shanek said:
Well, I have shown you the economic principles, and I have given real-world examples. Perhaps instead of just "agreeing to disagree," you could come up with a rebuttal? Refute the economic argument, and provide real-world examples of it not happening as I say? Your example above is unsuitable since, as I said, it's about a government and a black market, not the free market.
The fact the employees working for a company who presumably were good workers have been fired for smoking on their own time makes my argument.
The fact that right now there are employees who have to submit to testing to determine if they smoke a legal product or they lose their job makes my argument.
As I said previously, I don't disagree that over the long haul the market may be able to correct for things like this, at least partially.
The problem is that while we are waiting for the market to take corrective action people have lost their jobs for a reason that is not at all related to any legitimate business of the employer. Now, you might quibble over who determines what is or isn't reasonable, but someone in this thread gave a real world example of an employer firing an employee for not voting the way the employer wanted and the courts upheld the right of the employer to fire the employee for that reason. I don't consider that reasonable as nobody, employer or otherwise, has any legitimate right to control how one votes.
As long as we have a market that allows for even one person to lose their job for no cause related to the business the market isn't sufficient as far as I am concerned. Fire someone because they aren't needed, due to poor performance of their responsibilities or whatever. That is fine just so long as the employee isn't being discriminated against for something that isn't the employer's business. I have even said I support the right of an employer to prohibit smoking on their property or while the employee is on the clock. Totally the employer's right. It is also the employer's right to mandate the employee wear pink spandex while on the job, but what the employee wears at home isn't the employer's business.
I think the employee's right to privacy trumps the employer's right to hire/fire at will in these cases.
I just don't see it as being black-and-white as you do. There are cases where it's equal, there are cases where it's favored on one side or the other. Even with a market phase that favors the employers, that doesn't mean there aren't employees who have the upper hand, and vice-versa.
I agree, there may be some employees in some sectors that have the upper hand while the reverse is true in other sectors, but you keep looking at this in a macro sense while I am looking at it in a micro sense.
I believe the market forces are able to handle abuses on a macro level, but often not on a micro level. To me it is too much for even one person to lose their job due to a tyranical employer who makes their employee's private business their ilegitimate business.
There are options other than government intervention. And those options don't have the perverse negative consequences that government intervention always does.
I agree government regulation can have perverse consequences. However what other option is their for the employee fired for smoking on his own time? There are no labor laws protecting him therefore the courts will not rule in his favor and I don't see there being any public revolt, particularly since it is fashionable to be intolerant of smokers these days.
The fact that people continue to shop at Walmart demonstrates that people are about price over principle so I don't see any help for the fired employees other than government regulation.