Subject: You should really read what you link.
Author:
Posted on: 2016-11-14 16:33:00 UTC

The petition response has a bit that says,
"Indeed, although simply believing in white supremacy or belonging to a white supremacist group—while abhorrent—is not a crime, the federal government has successfully charged white supremacists over the years using many federal statutes, including those prohibiting civil rights violations and solicitation to commit crimes of violence." (Emphasis mine.)
The FBI link states,
"The Bureau has been investigating the criminal activities of white supremacy extremists like Ku Klux Klan members since as early as 1918." (Again, emphasis mine.)
So basically being a member of the KKK is perfectly legal if morally repugnant, according to the US Federal government. The government of a free, democratic state has no business being a) Thought Police or b) Morality Police. Its business is prosecuting lawbreakers, which is what both quotes say the government has been doing.
To answer your other question: as EAUO noted, it's illegal for a business to decide not to serve a costumer. If you're a private person, sure, you can say that KKK isn't welcome in your house or similar things, but you're forbidden from doing that as a business.
I don't particularly like the KKK (it's hard to like people who hate me because I belong to a certain ethnoreligious group), but KKK membership does not suddenly make its members not citizens; as citizens they are afforded certain rights. It's that simple. Going "only people I agree with deserve civil rights" is immoral, and it doesn't matter whether your in-group is liberals, Christians, LGBT people or Klansmen.

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