Admiral
Commander of the Fleet of Justice
- Joined
- Jan 23, 2006
- Messages
- 769
This is an example of the absurdity of free-market totalitarianism. If you as an employer also said "I will not hire anyone who will not give me a blow-job and swallow my semen" the govenment then says "that's illegal - That's illegal- you can't not hire someone just because they refused to take a drug test". By your logic you are being "forced" to hire people you don't want. However, you're not. You're being forced to respect a person's privacy, civil rights and human rights. I know, boo-fukkin-hoo, the government is protecting a citizen's rights.
Now you're hitting the most controversial issues: I don't think it should be illegal to require sex to be hired. (Obviously I personally would never do something that I find so despicable, but there's a big difference between despicable and illegal). This is, of course, similar to the argument over prostitution, so most of the arguments I make are applicable to the other.
Here's the simple reason: I support property rights. The employer has his property (he owns the money and controls the corporation), and the employee has hers (she owns herself- no one can legally force her to do anything sexual). If the employer wants to trade a job for sex, and an employee agrees to it, what right does the government have to say that it's a violation of the employee's rights?
You don't have an intrinsic right to anyone else's property. I can't claim any right to any of your property unless you agree to it. However, you're saying that employees have a right to the employer's property- that one of their human rights is to be able to demand a job from the employer. If the employer wants to hire the most skilled people for the job, then he has a right to do that. If he wants to hire people that agree to sleep with him, then he has a right to do that. If he doesn't hire anyone and instead sits around in a pile of money, well, he has a right to do that.
People's rights only extend as far as they infringe anyone else's. Obviously every person has the right to their own body- no one can be allowed to force them to have sex against their will. And the employee has the right to his property. Neither one should be allowed to force the other to give up anything- they should only be allowed to make voluntary exchanges.
Let me make a quick side note. This is different from a lot of forms of sexual harrasment, many of which SHOULD be illegal. If an employer, after hiring someone, says he'll fire her unless she has sex with him, it's a breach of contract- that should be illegal. Also, many cases of this would fall into the category of harrasment- the question is whether there's a potential for mental harm (there certainly is that possibility when an employer demands sex from an employee). However, what should be legal is the employer simply publicly stating that he will not hire anyone who doesn't sleep with him. Most people will rightly find him despicable, but those who don't should be free to sleep with him and get a job for it.
Now, you might say, "That makes sense in terms of property rights, but FORGET property rights, you're suggesting a society that is not based on merit or ability but instead on sexuality! There is no justification for this!" Here's the thing, though- the effects would not NEARLY be as bad as you think they would be. Let's look at it from a consequentialist point of view instead of a deontological one:
Would you ever work for an employer that demanded sex from his employees? Neither would I. Would you ever do business (buy products from, sell resources to) with an employer who demanded sex from his employees? Neither would I. Some would, but the point is that doing this is an ENORMOUS cost to a business. And the cost goes farther than that- by hiring people based on sexuality rather than merit, they're hiring unqualified people. In short, there is a huge financial incentive NOT to use these policies. If I trust corporations with one thing, it's that they really, really want to make money.
So the behavior wouldn't even be CLOSE to widespread (particularly since in a free society, prostitution would be legal. Executives wouldn't sacrifice their companies for sex if they could pay for it directly). And if this awful practice of demanding sex in exchange for employment does go on, it doesn't have to hurt you at all. Just don't work for the employers that do this (which would be very rare) and don't buy their products. In the end, no one ends up getting hurt.
Remember, you only believe that people are getting hurt because they have a right to a job. The simple fact is, though, that you own yourself. No one should be allowed to force you to do anything you don't want to do. Therefore, the right of an employer not to give someone a job trumps the person's right to force that employer to give them a job.