Nyarlathotep said:But where does their right to enforce that agreement end.
When you get fed up and walk out the door.
Nyarlathotep said:But where does their right to enforce that agreement end.
Tony said:It doesn't?
So a business can force you to convert to a religion and not speak your mind? 1st amendment.
A business can force you to give up your guns? 2nd amendment.
A business can quarter it's soliders, against your will, at your house? 3rd amendment.
A business can serach your house and your property without a warrent? 4th amendment.
A business can compell you to implicate yourself in a crime? 5th amendment.
A business can delay justice and your day in court? 6th amendment.
A business can prevent you from voting?
Tony said:Now you're contradicting yourself.
According to you, it's a voluntary arrangement, those other employees don't have to do anything.
The thing about a psuedo-libertarian dictatorship was in response to your statement regarding congressional genocide. Keep up.
Tony said:I can come up with a rebuttal, all you say in response to it would be more theory and dogma. Ultimately, talking with you is as wasteful as talking to a fundie. Neither of you are prepared to think outside your self imposed box.
A business can serach your house and your property without a warrent? 4th amendment.
shanek said:No, it can't.
And this business isn't preventing people from smoking. It's only refusing to keep on people who smoke as employees.
shanek said:When you get fed up and walk out the door.
username said:Unfortunately this is what is being argued for. Regulating private behavior and searching the employee's body to enforce the regulation. Arguing that the employee voluntarily gives up this right as if there were no coercion involved.
Nyarlathotep said:So in other words, in libertarian-land my employer CAN tap my phone and monitor my home e-mails.
shanek said:No, I'm not. You only wish I were.
That's right; they don't. But if they don't, production suffers. One of those three things is going to happen; there's just no other option.
I never said anything about "congressional genocide." Stop lying.
I was making a parody of how Congress exempts itself from laws.
But keep it up; you only show how desperate you're becoming.
shanek said:No, they can't, because that's your property.
Nyarlathotep said:So in other words, in libertarian-land my employer CAN tap my phone and monitor my home e-mails.
Yow.
shanek said:There isn't. Either side has the right to terminate their voluntary agreement for whatever reason they choose, absent a contract stating otherwise. Nothing is being coerced.
shanek said:There isn't. Either side has the right to terminate their voluntary agreement for whatever reason they choose, absent a contract stating otherwise. Nothing is being coerced.
Tony said:See what I'm talking about, username. He ALWAYS reverts back to his dogma, he refuses to think.
Well, there's proof that you live in an alternative universe. I am self-employed and my insurance is 3+ times what a group policy would cost - much as Nyarlathotep's experience. I just don't believe your assertion, shanek.shanek said:Funny; every time I had such benefits, they always cost 2-3 times as much as I could get on my own. Of course, they covered things such as chiropractic...
Tony said:It's neo-feudalism.
username said:
Let's wait for a tight employment market and have to agree to give our firstborn to the CEO as a sex worker in order to retain employment. It would be a voluntary contract between 2 equals with no coercion involved right? I mean, I could just leave. No pressure.