Is It OK To Fire Employee For An Opinion Stated on Personal Time?
I had an interesting discussion with Beth (my wife) about Hayley Geftman-Gold, the now-former CBS VP and Senior Counsel. Ms. Geftman-Gold posted a comment in a Facebook discussion thread that got her fired, essentially saying that she had no sympathy for the Las Vegas shooting victims because most Country and Western fans are probably gun-toting Republicans.
My wife’s position is that CBS was fully within its rights to can her based on her statement. If she was talking on the Facebook thread as “Hayley Geftman-Gold, CBS VP and Senior Counsel”, then I agree. They were well within their rights to dump her, since she brought her employer into the conversation without their knowledge or consent.
But if she was simply acting as an individual with an opinion (however ludicrous and stupid and insensitive that opinion might be), my position is that if she was acting purely as a Facebook participant and NOT as a CBS employee, she should not have been subject to any discipline by CBS.
If she was not acting as a CBS employee, what CBS did to here is—in my opinion—no different than what the leftist idiots at Berkeley did to Ann Coulter and Milo Yiannopoulos. The idiots at Berkeley didn’t like what Coulter and Yiannopoulos might say, so they did everything they could to prevent them from speaking.
If Geftman-Gold’s sentiments were her own as a person and not as a CBS employee, she should not have been terminated because of her ideas. To punish her for believing something—anything—seems like Orwell’s Thought Police live and in person and coming to a theater near you.
I’d like to get perspectives and opinions from others about this. And please disregard any “employment at will” concepts; I’m simply talking what’s right and wrong. I’m asking purely about whether you believe an employer has the right to punish an individual for having an opinion, when that individual was not on work time, and was not speaking as an employee of that company.
If Geftman-Gold was acting as an individual and not as a CBS employee, do you think CBS was right to fire her?
Or do you think what happened to her is as wrong as what happened to Ann Coulter and Milo Yiannopoulos?
Or do you see it some other way?
Thanks,
Ray
These comments added 05.October, 8:15am EST.
I’d like to thank everyone who responded to my question. Got a larger response than I thought I would. Rather than trying to respond to selected answers, I’m updating my original post.
I think my problem (if “problem” is the right word) is twofold, one based on my perspective, and one based on my ignorance.
First, I’m a grunt, someone who isn’t even on the corporate ladder (and who has absolutely no intention of trying to find and climb that corporate ladder). I’ve spent my entire 40 year career as a computer programmer, perfectly content to watch people move up the food chain—only to be eaten by someone else more ambitious moving up that same food chain.
So I have absolutely no idea what it’s like to be viewed by others outside my company as an executive of some kind, rather than someone who maintains the day-to-day functions of a Fortune 500 company.
If I was somewhere on that corporate ladder, I may well understand that the line between who I am when I’m “on the clock” and who I am after-hours isn’t nearly as clearly defined as it is in my current position.
Second, I am probably one of 17 people in the entire United States who has absolutely no presence in the social media world. I doubt anyone really gives much of a rat’s behind about my feelings as I watch a television program. I really don’t think anyone cares about something that happened to me at work, or on my vacation, or about what I ate for dinner. And yes, that pretty much means I don’t care about others’ feelings about that same television show, or what they did at work or on vacation, or what they had for dinner. It’s just not a world I’ve ever been interested in joining.
If I was active in social media, I may well understand again how that line between the on-duty me and the off-duty me isn’t as clear as I think it is.
For me, that line between the two parts of myself is very clear and distinct. Anything I’m doing that’s in any way related to my company, I have an absolute responsibility to do what’s in the company’s best interests. But when I go off the clock, that responsibility ends. I’m living for myself at that point, not for my employer.
Anyway, you’ve all given me some great situations, perspectives, situations, etc., and I really appreciate everyone’s comments.
And it seems like my naiveté is firmly on display for everyone to see.
I’ve got my reality, and in that reality, there are two different aspects of me: the employee, and the individual away from work. But it’s become obvious after reading these comments that how I see the world is different than most of you. And the reality is that you’re probably right, and I’m probably wrong.
Thanks again, everyone, for the replies.
My wife’s position is that CBS was fully within its rights to can her based on her statement. If she was talking on the Facebook thread as “Hayley Geftman-Gold, CBS VP and Senior Counsel”, then I agree. They were well within their rights to dump her, since she brought her employer into the conversation without their knowledge or consent.
But if she was simply acting as an individual with an opinion (however ludicrous and stupid and insensitive that opinion might be), my position is that if she was acting purely as a Facebook participant and NOT as a CBS employee, she should not have been subject to any discipline by CBS.
If she was not acting as a CBS employee, what CBS did to here is—in my opinion—no different than what the leftist idiots at Berkeley did to Ann Coulter and Milo Yiannopoulos. The idiots at Berkeley didn’t like what Coulter and Yiannopoulos might say, so they did everything they could to prevent them from speaking.
If Geftman-Gold’s sentiments were her own as a person and not as a CBS employee, she should not have been terminated because of her ideas. To punish her for believing something—anything—seems like Orwell’s Thought Police live and in person and coming to a theater near you.
I’d like to get perspectives and opinions from others about this. And please disregard any “employment at will” concepts; I’m simply talking what’s right and wrong. I’m asking purely about whether you believe an employer has the right to punish an individual for having an opinion, when that individual was not on work time, and was not speaking as an employee of that company.
If Geftman-Gold was acting as an individual and not as a CBS employee, do you think CBS was right to fire her?
Or do you think what happened to her is as wrong as what happened to Ann Coulter and Milo Yiannopoulos?
Or do you see it some other way?
Thanks,
Ray
These comments added 05.October, 8:15am EST.
I’d like to thank everyone who responded to my question. Got a larger response than I thought I would. Rather than trying to respond to selected answers, I’m updating my original post.
I think my problem (if “problem” is the right word) is twofold, one based on my perspective, and one based on my ignorance.
First, I’m a grunt, someone who isn’t even on the corporate ladder (and who has absolutely no intention of trying to find and climb that corporate ladder). I’ve spent my entire 40 year career as a computer programmer, perfectly content to watch people move up the food chain—only to be eaten by someone else more ambitious moving up that same food chain.
So I have absolutely no idea what it’s like to be viewed by others outside my company as an executive of some kind, rather than someone who maintains the day-to-day functions of a Fortune 500 company.
If I was somewhere on that corporate ladder, I may well understand that the line between who I am when I’m “on the clock” and who I am after-hours isn’t nearly as clearly defined as it is in my current position.
Second, I am probably one of 17 people in the entire United States who has absolutely no presence in the social media world. I doubt anyone really gives much of a rat’s behind about my feelings as I watch a television program. I really don’t think anyone cares about something that happened to me at work, or on my vacation, or about what I ate for dinner. And yes, that pretty much means I don’t care about others’ feelings about that same television show, or what they did at work or on vacation, or what they had for dinner. It’s just not a world I’ve ever been interested in joining.
If I was active in social media, I may well understand again how that line between the on-duty me and the off-duty me isn’t as clear as I think it is.
For me, that line between the two parts of myself is very clear and distinct. Anything I’m doing that’s in any way related to my company, I have an absolute responsibility to do what’s in the company’s best interests. But when I go off the clock, that responsibility ends. I’m living for myself at that point, not for my employer.
Anyway, you’ve all given me some great situations, perspectives, situations, etc., and I really appreciate everyone’s comments.
And it seems like my naiveté is firmly on display for everyone to see.
I’ve got my reality, and in that reality, there are two different aspects of me: the employee, and the individual away from work. But it’s become obvious after reading these comments that how I see the world is different than most of you. And the reality is that you’re probably right, and I’m probably wrong.
Thanks again, everyone, for the replies.
Today the news media are much, much worse, not because of the nature of journalism as such but because of their assumed views on their purpose in journalism (as promoters of their ideology and own activism) as well as their politics. There is a bigger need than ever for good writers and more ways to do it, but the supply has been curtailed by bad philosophy and corrupt education.
Oh... and you're not saying the people you know are a random sample. I get it now. That thought makes Gail Wynand seem even more tragic to me.
It's odd that any type of content, including good journalism, would decrease at a time when the means of publishing content to an audience of any size have improved so much.
If the original claim that there is less good journalism now than in the past is correct, one possible explanation is tracking clicks makes it easier to provide content that people click on. Something drawing our attention is not the same as something we want to see. There may be other explanations.
ewv: I have personally known good editors/publishers like that, so it's a simple "existence proof". But I don't know personally if there are any left now.
CG: This seems odd.
It's not 'odd', I don't personally know any now because the ones I knew personally are no longer doing it. (One of them was a former executive editor of the Washington Post who died in his 90s, still running the weekly newspaper he founded for his 'retirement'.)
As with the question of finding honest journalists, it is odd in this world of cheap/easy communications and travel that it should be harder to connect with interesting people and projects than in the past.
"That is not a "bias"."
Probably the wrong word. I mean if it's a question of should I carry on working with the same people or do something different, and I can think of equally strong reasons either way, I'm "biased" toward doing something new. Maybe it's because I have internal inertia I'm unaware of. I see in in people's posts. Should the company "punish" the employee. If I were in that situation, I'd think I'm not keen to punish people, so I'll jsut keep her on and deal with the problems. Then I realize: NO, NO, No. You're punishing yourself and her by having her stay. Letting her go if she's causing problems for the business is rewarding her because it frees her up to go find something where she's doing a good job, her employer is happy and giving her raises, she's happy--- so much better than keeping her.
This seems odd. The world has so many people and great ways to provide content, products, and services down the long tail, in other words to very small markets. So if there are clear examples in history of good journalism, but it disappeared recently, that's an interesting development.
"Gail Wynand wasn't doing that (but Toohey was)."
I thought of Toohey as pure evil. Wynand was not evil but was flawed. He wanted to show the world he did indeed run things. If I read it again I'll look for indications Rand was saying Wynand should have quit the newspaper business altogether, stop providing sensationalized content, or keep providing the sensationalism his customers wanted but stop trying to quash people who are doing great things and ignoring public opinion.
But we have a different idea of what an interesting, productive project is than the leftist ideologues in the media and what they are out to accomplish. That is not a "bias".
In this case, it appears to more of a case of someone doing something so stupid that even her intellectual allies are too embarrassed by it to want to be associated with it. Or maybe some of them are properly embarrassed by something they don't agree with. But ideologues trying to use a business to push beyond what people will yet accept have to be more careful at least in their tactics. Gail Wynand wasn't doing that (but Toohey was).
I wonder if that industry is second-hander by its nature. Could Gail Wynand have gotten over his need to show the world I do run things around here and been like Roark and still run a paper with content geared toward Alvah Scarret?
Legally, firing for any reason or no reason should be absolutely within your rights as an employer.
But ethically, I'd say your goal should be acheiving your hierarchy of values... so if this is an employee who helps you do that, then firing them for some other reason (such as a desire to punish their bad views etc.) represents and act of sacrifice of your higher values, so then I'd say no. But if the employee's behavior jeopardizes achieving those values then you should fire them. There is no obligation to continue employing them at any sort of sacrifice.
Yes. I think it comes from working at these big companies that have procedures. Those procedures are part of how they create value and not be dependent on key people. It's different from the small business world, where if something's not working, you just make a quick a change. It makes you nimble but dependent on the individual decision-makers.
So I think someone coming at it from a big-company view would think how hiring and firing decisions align with a company policy, while I'm left thinking they should just stop working together and start working together again if they change their minds.
"Thinking of keeping her out of duty or pity assumes they disagree with her."
Well if they don't have a problem with her then the whole question is moot, right?
Thinking of keeping her out of duty or pity assumes they disagree with her. Often people like that say what the rest of them believe and wish they could say. They may have wanted her to stay but were afraid they couldn't get away with it.
The first is simple. If a private person or company wants to fire an employee for a political opinion, the law should let them. Period. But if the firing is immoral or even questionable, other participants in the market can and should use their own powers to reward or punish either side by trading or not trading with them.
As for whether it is morally virtuous to fire someone for political speech, I'd say generally no, except in two classes of situations.
(1) If the employee's job is such that other people reasonably expect fairness on his part, and the speech casts doubt that they will get it. For example, a person who says that black people as a class deserve "affirmative action" should not get to keep his job if that job is hiring manager or dean of admissions.
(2) If the employee's job makes him a public spokesperson for the boss's point of view, and the speech disagrees with that point of view or makes the boss look bad. This is the situation G-G was in. The network could not have kept her without giving the public the impression that it endorsed what she said.
The bright side of this is that she will probably not sue. As a lawyer she has to know she doesn't have a case.
In that scenario, the reason an employer would choose to overlook indiscretions by the opinionated employees would be if the employee is valuable to the company.
Simply put -- all decisions possess a cost.
concepts"? And why?
I would not hire somebody to cut my grass, etc., on the basis of whether or not he was an Objectivist, or his politics, etc.
But I would have the right to do it. Still,
I don't know. If she did not identify herself as
a CBS employee, perhaps they should not have
done it, as she did not say it on the air.
---However, I wonder how much of such "freedom" an employee on the other side would get from most of the media networks.
There is a difference between whether CBS had the right to do it, and whether it was good policy. Certainly CBS had the right. As someone else pointed
out, there might be a difference (as to whether they should have done it--at any rate, they had the right to, in the absence of a prior agreement or contract),
depending on whether she was using her own name or a handle.
Stay well.
Maritimus
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