• @[email protected]
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    6 hours ago

    It’s her job to deliver the mail. The only law broken here is her refusal to deliver it. You don’t get to cherry pick the mail system.

    If she won’t deliver the mail, she needs to be fired. Period.

      • @[email protected]
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        55 hours ago

        I love this discussion because it’s a complex issue.

        I suppose I stand on the side that maybe she should have just delivered them. It’s just words and individuals can throw garbage in the bin pretty easily. I sure as shit wouldn’t want anybody filtering my mail.

        OTOH, “got a job to do” is a weak justification for unethical behaviour.

        Put me down 3:2 in favour of delivering the things I guess.

        • @[email protected]
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          32 hours ago

          It is a complex issue and deserves a full conversation. It’s hard to say what I would do in her shoes, but it probably would be to copy a personal letter a bunch of times. The context of the letter would, of course, be a general warning about circulating hate speech mail trying to misinform people, and be wary of what you read.

      • @[email protected]
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        16 hours ago

        Hot take bud, where do you draw the line with that?

        Can a transphobic postal carrier refuse to deliver anything they disagree with also? Shouldn’t they be able to decide what mail you get based on their beliefs as well?

        Or are you a hypocrite that thinks that rules should only be broken because you disagree with them.

        Oh, and please don’t go to Nazis when you feel someone disagrees with you. It’s immature, it’s irrelevant to the discussion, and it’s foolish as hell.

        • @auzy
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          25 hours ago

          Pro trans material isn’t putting people in harm’s way

          Huge difference bud

          • @[email protected]
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            5 hours ago

            You’re wrong here bud. No matter how you feel about it. You’re wrong. It’s her job to deliver mail. Even if she disagrees with it.

            And for the record- they will tell you that trans rights puts people in harms way as well- even if we both disagree- belief is belief at the end of the day- and someone is choosing to take the law into their own hands based on that belief.

            She should be fired.

            I’m done arguing this with people that don’t understand how federal laws work on the most basic of levels.

    • @auzy
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      25 hours ago

      She could argue it’s self defence technically. As we all know what shitfuckery advertising like that leads to…

      She’s probably been delivering the mail for decades. Just not some bigoted advertising.

      It’s not my job to pull down Nazi sticker crap or clean it up, but I do.

      Yes management should reject that delivery, but she also has a right not to put her family in harm’s way.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 hours ago

        So should a bigoted transphobe mail carrier be allowed to deny mail from a source depicting trans rights as a positive thing?

        Does this work both ways?

        Or is it only that the law should be broken because you disagree with it. You don’t get to cherry pick federal laws bud. That’s not how it works.

        • Krzd
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          -13 hours ago

          What? The flyers promote the discrimination and criminalisation of a memory group, versus your example which would be promoting minority rights.
          Those aren’t comparable.

          • @[email protected]
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            33 hours ago

            They’re 100% comparable when you understand how federal law works. Learn it- then come back here and we can discuss whether or not a mail carrier has the right to decide what mail you get.

            Until then, I don’t think you can carry your side in this discussion.

            • @GeneralVincent
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              2 hours ago

              Well I’m not too well versed on Canadian federal laws as I’m a bit further south. So I looked into discrimination laws in New Brunswick, Canada and found this Human Rights Act

              Some parts that could be relevant;

              The New Brunswick Human Rights Act is the provincial law that prohibits discrimination and harassment based on 16 protected grounds of discrimination.

              The Act prohibits discrimination in the following five areas under the provincial jurisdiction: Employment (includes job ads and interviews, working conditions, and dismissals); Housing (e.g. rent and sale of property); Accommodations, services, and facilities (e.g. hotels, schools, restaurants, government services, libraries, stores, etc.); Publicity; and, Professional, business or trade associations (e.g. Nurses Association of New Brunswick, New Brunswick Teachers’ Association, New Brunswick College of Physicians, etc.).

              Publicity includes any publications, displays, notices, signs, symbols, emblems that show discrimination or an intention to discriminate against any person or class of persons

              Not a lawyer or expert, but that seems to apply at least superficially. Maybe a bit of a stretch. But it helps that the fliers were full of factually wrong and hateful anti-trans myths. And freedom of speech has limits, even federally.

              ETA: However, mail carriers are probably exclusively covered by federal law, and the federal Canadian Human Rights Act only seems to specify discrimination and not harassment. I do think it’s too much of a stretch to say this would be covered by any federal laws

              Final edit: ok I read more. This is the closest thing I could find from the federal Human Rights Act

              12 It is a discriminatory practice to publish or display before the public or to cause to be published or displayed before the public any notice, sign, symbol, emblem or other representation that (a) expresses or implies discrimination or an intention to discriminate, or (b) incites or is calculated to incite others to discriminate

              If I am misinterpreting it, please let me know. I think it could be used as an argument tho

                • @GeneralVincent
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                  11 hour ago

                  I understand that. I’m reading way too many laws already lol

                  If the letter is determined to be unlawful, there’s a provision that allows Canadian Post to not deliver the letter. It’s a whole process that the mail carriers did not follow. Maybe if they had tried, and used the argument that it was unlawful discrimination or harassment to deliver the fliers, they would have had a leg to stand on. It seems that they didn’t, they took matters into their own hands, and they were punished accordingly.

                  To be more clear, I’m not arguing against the punishment. Just the fliers and if they could be considered unlawful