Glocksman wrote:Edi wrote:
This means that "freedom of speech" in the US is just a slogan with no substance behind it. Yiou have the right to free speech as long as you only say things that the big money elite (i.e. those whose companies people depend on for their livelihood) approve of, otherwise you have the right to shut the fuck up and take it up the arse. Your country is seriously fucked up on a very fundamental level.
Edi
Or unless you're union. Union contracts include 'just cause' clauses and lay out what is considered legitimate grounds for termination. If she had been union, the ALJ not only would have given her the job back, he probably would have fined the employer for deliberately violating the contract.
My guess is that its not illegal because of the potential for forcing an organization to employ someone who is directly opposed to the goals of the company. One example would be an abortion rights activist employed by a Catholic hospital that refuses to perform abortions due to moral restrictions.
Should this hypothetical hospital be forced to continue the employment of the activist once he/she speaks out against the hospital's position?
That's a different matter. If the person is actively disrupting the workplace by proselytizing there, that's enough to fire them for it. There is also the little thing about freedom of association cutting the other way. There is a freedom to form associations that have certain kinds of rules, and those associations cannot be forced to employ people who go against the rules and/or try to undermine the association. The caveat is that the rules must be relevant, which requirement the Catholic hospital would fulfill, because their work is based on religious tenets even if they perform a practical service.
There's a Finnish Supreme Court case where exactly this happened, a man who was employed by the church and constantly spoke out against it was fired (I'm not quite sure, but I think he had also quit his membership in the church) and who sued the church for wrongful termination. He won in lower and Appellate Court, but the Supreme Court sided with the church using exactly this kind of reasoning. It was our constitution's prohibition of discrimination running head-on against freedom of association, and the latter principle came out on top in that case. My dad was somewhat involved in the case, as he's Finland's foremost legal expert in matters involving the church, and he said that everyone (up to and including the Parliament's Constitution Committee members) were telling him that he's wrong and it's not going to fly, only to be proven wrong.
Glocksman wrote:As I pointed out earlier, the laws vary from state to state. In other states, your right to speak out and keep your job is largely protected, though exemptions are made for religious organizations.
The religious organizations have that exemption precisely because of the above freedom of association vs freedom from discrimination on the basis of race, sex, religion etc issue, and there's nothing wrong with that. What is wrong is that in America there is no universal ban on discrimination based on race, sex, religion or lack thereof, ethnicity, political beliefs and affiliation etc, which has been written into most European constitutions anyway.
Edi