But it's just fine and dandy for the converse of this whole argument, where the public would discriminate against a business and avoid it if it were owned by, say, black people.
There's no law that says people have to do business with minority owned companies, so why should there be laws to the converse of that?
Individuals have rights that businesses do not enjoy. The constitution wasn't written to cover businesses, it was written to cover "all men".
What's interesting here, is that you're actually throwing your own beliefs about racial equality under the bus for the sake of merely being able to have a certain law on the books.
You're saying it's ok for the public to discriminate against a business, simply because businesses aren't mentioned in the constitution. Nevermind the fact that a PERSON had to create that business.
If you feel so strongly that racial equality can only be achieved via laws, then why wouldn't you advocate the same law to the converse?
I mean, come on Rav. Anyone can pretty much come up with any clever constitutional justification for any law, simply by interpreting wording a certain way. Just because the word "business" isn't written, doesn't mean someone can't come up with a civil rights law to protect it.