For
@Alzrius ,
badly phrased old quote said:
A) Say a store has a stated policy of "All products we sell are legal or approved by their industries for anyone aged 13 and up." because they market themselves as family friendly as a business strategy. That is ok because it isn't specifically designed to curtail anyone's expression."
Gack. I was worried so much about the rest of the examples I botched the set-up. So here is a cleaned up version (I hope).
Am I correct in interpreting your personal framework for the following?
A) Consider a store that markets itself as "family friendly" as a business strategy and has a number of policies to help with this (choice of music played in the store, employee dress code, type of items displayed by the register, etc...). To make the overarching store concept workable (so they don't have to inspect every product in detail) they've come up with a screen for what they carry: "We won't sell any product that is legally un-purchasable by someone who is 13 years of age, or that is rated to have a minimum appropriate age older than 13. So, alcohol and cigarettes are out. In movies, for example, G, PG, and PG-13 are Good, R and NC17 are out." As such they will not carry the AO rated Rockstar game. Am I correct that you would be ok with this because the exclusion of Rockstar games is based on the marketing attempt to create a store atmosphere, and the restriction of someone else's creative expression is just a byproduct?
B) A store owner finds sex and violence immoral and doesn't want anyone to sell such products. They actively pursue this goal, and as part of that pursuit their store also has the G-PG-PG13=ok, R-NC17=bad type policy. Am I correct that this is a solid example of their exclusion of Rockstar games being bad because the overarching policy is explicitly to deny someone's creative expression?
C) A store owner believes that it is immoral to run a business involving extreme violence or graphic sex. As such, they would have to decline the AO Rockstar game. Am I correct that their only moral option is to choose another business to go into? Can we view running a store (the design, set-up, marketing, etc...) as a creative process? If so, is Rockstar being immoral by asking this store to surrender its own creative process by carrying their AO game?
D) A store owner believes that videos and games depicting pornography and violence are actively exploitative and harm the people who make and view them? Am I correct that they could morally decline to carry the AO game on the same moral reasoning they could decline to carry the child pornography? (As the morality and legality are separate issues and they think it is exploiting and harming others).
Personally, I tend to be hypocritical in my views of this (if I think its wrong so should they, and if they think something I like is wrong then they're wrong) and would like to work on that before I have to make my own decisions on some of them.
In general, as long as monopolies and collusion are illegal, and no discrimination is occurring based on race, religion, orientation, disability, etc... , I don't see a moral obligation for the store to use its time and money to enable creative enterprises they disagree with.