're not the world police.