[Vision2020] 'No Negroes Allowed' in Wisconsin Gentlemen's Club

Sue Hovey suehovey at moscow.com
Wed Dec 8 10:45:41 PST 2010


And if it's a "Gentlemen's Club" he is also discriminating against women. 
Isn't anyone bothered by that, as well?

Sue H

-----Original Message----- 
From: Tom Hansen
Sent: Wednesday, December 08, 2010 6:13 AM
To: Moscow Vision 2020
Subject: [Vision2020] 'No Negroes Allowed' in Wisconsin Gentlemen's Club

Courtesy of The Grio at:

http://www.thegrio.com/news/no-negroes-allowed-in-wisconsin-gentlemens-club.php

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'No negroes allowed' in Wisconsin gentlemen's club

An Abbotsford business man is under fire for posting a 'No negroes
allowed' sign in his future gentlemen's club. The sign excluding black
people is enraging residents of this small town in Wisconsin.

The Clark County business man, Mark Prior, says its his right to
discriminate. "If I've got a problem with you it's going to be on the
front of my store," he says.

The gentlemen's club Prior wants to open is in a building next to the
Abbotsford city hall and library. A city official asked him to remove the
sign, which was previously outside the establishment but he kept it and
placed it inside the club instead.

This sign is one which generations of people may have never seen, and many
wished they would never have to see again. Federal and State law says that
if the business is open to the public then prohibiting people to enter it
based on race, is illegal. However, if the proposed gentlemen's club is
private, then he technically could discriminate.

The sign was posted because Prior has allegedly had issues with black
people in the past, and decided to make a policy against them. Apparently
it is not just black people that he has issues with. Prior says that he
has a problem with others as well, but could not post a lengthy list of
names outside his establishment, and opted instead to post the 'No Negroes
Allowed' sign.

"I'm going to stick to my guns because I think I have the right as a
business owner to reject service to anyone. It's not all the black people,
there are just a few bad ones," Prior says.

People in Abbotsford say it's a sign they don't welcome in their town.
However, Prior says it's his right as an American and as a business owner
to decide who's welcome; a right he says he'll take all the way to court
if he has to.

"It's insulting to think that someone automatically sees your skin color
and thinks that you're inferior and that you're not fit to be around. On
the other hand, if they're of this kind of intelligence, I'm not going to
worry about it too much," says Dr. Selika Ducksworth-Lawton, an African
American historian at the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire.

Ducksworth-Lawton says the second he opens his business, he'll be in
violation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

Prior's gentlemen's club is set to open to the public Friday, however this
business man's previous endeavors, (a grocery store and his own sheriff's
department), have not worked out in the past.

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Seeya round town, Moscow.

Tom Hansen
Moscow, Idaho

"The Pessimist complains about the wind, the Optimist expects it to change
and the Realist adjusts his sails."

- Unknown


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