musky said:
She has a right to believe what she wants.
Did I say she didn't? What I said was that her employer had the right to expect she would do the job she was hired for. If anyone feel they can't do that, they better not take the job! I have posted other examples here as well.
then we have bigboy again (sigh)
There is no way you can fire somebody for what they believe. This was not an essential duty, she could have been reassigned with no problem.
As usual - he can't read, and as usual he jumps to conclusions. As many here already said, nobody was fired for what they believed. The case was about refusing to do what she was expected to do as part of the job!
I can't see anything is changed just because bigboy "believes" "she could have been reassigned". Fact is, mr. bigboy - you were not her boss, and he didn't agree with you. Honestly, I don't think he gives a shit what you think either, and I'm 100% surehe will never hire a dub again!
Then Gozz whined:
to write to not hire a Jehovah's Witness is discrimination beyond that expected by reasonable humans.
I don't know if you really are that stupid, or you try to fool us. If so, you certainly do a good job!
Why don't you read this story:
http://watchtower.observer.org/apps/pbcs.dll/article?Date=20010623&Category=JWANDSOCIETY1&ArtNo=10623005&Ref=AR
What do you think would happen to Carol Keener's employers if they were sued? I have to say I really hope Hope Nicholson and her family actually does sue them, even though this lovely Jehovah's Witness, Carol Keener was fired on spot.
This case could have costed her employers an awful lot of money - just because they were stupid enough to hire a JW.
Gozz keeps on whimpering:
You lump all Jehovah's Witnesses together, and that is not fair.
It isn't fair? What do you men by "not fair"? Do you mean that some of these assholes won't follow the rules of the Watchtower? Isn't that to say that you expect employers to gamble that the JW he/she hires will NOT follow Watchtower rules - and MAYBE he won't get problems with his employee?
It would have been dishonest for the JW not to have disclosed that she would not do part of what would be her duties. It would have been the right thing for her to do, being in full understanding of the peculiarities of her own religious beliefs; but to make sweeping generalisations and admonish that such be the basis of employment is going too far.
They are dishonest. I know a lawyer here in town, and he has a JW secretary. This JW never told him she might break her confidentiality if a JW was involved in a case, and that she might find this was "A Time To Speak"!
If I hire anyone, I set the rules for the job. I decide what shall be done or not be done as a part of the job. And I don't give a flying fart if some freak feel they can't comply. Then they will be fired, and that's that. They can believe what ever they want to - but I will have no messing around when they are at work. And they will have to do the job they are hired for. But then again, I would see to that such things were mentioned in the contract.
Bottom line:
Never Hire A Jehovah's Witness!
Yakki Da
Kent
"The only difference between a fool and the JW legal department is that a fool might be sympathetic ."
Daily News On The Watchtower and the Jehovah's Witnesses:
http://watchtower.observer.org