What "innate abilities" do employers have
They may not have any innate abilities that are relevant. Which is the point!
Their ability to get what they want is simply based on the government allows them to have. If the government decides that they have too much, it can take of it away and give it to someone else.
That's why a comparison with Michael Jordan is inappropriate. The government can't take away a bit of his talents and give them to someone else.
You asked "What property of his are we entitled to?" The answer is simple: none, because the advantage he has is not transferable. The advantage an employer may have over an employee is to some degree transferable and therefore comparison falls flat.
It is possible to give an answer to "what property is the employee entitled to?" if one assumes the employee is entitled to anything. It may be some of the negotiating power the employer has.
Uh, yes it is. He said, "it is also the job of government to ensure that coercion is not used to arrive at the terms of the private contract."
No, it isn't. You just show your difficulty to read. Just because it is the government's job (in Username's opinion) to
ensure there is
no coercion does not mean that there is coercion.
In fact it if the government does its job, it means the exact opposite: there is
no coercion because the government
ensures there isn't.
And Tony said it explicitly.
Tony doesn't make Username's argument. He makes a completely different argument.
Again, a distinction without a difference.
I don't understand what you are trying to say? Where in that sentence do I make a distinction, and why should there be a 'difference' ?
I get a strong feeling you are misreading again.
Yes. Now, how has Weyco been involved in criminal activity?
That depends on the definition of 'criminal activity'. If discrimination of smokers is criminal activity, it has been involved in criminal activity. If discrimination of smokers is not criminal activity then it hasn't.
So whether one thinks it has been involved in criminal activity depends purely on one's personal political philosophy. Some will say yes, others will so no.
It's a logical explanation of the employer/employee relationship and it debunks the claims of many in this thread.
The logic of it depends too much on your own personal political philosophy. Someone who prefers slightly different definitions of 'right', 'priviledge' and 'the proper role of government' will not agree with your conclusion. Even if s/he agrees that your logic is sound when one uses your basic assumptions.
But not everyone uses the same basic assumptions, and your assumptions are not objective truth. Therefore your argument is simply a nice summary of your own political philosophy, which we already knew. It debunks nothing.