Sorry for the late response lady, I was out and about this weekend.Valentina327 wrote: ↑Sat Sep 21, 2019 6:48 pmHey Southern - What's disturbing to me is that the event is promoted as a public event. No where did it say private event. If it did, that's a whole horse of another color.SouthernIslander wrote: ↑Sat Sep 21, 2019 6:35 pmMaybe you are a better person to help me understand d what I am obviously not realizing...
People are not legally obligated to let everyone attend their event simply because it’s a public building. It has never worked that way and it hasn’t for a reason.
What's her name is known to be doing those "man in the street" type interviews as a conservative. The left knows who she is and what her views are.
She was not disturbing anyone, was sitting there in a seat, quietly, yet was singled out because the left doesn't agree with her politics. There are plenty of lefties that show up at Republican rallies and scream and disturb. They show up at college assemblies when there's a conservative speaking and scream and shout them down. They're asked to stop. They're not removed simply because someone at the event objects to their very existence. If I recall correctly, Regina Talab did that very thing at a Trump rally before becoming part of Congress.
To me it's akin to discrimination. That's what's disturbing. It starts here. Then who's next? Who decides who's appropriate to attend an event? Things like this tend to creep.
Even if an event is “public” the host or organizer still has the right to ask anyone to leave the event and it’s not considered discrimination. It’s been that way for decades so this isn’t a sign of changing times or things going to hell.