US Secretary of Homeland Security Kirstjen Nielsen hastened her departure from a Mexican restaurant near the White House last week after being confronted by protesters.—Washington Post
But Cole disagreed. “When people say the gay couple in Masterpiece Cakeshop could simply go down the street to another baker, that ‘it’s no big deal’, that could also be said for Sarah Sanders. But it is a huge indignity to be turned away from a place that is open to the public.”
“In some sense the business is saying, ‘We’re not going to treat you as a legitimate member of the public,’ “ he said. He added that the so-called “public accommodations” laws are designed to promote tolerance and equality and the underlying principle is that a business “that chooses to serve the public must serve the public”.
The immediate effect of Sanders being asked to leave the Virginia restaurant was that it triggered more harsh political rhetoric.
Sanders’ father, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, tweeted to his million followers, “Bigotry. On the menu at Red Hen Restaurant in Lexington VA. Or you can ask for the ‘Hate Plate’. And appetisers are ‘small plates for small minds’.”
Name-calling and insults, many mimicking the combative style by Trump himself, poured onto the internet and TV.
Ironically, Bondi, the Florida Republican jeered at a movie theatre, was watching Won’t You Be My Neighbour?, the film about Fred Rogers, the children’s TV personality who taught kindness to one’s neighbour.
In 2012, the owner of a Virginia bakery and ice cream shop made national headlines when he declined to allow Vice President Joe Biden to hold a media stop at his place. But the owner said at the time that the exchange was “very kind, it wasn’t at all heated. We just had a difference of opinion politically.”
Public treatment in the past
Animosity towards those with different political beliefs is far higher now.
Jon Meacham, a historian and author, said he cannot recall a “similarly tribal moment” in recent history.
“We’re kind of back to the Colonial era in terms of public shaming, with virtual and symbolic stocks in the public square rather than literal ones,” Meacham said.
During the Depression of the 1930s and Lyndon B. Johnson’s presidency in the 1960s, there was much political division, Meacham said. “But the New Dealers or LBJ officials didn’t face this kind of public treatment during the ‘30s or ‘60s. That said, neither [Franklin Roosevelt] nor LBJ conducted their presidencies in as contentious and confrontational a manner as Trump and his allies do, so I think the Trump world is reaping what they’ve sown. And that’s bad for all of us.”
Presidential historian Michael Beschloss recalled a 1974 incident at the Chez Panisse restaurant in Berkeley, California. Its staff did not want to serve H.R. Haldeman, chief of staff in Richard M. Nixon’s White House and a key figure in the Watergate cover-up.