eaglesdare
Member
- Country
England
It makes me and my staff and customers feel uncomfortable. I am well within my rights to refuse.This right of refusal only applies to pubs and restaurants. So no, unless it is one of them.
It makes me and my staff and customers feel uncomfortable. I am well within my rights to refuse.This right of refusal only applies to pubs and restaurants. So no, unless it is one of them.
It makes me and my staff and customers feel uncomfortable. I am well within my rights to refuse.
Probably not. It might be unwise to find out.Are you allowed to refer to a man in a dress as "one of them".
That’s irrelevant.It makes me and my staff and customers feel uncomfortable. I am well within my rights to refuse.
If Robinson was a Traveller they would be suing the restaurant (they do this all the time with pubs and holiday camps).
So in that case you are saying Tommy Robinson was right then.That’s irrelevant.
If you break anti discrimination law by refusing service to someone in a specified category just because they are part of that category then you have no defence.
You might not be prosecuted, but simply warned, but deliberately repeating it would not be sensible.
Agree, but then you have cake saga in Northern Ireland and the trans blokes in dresses who serially sue places that don't let them in.Businesses should be free to serve and not serve whoever they like.