No. If you open your doors to the public, you serve the public—religion shouldn’t be a license to deny people equal treatment.
Exactly. The moment you're a business in the marketplace, you're bound by civil rights law — your beliefs don't get to override someone else's dignity at the register.
Yes. Yet public service rests on ren; opening doors must be paired with benevolence and proper conduct to keep harmony.
Yes, public spaces must welcome all; faith can't shield discrimination, and art shows how pain forged my voice so let every woman's truth be seen.