We don’t know if it was the worry that North Carolina would lose jobs, the NCAA would no longer allow tournament games to be played in this state, or if The Boss would forever freeze-out this state as a concert venue, but something inspired Gov. Pat McCrory to order a plate of humble pie and begin what we hope will be a comprehensive rollback of House Bill 2.

Perhaps it was all of the above — and some.

There has been no shortage of outrage, real and contrived, over the legislation that lawmakers passed and McCrory signed in a single day last month to circumvent a Charlotte ordinance that would have allowed folks to pick the bathroom that they felt fit their perceived gender. And it really doesn’t matter if that outrage was well-aimed or not, or whether it was selective and hypocritical, it is clear that this state was beginning to suffer — and not only its image. Real damage has been done, and more was promised.

It was a good and painful lesson of the power of economics to bend a position.

On Tuesday, McCrory spoke: “After listening to people’s feedback for the past several weeks on this issue, I have come to the conclusion that there is a great deal of misinformation, misinterpretation, confusion, a lot of passion and frankly, selective outrage and hypocrisy, especially against the great state of North Carolina. Based upon this feedback, I am taking action to affirm and improve the state’s commitment to privacy and equality.”

There is certainly confusion over House Bill 2, not only among those who favor and oppose it, but among those who voted to make it law. That’s not a good way to legislate.

As we said in an earlier Our View, if lawmakers want to keep people who are born male out of the women’s bathroom, and people who are born female out of the men’s bathroom, more narrow legislation could have been crafted to that end. We repeat, however, that the real potential for violence is when a person born male who self-identifies as a female enters the men’s bathroom.

We are headed toward a future when in public places there will be men’s and women’s bathrooms, as well as those that are open to everyone, but North Carolina is likely to be at the end of that line.

McCrory issued an executive order on Tuesday that attempts to keep intact the bathroom rule as it relates to public facilities, but reaffirms the right for private businesses to establish their own bathroom and locker-room policies. The order expands the state’s equal employment policy to include sexual orientation and gender identity, but leaves a provision that local governments may not pass broader non-discrimination or minimum wage policies for their communities than what House Bill 2 outlined.

Can someone explain again why bathroom use and the minimum wage are part of the same house bill?

Predictably, the ACLU wasn’t satisfied, saying in a statement: “Efforts to divide the LGBT community by extending limited protections but leaving in place the rules mandating discrimination against the transgender community will only strengthen our resolve to fight back against this discriminatory and misguided legislative action. We call on Gov. McCrory and the North Carolina legislature to repeal House Bill 2 and replace it with full non-discrimination protections for all LGBT people.”

Legislators will return to Raleigh later this month, and by then there should be better information on whether McCrory’s executive order eliminated or mitigated to an acceptable level the damage the bill is doing. If not, the retreat should continue.