Sorry for leaving that impression. Yes, it's tricky. You've had many threads about the issue in the past, grappling towards some resolution. I have a thought here, but it's not a very happy one.
So, I ask again: is there any limit to this process? If I leave McD and go to Chilis , then leave there and go to Longhorn, then leave there and go to sushi - what prevents your process from turning every one of those into your set of norms?
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perhaps try it another way imagine there are no laws against smoking, and restaurant owners don't like to get involved in disputes between customers someone lights up in Chilis "well, just leave, Eddie" you get sushi 1 person lights up "well, just leave, Eddie" etc
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your response might be DESCRIPTIVE, e.g. "well, without a law, that's how it is" and that might be true but it's UNINTERESTING the only conversation I find interesting here is "how can norms X and Y both exist, so that 3% of the population doesn't ruin things for everyone"
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