Talya wrote:
Discussions are so much more interesting when one has a certain level of agreement with both sides.
<Teal'c>Indeed.</Teal'c> (sorry -- cross-polinating threads)
Anyway, I think you're making interesting points, particularly looking at jobs as what they are -- transactions of the labor market. Some people are looking to sell labor, and some are looking to buy it. It's difficult to see why anyone should have to be forced to engage in a commercial transaction against their will, especially not in the name of freedom. Your reasons don't
have to make sense to anyone else, or be "fair". I can, for instance, refuse to buy products made by a particular company because, I don't know -- let's say the CEO had an affair that went public. That has nothing to do with the product or the company really, but so what? That's my liberty as it pertains to my property (money).
Of course, corporations aren't individuals, but how does that really change anything? I don't see how you get to "this company must purchase labor under terms it finds unwelcome" without abridging the rights of the individual(s) who own it. Effectively, you're saying that a prospective employee has a greater claim to the company's assets than does its owner(s). And, of course, the company's (which is really just a collection of assets) may be controlled by a 3rd party chosen by the owners (ex. a CEO, CFO, etc.) but this doesn't change the equation, either. Consider elderly people who have given power of attorney to someone else in order to manage their affairs. Do their rights cease to exist? Of course not.
The argument is usually that having a job is essential to having income, and having income essential to living. Fair enough. But then, if I refuse to by a product from some company, am I not depriving its owners and employees of the income
they need to live? That argument doesn't really resolve.
I understand where Corolinth is coming from. I don't particularly like the way these companies are exercising control of their property, but then, I don't like a lot of thing that people do with their money/property. I'd like if there were a better solution to this, but I can't see a way around it without abridging someone's rights. Maybe there's something I haven't thought of.
As an aside, discrimination in hiring isn't, by the way, illegal in the broad sense. It's only illegal when the discrimination is on the basis of race, religion, creed, national origin, etc. And those are not even Constitutional provisions/amendments, but rather state and federal statutes. But even those are a confusing mess of contradictions and exceptions. The ever-popular example of this is Hooters. You'll notice that there are no Hooters Guys. It's blatantly gender discrimination, but they've generally been able to get away with it. I believe they've lost one lawsuit, but won several others. Something about "trademark image" being a bona fide job qualification. I don't really know the details.