Not really. When you're working, your boss can dictate exactly what you say and when you say it, and fire you if you deviate from the script.Coito ergo sum wrote:Which they do.Seth wrote:MrJonno: "Well an employee and to some extent employers lose a lot of free speech once they enter work."Coito ergo sum wrote:
Because you said I was "wrong" about freedom of speech not supposed to be limited in the workplace, and then you proceeded to prove that point by explaining that a private employer can control speech in the workplace, which, of course, has nothing to do with freedom of speech in the first place.
CES: "In the US, that is not supposed to be true."
Seth: "Wrong."
What we have here is a failure to communicate. Let me rephrase for clarity:
MrJonno:"Employees lose free speech rights at work."
CES:"Not in the US" (Implying that employees HAVE free speech rights at work in the US)
Seth wrote: Seth:"Wrong" (Stating that employees DO NOT HAVE free speech rights at work in the US.)
Obfuscation and pettifoggery. Yes, you can speak, but no you cannot maintain a legal claim against your employer for firing you because your speech violated his rules, therefore you do not have a "free speech right" you merely have the ability to speak. The concept of "right of free speech" implies that you may invoke the law to protect your exercise of speech if it's infringed upon, and that right only exists as against GOVERNMENT, not private, suppression of speech.And, you are wrong about that. They do have free speech rights at work. However, free speech rights do not include the right to not be ordered off private property or fired by a private employer because of what you say.
Seth wrote: The First Amendment prohibits government from regulating free speech, but people wrongly assume that this means they have a "right" to free speech everywhere, which they don't.
Yes, it does. You're pettifogging.I don't care what idiots "assume." Freedom of speech has nothing to do with a person's right to be or speak while on someone else's property.
Seth wrote:
They have a right not to have the government infringe on their speech unreasonably. But they have no "right" of free speech as compared to, for example, the "right" to not be discriminated against by reason of race, religion or disability in the workplace that can be enforced against the employer.
Pettifoggery. If the employer fires them for saying something, they have no recourse in the law, therefore they have no "free speech right."They do have a right of free speech. They just don't have a right which takes precedence over the employer's rights, and the employer owns the property/building or leases it.
Seth wrote:
The government cannot suppress speech, but neither can the government mandate that a private employer not suppress speech in the workplace.
You did. Government exists to secure the rights of the people. A person has a right not to be discriminated against in employment by reason of race. If an employer so discriminates, the employee has legal recourse, enforced by the government, against the employer. No employee has such a right when it comes to speech while under employment.Who in the world stated or implied that the government could?
Seth wrote:
That's what I was saying. Sorry if there was some confusion.
The right to free speech only relates to government power.
Exactly.
Now you're flip-flopping.To say that an employer can control what is said by employees, or take adverse job action against an employee for saying the wrong thing, has nothing to do with freedom of speech.
You have the ABILITY to speak, but you don't have the RIGHT to speak or post. The term "right" implies a freedom of action that can be defended (in this case legally) against infringement by another. You cannot invoke the protection of the law (enforced by the government) to prevent the mods from censoring your posts or to prevent your employer from firing you for speaking out of turn.Just like the moderators here don't violate freedom of speech by deleting posts. We still have 100% freedom of speech.
Seth wrote:Yes, you are wrong about "freedom of speech" existing in the workplace as much as it exists outdoors. It doesn't. Outdoors, in public spaces, the only authority that can regulate speech is the government, and it is severely restricted in how and when it can lawfully do so. Therefore there is "freedom from government restraint of speech." But in the workplace, there is no "freedom of speech" because the employer has absolute control over what is spoken in his establishment.The fact, is in the US, Constitutionally, the government is supposed to have no greater power to restrict speech in the workplace than it has to do so in the street. Thus, the First Amendment doesn't indicate a location-dependent right of free speech. Freedom of speech exists in the workplace, as much as it exists outdoors. You told me I was wrong about that. I'm not.
No, you are moving the goalposts by intermixing "freedom of speech" and "rights." "Freedom to speak" is nothing more than the present ability to mouth words and make sounds. A "right" to speak freely is something entirely different. You are pettifogging when you mix the two as if they are interchangeable. They aren't.You have a complete backwards notion of what freedom of speech is.
You have the ABILITY to speak, but you don't have a RIGHT to speak freely in my home that can be invoked under the law to prevent me from kicking you out of my house. That's what "a right to freedom of speech" means in this context. If you have a right to speak freely in a public park, and the police come along and suppress that right, you have a cause of action against the government that can be enforced by the law to prevent the police from interfering with your speech. You have no such right when it comes to your employer's premises.Freedom of speech is not location dependent. It exists to the same extent everywhere, which is why the constitution doesn't mention employers, or homes, or streets. You have freedom of speech if you are in my home, but I have property rights to kick you off if I don't like what you're saying.
You're just being evasive.
An employer has no right to suppress a person's speech. the employer has a right exclude the person from the employer's property, or fire the employee. But, the employer has not right to shut the person up. That's what you're missing. The employer can exercise free speech rights, and condition presence on the employer's property on the employee only saying certain things. However, if the employee refuses to comply, the employer has no remedy that shuts the person up - the employer can escort the person off the property or call the police and have him removed. Beyond that, there is no power to shut another person up other than through force of persuasion or simply telling the person to shut up.Seth wrote:
Since the term "freedom of speech" implies the words "right of" to form the phrase "right of freedom of speech" this implies some protection against an action suppressing speech which can be asserted as a right against the employer. In public, all persons have protection against GOVERNMENT suppressing speech or sanctioning it (to one extent or another...but not absolutely), in private no person has any protection whatsoever against a private business owner suppressing or sanctioning speech at all. Period.
Where, exactly, do I imply or say that one would have a free speech claim against him?Seth wrote:
If your boss doesn't like the way you pronounce your words or the words you choose, he can fire you, and you have no "free speech" claim against him.
The employer has freedom of speech rights too.
And, the employees have their freedom of speech rights. An employer firing a person for saying the wrong thing is not a free speech violation at all, and doesn't deprive the employee of free speech rights. It doesn't even shut the employee up, necessarily, unless the employee consents to shut up. If the employee keeps talking, the employer's recourse is to have the person removed from the employer's property - which is an exercise in property rights, not a suppression of speech. The person is free to keep talking off of the employer's property.[/quote]