If a company says. "I will pay you x dollars per hour to walk around with a t-shirt that says 'I'm an Ass Clown'" & you take them up on their offer I don't have a problem with it. Same applies to Covenant. You know what you are getting into at the time of employ. If you don't want to drive a truck with their message, drive for another company. Nobody forces Kobe Bryant to wear Nike shoes....but given that he took their money he better...but he had a choice. Originally Posted by atlcomedyThe problem with this argument is that discriminating of the basis of being an Ass Clown or on what brand of shoes you wear doesn't violate the Civil Rights Act. See my response to Rud above.
A business cannot have a policy in which they hire only Christians or Muslims or Jews or Buddhists, etc. (Lets leave aside non-profit religious organizations for the moment). However, if I do take a job with Covenant then I better be ready to drive a truck with their signage on it. Originally Posted by discreetgentOK, let's take this argument and switch around the facts a little.
Instead of Covenant we have Back-of-Bus-Trucking, Inc. BBT was founded by a segregationist and calls itself a segregationist-based company. It holds company meetings where management talks about why the races should be separate. It prints and distributes literature to its employees that carry the segregationist message. All of its trucks carry the slogan "Segregation Now, Segregation Tomorrow, Segregation Forever!"
BBT, however, insists that it's not breaking the law against race discrimination (the same law that forbids religious discrimination) because it has an open policy that it does not base hiring decisions on race and that the message on the trucks is a political one protected by free speech.
Do you really believe that BBT isn't breaking the law?
Cheers,
Mazo.