• @[email protected]
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    158 hours ago

    The Post Office disseminating hateful propaganda is bad, actually, and just because the law currently requires Postal workers to do it doesn’t make it right.

    • @[email protected]
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      7 minutes ago

      Their free speech is bad. OK.

      What does that have to do with delivering the mail as the carrier takes an oath to do ?

      Or was professionalism in the civil service bullshit from the start ?

    • @iamtherealwalrus
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      05 hours ago

      So a pharmacist should be allowed to refuse selling e.g. birth control, due to personal beliefs? Everyone can just decide who they want to service for any reason, right?

      • @nutsack
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        5 hours ago

        the post office is right to punish her for not doing her job, but she is also right to sacrifice her job for an act of civil disobedience. they are both right. the only person who’s a piece of shit here is the one sending the mail.

        • @[email protected]
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          23 hours ago

          That. What this parent did was a laudable act of civil disobedience. Unfortunately, the post office did what they had to do.

        • @[email protected]
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          -14 hours ago

          Yes. Exactly. But that’s the original point: you accept the job with the understanding that, if you find a particular aspect of the job to be against your morals, and you refuse to perform your job due to your morals, that you may be disciplined and/or fired.

          The wrinkle here is that pharmacists have some degree is 1a protections (in the US) because their objections are on religious grounds rather than humanist ones. That makes firing them difficult, because it can be argued that it’s religious discrimination. An obvious solution would be to require them to refer the person to another pharmacy, so that they aren’t violating their religion, but pharmacists are arguing that’s compelled speech that still violates their 1a rights.

          • @nutsack
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            4 hours ago

            nobody should ever be granted special privileges based on religion or political beliefs. the postal service and the pharmacy face the same moral circumstances in these two scenarios.

            civil disobedience is still disobedience. you do it because you believe its right, and you accept the consequences.