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Lumifer didn't say anything about enforceability. E.g. the boy scouts have the right (as a private group, if you accept that a group with the U.S. president as their figurehead is in fact private) to disallow membership based on gender, sexual orientation, or religion. That doesn't mean it is right for them to do so. One should expect that in a civilized society groups like the boy scouts shouldn't discriminate based on things like sexual orientation. But that doesn't necessarily imply that there should be regulatory action to enforce that.
Likewise, Facebook should be a public commons where freedom of speech is respected. But that doesn't mean I'd call for regulatory enforcement of that.
Agreed in principle, but there are certain situations where the boundaries are much less clear. Should I in a gentleman's club allow women? Obviously not, and it's not even discrimination.
Should I in Lesswrong allow the discussion of theology? Obviously not, and someone shouldn't, in the normative sense, invoke freedom of speech to allow trolling.
At the same time, I can create a social network which is devoted to the dissemination of only carefully verified news, and no one should be able to invoke freedom of speech to hijack this mission.