Back to News & Commentary

Discrimination Is Bad for Business. Worse, It鈥檚 Bad for People.

Protest sign and american flag
Protest sign and american flag
Share This Page
February 28, 2014

I鈥檓 an Arizona businessperson and, yes, profits are important to me. A thriving business needs solid financials but I believe it also needs something else: respect and a culture that encourages the fair treatment of all people.

I鈥檓 thrilled that Gov. Jan Brewer vetoed Arizona鈥檚 SB 1062, a law that could turn our free exercise clause on its head, transforming religious liberty from a shield into a sword, and I鈥檓 proud that Arizona鈥檚 business community and corporations across the nation forcefully spoke against this bill. Gov. Brewer was swayed by corporate arguments that SB 1062 is scaring off business and resulting in lost revenue, hurting Arizona鈥檚 鈥渂rand,鈥 and placing businesses at risk of costly litigation.

But the consequences sparking outrage shouldn鈥檛 all be about the bottom line. Offering religious liberty as a cause of action in a lawsuit even if the government isn鈥檛 a party to the proceeding puts at risk the years of hard work that scores of businesses in Arizona have put into building accepting cultures and instituting policies that prevent employees and managers from discriminating against people on many bases, including sexual orientation.

SB 1062 and bills like it threaten to undermine inclusive companies by placing private businesses in the position of defending their own nondiscrimination policies and the government鈥檚 interest in treating all of us equally.

To resist this effort, officials in states like Mississippi, Missouri, Oklahoma and Kansas will need to hear from their business owners and operators. They鈥檒l need to hear about the impact on companies that such discriminatory legislation could have. But it鈥檚 a shame businesses will have to talk largely about the financial implications of bills like this, and not the threat to workplace equality, in order to persuade legislators.

Every day this week, before Gov. Brewer鈥檚 veto, gay and lesbian Arizonans and their allies waved placards reading 鈥淏ad4Biz鈥 outside the Arizona Capitol. It鈥檚 a shame we鈥檙e still so far from understanding equality in this country that those signs couldn鈥檛 simply say 鈥淏ad4Us.鈥

Entrepreneur Eric Crown is a founder of Arizona-based Insight Enterprises Inc., a Fortune 500 company, and other businesses. His companies employ several thousand people in Arizona.

Learn more about LGBT rights and other civil liberty issues: Sign up for breaking news alerts, , and .

Learn More 老澳门开奖结果 the Issues on This Page