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  • The city of Fayetteville, Arkansas recently repealed an anti-discrimination ordinance

  • that protected the LGBT community from being discriminated against by local businesses.

  • Which means that in Fayetteville, right now, local businesses are free to refuse service

  • or employment to the LGBT community. And Fayetteville isn’t the only place this sort of discrimination

  • is happening. So, the question is, how is this possible? Is it legal to discriminate

  • against gay people in the United States?

  • The short answer is that there is no federal law specifically protecting the LGBT community.

  • The overall law of the land when it comes to discrimination in America is the 1964 Civil

  • Rights Act. This protects employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex or national

  • origin. However, it does not protect people based on their sexual orientation, something

  • that people have been trying to amend since 1975. So far every attempt to pass federal

  • legislation protecting gay Americans has been unsuccessful, including numerous failed votes

  • for the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, which would make LGBT discrimination in the

  • workplace illegal on a national level.

  • But that doesn’t mean there aren’t some laws in place. 21 states and the District

  • of Columbia have laws that prohibit discrimination based on sexual identity, 18 of those laws

  • include gender identity protection as well, but some are only for public employees. Going

  • deeper than that, over 200 cities have laws in place protecting LGBT communities from

  • employment discrimination. However some of these laws do not always apply for private

  • employers or businesses with less than 15 employees and most religious organizations

  • are also exempt.

  • That still leaves over half of the country without laws specifically prohibiting discrimination

  • against LGBT employees or customers. And in many states it is still legal to discriminate

  • against the LGBT community when it comes to housing, public accommodations, adoption and

  • hospital visitations. So the answer is yes, in the majority of United States it is legal

  • to discriminate against LGBT individuals.

  • However there are people working to change this. President Obama issued an executive

  • order to protect LGBT federal employees from discrimination in July of 2014 and in 2013

  • the Senate passed the ENDA protection bill for the first time ever, but the bill has

  • since stalled in the House and will most likely never pass. Oregon Senator Jeff Merkley is

  • also proposing a new bill that will prevent LGBT discrimination in employment, housing,

  • jury service, public accommodations and more. And many advocates are optimistic of change,

  • pointing at the rising number of states that have legalized gay marriage as well as the

  • American public’s growing support of gay rights. According to a Human Rights Campaign

  • poll, over 70% of likely voters would be in favor of a federal law banning LGBT discrimination

  • and 87% of American’s already think there is one.

  • Whether or not you support gay rights, it turns out there’s actually scientific evidence

  • that homophobia is harmful to everyone. Check out this video over on DNews to learn why.

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The city of Fayetteville, Arkansas recently repealed an anti-discrimination ordinance

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