Amazon.comās Whole Foods Market doesnāt want to be forced to let workers wear āBlack Lives Matterā masks and is pointing to the recent US Supreme Court ruling permitting a business owner to refuse services to same-sex couples to get federal regulators to back off.
National Labor Relations Board prosecutors have accused the grocer of stifling worker rights by banning staff from wearing BLM masks or pins on the job. The company countered in a filing that its own rights are being violated if itās forced to allow BLM slogans to be worn with Whole Foods uniforms.
Amazon is the most prominent company to use the high courtās June ruling that a Christian web designer was free to refuse to design sites for gay weddings, saying the case āprovides a clear roadmapā to throw out the NLRBās complaint.
The dispute is one of several in which labor board officials are considering what counts as legally-protected, work-related communication and activism on the job.
I think youāre way into the weeds here and forget the most important thing to remember about āfreedomā: things like the Bill of Rights and the Constitution are a compact between you and the government, not you and private companies. Private companies donāt owe you anything besides whatever the government has expressly legislated, such as explicit protection for religious clothing and icons like crosses, Sikh turbans, etc.
However, beyond that, individual companies have the right to request their employees look and dress in certain ways. The flip side there is, if you donāt like those rules, you are free to not work there anymore.
Of course, legislators can always choose to pass laws forcing companies to allow more exemptions, but that hasnāt happened yet for displays of a political organisation.
@trias10
I get that. It makes logical sense. Itās just that corporations have so much power to impose their will and it feels weird to me that we let them do that even when it comes to how a human presents themself.
I agree with you about that, but these employees have chosen to do a job where they come face to face with customers daily, and some of those customers may get offended by seeing an employee wearing a BLM badge, in red states for example. The company doesnāt want to antagonise a potential customer and lose a sale, so theyāre asking that no employees wear any political markings. And honestly, I think thatās a fair request if you work in a customer-facing role.
Notice that this ruling only applies to Whole Foods workers, not Amazon warehouse workers, who can probably wear whatever they want since they donāt deal with customers.
Because it is weird. Itās even weirder for any average person to defend it.
No, I am very well aware of that. But theyāre not saying āYou canāt wear a BLM button because we do not think black lives matter, but you can wear a proud boys one if you want.ā
They may or may not have that right - thatās going to depend on both the currently existing corporate rules and any state/local legislation.
I was thinking in particular about a case in the past 5 or so years where a company was sued for forbidding one employee from wearing a hijab while allowing others to wear crosses. It was a case of religious discrimination.
My point is that for this to be non-discriminatory it has to be a policy thatās handled in an even handed fashion. Of course it has nothing to do with the constitution - Iām not even sure why youād introduce that unless youāre staying to strawman. But I know that I canāt fire someone for saying in the workplace that they agree with Trump unless I have a wholesale policy banning talking about politics. Iād be in trouble if I said people could talk about politics, but they could only say nice things about Biden and bad things about Trump. You might be able to get away with that at a locally owned auto body shop, but not at a major corporation.
My further point is that saying that black lives matter isnāt political, unless thereās a major political party that thinks black lives donāt matter. Rainbows arenāt political, unless thereās a major political party that thinks the LGBT community shouldnāt be visible. Books on gay parents arenāt political unless thereās a political party that thinks gay people shouldnāt be allowed to be parents. But that same party would allow a flag pin, or a yellow ribbon, or a book about a hetero couple with a kid. Itās only political when they disagree with it. Otherwise itās just ānormal.ā
You actually can fire people based on their political beliefs, because believe it or not, political affiliation is not a protected class under current US federal law (maybe some state law though). There are only 7 current federally protected classes: age, race, sex, religion, marital status, disability, and sexual orientation. Thatās why Republicans have been announcing they want to make political affiliation a protected class soon, because I guess thatās the next big battleground, is employers start to hire/fire based on politics.
I take your points, but I guarantee you this isnāt a decision about politics by Amazon, but purely a maximisation of revenue decision. Whole Foods employees interact with customers face to face, every day, all across the US, from blue states to red states. They know that their customers in some places consider BLM to be a political organisation, one that they donāt support, and that goes for proud boys, KKK, whatever. The point is, you donāt want to antagonise any customers coming in through the door, and corporate is aware that people are awfully sensitive these days and ready to kick off over any tiny thing, so to ensure no customer gets offended and takes their business elsewhere, and to ensure a policy which can be applied nationally for all states where Whole Foods exists, itās just easier to say they wonāt allow anything which their customers could potentially consider political.
Thatās all this is, itās not the political dog whistle some are making it out to be. This is just corporations wanting to remain neutral and take money from every customer, not just liberal ones. Hence I agree with this policy, itās not coming from a bad place and itās not an absurd request either.
And yes, as you said, not allowing someone to wear a religious article of clothing is a lawsuit waiting to happen, which will be a slam dunk, but this isnāt the same.