German nightclub Brucklyn apparently has a quota on refugee patrons
Last week, a nightclub in the town of Bad Tölz in Bavaria, Germany, admitted that it was barring asylum seekers from entering.
The Local, an English-language German news outlet, reported on Wednesday that last week, club-goers noticed that bouncers at Brucklyn were turning away refugees. The move apparently prompted onlookers to call the bouncers “Nazi pigs,” Brucklyn explained in a Facebook post. The club added that the decision was made to keep refugees out in order “to maintain well-being in the club.” Yikes.
The Local recaps the Facebook post:
When refugees began to arrive in Bad Tölz early in 2015 the club had allowed them in just like any other customers, the post claims. But young male asylum seekers began harassing women in the establishment, following them to the toilets or calling them “whores“ and offering them money for sex, according to the Facebook post. The nightclub writes that it faces a dilemma. On the one hand it could ignore the problem and face losing more and more of its old clientèle, as women become more reluctant to drink there. The second alternative is “to only let a limited number of refugees into the club. That way the girls can feel more comfortable”— but on the other hand they are aware this leads to accusations of racism, they say.
So less of a ban, more of a quota.