Showing posts with label workplace speech. Show all posts
Showing posts with label workplace speech. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 3, 2025

Waxing philosophical: workplace speech vs. anti-discrimination law


Federal anti-discrimination laws protect people, not the content of their speech. Amy Wax, a Penn law professor (who, frankly, should have known better) just learned this lesson the hard way.

The law school disciplined her for what the it labeled "flagrant unprofessional conduct" stemming from a string of statements she made—some in the classroom, others in media—that denigrated racial minorities and others, including:
  • Insinuating that Black people are inherently inferior to whites.
  • Asserting the U.S. would be "better off with more whites and fewer nonwhites."
  • Telling a Black colleague it's "rational to be afraid of Black men in elevators."
  • Dismissing interracial marriage as misguiding advertising.
  • Commenting on a podcast that Black women are "single moms with a bunch of guys who float in and out."
  • Saying same-sex relationships are selfish and not about community or family.
  • Claiming the country is better off with "fewer Asians" and describing them as resentful and envious of Western achievements.
Wax sued, claiming that punishing her for years of inappropriate racist, sexist, and homophobic statements was discrimination against her as a White Jewish woman.

Tuesday, July 8, 2025

Yes, you can be fired for what you say outside of work… especially when it's hateful.


In Darlingh v. Maddaleni, the Seventh Circuit just upheld the firing of a school counselor who gave a profanity-laced anti-trans tirade at a public rally. She promised "not a single" student under her watch would "ever, ever transition," and made sure to identify herself as a Milwaukee Public Schools employee while doing it. 

She sued, claiming the school district violated her First Amendment rights by terminating her. The 7th Circuit disagreed.

Thursday, April 25, 2024

"This is a business." Google CEO fired back and fired protesting employees.


"This is a business, not a place to act in a way that disrupts coworkers or makes them feel unsafe…."

Those were the words of Google CEO Sundar Pichai in a post on his company's corporate blog.

He's referring to Google's recent firing of 50 workers involved in protests against the company's cloud-computing contract with the Israeli government.