Unfettered capitalism is as far removed from scripture as soviet communism was.
I am trying to figure out who would have a problem, really, with having an ethics policy which would suggest that bookstores should refuse to stock 'literature' that is chock-full of demonstrably false information, when vetted by the same standards that say, the Encyclopedia Britannica uses. Certainly public libraries do have this obligation.
So, trying to follow your logic: where does that leave the Bible? Where can I find
demonstrable truth that an inexplicable power created everything from nothing--and in six days? Where is there
demonstrable truth that one man resuscitated another man who had been dead in the grave for days? Where is the
demonstrable truth that a man killed by crucifixion lived again in the flesh--or that Saul had the Damascus road experience exactly as recorded--or any number of other bit s of "literature" contained in the Bible?
Yes, I'm being a smartass, but I'm also asking a serious question.
Who gets to decide what gets a pass just because someone (the bookstore, the librarian, the individual, the community) believes they have the corner on capital-T "Truth," as opposed to what doesn't pass that test?
I can be responsible for making the choices of what I will and won't read (and believe). My problem arises when someone else presumes to make those choices for me, effectively removing my ability to make my own choice.
Of course, the issue of what bookstores carry is (should be/must be) driven by economics/capitalism--just as they can't/don't have to have everything available for me, I'm equally free to shop/not shop there. The issue gets more theoretical and muddier for me when we talk about libraries, and not just the "we can't afford to buy everything" aspect, but more specifically, "we have to protect you/your kids/the community" tone of it.