Babe, I support the right of a business to refuse to do things that they are not comfortable doing. I believe that a business owner actually owns their business.
I'd like to think that we lived in a world where the rules of the game meant that if a cake baker wanted to deny their services to LGBTQ+ people that on the one hand they could refuse service, and on the other hand it would mean they lost business to another baker who was happy to bake cakes for LGBTQ+ people. I believe in the concepts of libertarianism. Firmly and fully. I just realize that I don't live in a libertarian world. As such the laws need to regulate the game that actually exists, not the fantasy I hope for.
Businesses deciding to refuse service to a certain segment of the population, banding together in such an effort according to their mythology, or at least their personalized interpretation of their mythology, creates a coercive effect on the economy. It skews the normal market forces that would otherwise drive business owners to the best business decision. I'm not sure of your brand of libertarianism, but mine always said it was essentially protect your own interests and expect others to do the same, the only thing that was out of bounds was lying, cheating, stealing and coercion.
The coercion bit is what made me realize just how incompatible bastardized versions of libertarianism are in our current society. That's why I stopped beating the drum. Solve for coercion and you'll have me fully back on board, babe.
This all makes pretty good sense to me, as stated. You be you, I ask for nothing less, really.
I am probably not very consistent generally. I don't mind having people explore the incongruities or ignorance present in my little essays. I'm not much inclined to try to present socially-accepted, normative, or "consensus" views, even if I understand them..... or, God-forbid, embrace them.....
I do my bit here for the fun, and educational value, or the exercise. I don't have much of a temper, or much inclination to censorship or force.
I would like, speaking from ideal values, like to have a broad-based free speech view in the little conversations I engage in.