Quote from: LilDevilOfPrada on January 06, 2013, 02:08:50 PM
LOL loved this
but it if this ENDA back fires like my countres labour laws the amount of anti-gay protests will just get worse :/ for now tho seems nice.
Any time there is progress on a civil rights issue -- there will always, always be regressives amping up their protests against the group who's basic rights are being advanced. However, we must not allow that to intimidate us from pursuing progress.
Quote from: spacial on February 19, 2013, 07:22:28 AM
However, if someone is unsuitable for a job, they can be be rejected at interview or dismissed.
Quote from: spacial on February 19, 2013, 07:22:28 AMBut equally, if someone who is not capable of fulfilling the functions necessary to do a job, can be discriminated against. Turning up in unsuitable attire is most definately unacceptable. Having hair styles that are not appropriate is also unacceptable.
Problem is -- deeming someone to be unsuitable just because who they are.
If a transwoman's hairstyle is deemed "inappropriate" when it is one that would be considered
perfectly appropriate were only it on a cis-woman --- that is unjust discrimination --- and in a sensible society would be met with the fullest force of the law.
Yes --- I admit that if I were to go into a Christian bookstore looking for a job, and were wearing five-inch stilletos and an outfit skimpier than the one worn by women of the original STAR TREK series - they'd be well in their right to reject me because of that. (Of course, this assumes that they would similarly reject a cis-woman who does the same thing --- but that assumption isn't
too far-fetched if we're talking about a Christian bookstore.)
However, if I were in a situation where I was worried about being evicted because I can't pay rent --- and in desperation combed the classifieds and applied to that same Christian bookstore wearing an extremely conservative attire -- yet a female one --- sorry, but I shouldn't have to face eviction from my home because someone
else believes that me being trans is anti-God.
Likewise, I can see justice if someone won't hire a person on a wheelchair to do a job who's function involves carrying stuff on two feet. However -- if someone believes that being wheelchair-bound is a punishment from God -- well, they have the right to believe that, but not the right to make the job-applicant who is in a wheelchair bear the brunt of said belief if the job in question is, say, a desk-job. And if the law
permits such nonsense -- then it is a toothless joke of a law.
Quote from: spacial on February 19, 2013, 07:22:28 AMI don't know much about US Employment matters. But here, at least, it is the ability to do a job that matters.
Here, they are way too lax on discrimination --- and the burden-of-proof put on victims of discrimination is way beyond what anyone in their right mind would consider "realistic".