EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
Popular content
Today's Top News
Businesses Impeding Free Speech Rights in the Workplace
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees not only the freedom to speak but also the freedom not to listen. The U.S. Supreme Court has recognized that "no one has a right to press even good ideas on an unwilling recipient." Nevertheless, American businesses are increasingly violating what should be the acknowledged free speech rights of their employees.Frito-Lay Inc., one of the world's largest producers of snack foods, is also one of the country's worst abusers of its employees' right not to listen. It routinely not only compels its employees to listen to anti-union diatribes, on company time and property, but also forces its drivers to allow anti-union advocates to accompany them on their routes, requiring the captive drivers to listen to their anti-union speech.
Frito-Lay sugarcoats what it is doing by portraying this as merely "communicating" with its employees, i.e. exercising its own free speech rights. But an Aug. 6, 2007 letter, which was sent to several hundred Teamster-represented employees in Washington state informing them of Frito-Lay's impending effort to oust the union, had menacing undertones: "We will probably use several methods of communication over the next few weeks, including employee meetings, letters, route rides, and individual discussions." Left unstated, but nonetheless crystal clear to employees, was that listening to these "communications" would not be voluntary. To the contrary, any refusal by an employee to participate in such communications -- wherever, whenever and for however long the company wished -- would be grounds for discharge.
Unfortunately this kind of behavior is not unique to Frito-Lay. Many American companies take advantage of the intrinsic vulnerability of their employees at the workplace. A report for the federal government, based on a study of more than 400 union representation election campaigns, found that during 92 percent of union organizing drives, employers forced their employees to attend closed door anti-union meetings. In addition, 78 percent of employers directed supervisors to deliver anti-union messages to employees in one-on-one meetings.
Not surprisingly, employers have never seen fit to grant union representatives the same equal right to address employees. And nothing in federal law requires companies to allow labor representatives onto the employer's property to speak to workers, even if just to give an alternative view to the employer's anti-union speech.
So in many American work sites today, not only are workers' free speech rights being violated on a regular basis, but there's also no free market of ideas. Instead there exists a communication monopoly where workers are subjected to Soviet-like conditions, indoctrinated into the employer's anti-union credo and relentlessly harassed by their employers.
To counter this, a nationwide campaign has been launched to win basic free speech rights for workers. A proposed law, titled the Worker Freedom Act, would make it illegal for an employer to require workers to sit through meetings while the employer lectures on religious or political beliefs, including beliefs about joining a union. This law would not prohibit employers from sharing their opinions with their employees, but it would grant the employees the right to walk away.
The WFA has been introduced into numerous state legislatures and the Michigan, New Hampshire and Oregon houses of representatives all have passed it. It was passed by the Colorado Legislature in 2006 before being vetoed by the governor. Clearly, a lot of people agree with the U.S. Supreme Court that there is a compelling need to "protect listeners from unwanted communication." Whether in situations such as children in school or passengers on a bus, the court wrote that "the First Amendment permits the government to prohibit offensive speech as intrusive when the 'captive' audience cannot avoid the objectionable speech."
If "captive speech" is not permitted to be imposed on students in school, why should it be imposed on workers at their jobs? Should American workers have to forfeit their First Amendment-type freedoms whenever they show up to work?
Free speech is as American as apple pie, so it seems oddly un-American that in the 21st century American workers don't enjoy basic free speech rights in the workplace. The current momentum in favor of the Worker Freedom Act suggests that Americans recognize it is simply wrong that working Americans are denied this basic right. It's past time to support legislation that will give workers and worker representatives free speech rights in the workplace.
Dmitri Iglitzin is a labor law attorney in Seattle. Steven Hill is political reform director at the New America Foundation and author of "10 Steps to Repair American Democracy" (www.10steps.net).
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...

16 Comments so far
Show AllThere is also the seldom discussed matter of RIGHT TO SILENCE. The 24/7 noise machine that facilitates the control apparati of "The programmers" is everywhere. I go to the bank and have to watch Fox "news," or go to an airport, and everywhere is "CNN." One time I walked deep into a park just to hang out with trees and birds and contemplate, and some couple saw me sitting there, had to follow. The woman said, "You found a quiet spot," to which I replied none too cheerily, "Not anymore."
I think of silence as a YIN/feminine aspect. Many view silence as something to be filled up or penetrated. Poets, mystics, artists and anyone given to inspiration understands how sacred silence is or can be. It, like the countless species earth mother took eons to create, is passing from our sphere. Sure, our MSM is a crock of expensively packaged shit, insult to our senses, intended to dumb down so that no one pays attention to what that Wizard of ODD is doing behind the chief executive curtain. What is often missing from discussion is the importance of quietude. For all the hooplah about this being a "Christian" nation, I think observing the sabbath... and I mean shutting down every motor, every store, every factory, would be a good idea, a step in the right direction. We talked in this forum about the bees being overworked, dropping out; and that same response is true of EVERY elemental kingdom. Nature is depleted. Think of YOUR mother? Could she work 24/7 without pause? There is SOME truth in the Bible. The idea of the 7th day being a "rest" beat has its truth in Metaphysical principle. It will come apart, the center cannot hold, lest certain spiritual truths come back into the way we live to heal the disease that capitalism represents, the disease furthered by disgusting politicians who have no iota of humanity in them; but it is also centered in missing links of consciousness that like higher cognitive bridges must now be built into the collective understanding. These then become the ideologies that lead us to a world of different promises, potentials and possibilities. ANOTHER WORLD IS POSSIBLE, style.
Big Brother's ten minutes of hate, again.
"...so it seems oddly un-American that in the 21st century American workers don't enjoy basic free speech rights in the workplace."
No, it seems entirely in line with being American, which means complete hypocrisy in favor of corporations and at the expense of the citizenry. Stop fetishizing this disgusting country and its ugly flag.
Our politicians sold the Constitution to corporate America so it's no surprise that they will use it to intimidate workers. What was designed to protect citizens from the abuses of government has become a tool for corporations to use to get cheap, compliant labor. We can thank our political whores in D.C. for literally selling us out. America, you are a fraud.
Hoa binh
Shame that the article didn't mention what would happen to the employee who told such a unionbusting corpwhore that he/she didn't agree with what they said while driving their route. Would the employee even make it to the end of his route, or be fired when they showed up for work the next day?
Don't even have to be about unions, mention that you favour universal health care in some industries and they'll sack you as well. Weren't there stories on CD a few months ago about people losing their jobs because they were registered with the wrong political party?
Corporate Feudalism. Corporate Feudalism. Corporate Feudalism. We are NOTHING. Capital is EVERYTHING. We are slaves. They are the Masters. OBEY.
And yes, based on the lie of the header in the 1886 Santa Clara vs. S. Pacific Railroad they CLAIM Super-Citizenship but that is a LIE. The language they claim for precedent was in the header, written not by the Justices (the case had nothing to do with Corp Citizenship) but by a revolving door President from Eastern Railroad named Davis, acting as Clerk of the Supreme Court. The words he inserted into the header might just have easily been a sonnet to one of his concubines, a chili recipe, or perhaps a seven cheese guacamole dip for all the "legal standing" those words had.
So for 120 years, BASED ON A STUPENDOUS LIE, compounded by a wink and a nod, the Masters have held you and your children on a Leash.
Because of this LIE when you step off the curb you have NO CIVIL RIGHTS that any Richfilth need consider. And yes, if you're one of the well heeled servitors you may obtain access to legal counsel, maybe, if "Tort Reform" hasn't barred you from pursuing legal redress. And yes, that is exactly what "Tort Reform" was all about. Courts are for the Richfilth, not for the slaves.
So by all means let's pass the WFA. While we're at it maybe they could repeal Taft-Hartley and start enforcing the Wagner Act. Oh yeah, I forgot, the Department of Labor is headed by a former roommate of the Bush Crime Family, named Attila the Hun. He loves Workers, medium well with a pinapple glaze, a six pack of domestic, & side of caviar. Attila says we taste like pig, but then he's from Corp Agri-Biz.
Peace.
Aside from company sponsored diatribes, there is another breed of hatespeech. That is your off-cubicle type. Zealots have a habit of standing just off your cubicle and ranting about christ, and what wonderful things Pat Robertson and his ilk are doing.
They have images on their cubicles of kids from third world countries, saved by missionary work who left soon after the image was taken. And soon after that, the children died.
It is all about the buy-in. If you do not buy in to their rants, you are not part of America as defined by "them". And so far, I have no idea, and I dont think they do either, as to who "them" and theirs" are.
In the "Good Shepherd", Matt Damon tells Joe Pesci that he represents the "them", as in the same America the modern day haves. and that the Italians are just visiting.
It is much the same today, with homeland security and the everyday cop profiling who "theirs" are.
One provocateur in my ex-life of large corporations had a little note up on his cubicle.
"Of all the leaders of major religions, only one claimed to be God."
You can judge "their" intelligence yourself.
Love
Zero
There are those who say our inalienable rights stop at the corporate door. I think that is alienating a citizens rights and there is no provision in the constitution where one's rights are abrogated by visiting a neighbor's house...or enetering a store. Corporations are everywhere. Who gave my boss the ability to suspend my rights because it is a corporation? Where does it say in the constitution that a corporation can determine what your rights are because their property rights dismiss your free speech? Since recently actually.
We are losing our children's constitution.
Well said Bugs.
Thats why I held my breath today and registered as a repug (I had to take a shower when I got home). It seems that Ron Paul is the only one who will protect our Constitution for my children.
HOW TO _ NOT _ SIGN AWAY ONE'S RIGHTS
I've been advised that one sign the corp-o-fascist's work agreements with the phrase "signing under duress", as legal evidence of not having ever voluntarily given up any rights to the un-holy ones, just in case one has a chance to go to trial and stick it back to them.
Namaste … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … … Mahatma Gandhi … … … … … … … … … …
« We must be the change we wish to see in the world »
« There is a sufficiency in the world for man's need but not for man's greed »
wisteria1:
Ron Paul is NOT the answer. Even though he is a pure Libertarian, as a born-again Christian he opposes abortion rights and birth control. He does not believe in the Commons - public education, Medicare, Social Security, public infrastructure of ANY kind. Once you get past his opposition to our involvement in Iraq (which is part of his general isolationist views), he has nothing for progressives! PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE look at the truth of this dangerous and un-American candidate, and the dangers he poses for our future.
I know people who have been reprimanded, and even fired, for not kowtowing to the company line. In one, case the person was warned that his honest opinion about the county government's policies, that he gave to a reporter for a local paper, was not appropriate, and he would never be allowed to speak to a reporter again.
Truthteller
Thanks, but I've heard it all before. Should I trade health care for "show me your papers" on every corner. Should I feel better about my social security retirement when it could be frozen and me jailed with out a warrent for calling Sudan twice in a month. Should I be thrilled with my new public transportation even though I will need to go through a military check point to get where I am going(the Pres. can do it per patriot act). No thanks. No liberty, No freedom, No Bill of Rights...the rest is worthless.
I am with you truthteller, I read your post often. But first things first. We must take back this country now or live in corperate military state.
Sorry, but I must respond to ZeroPointField. One reason South America has achieved progressive, socialist governments IS Christ. No, not the pathetic, narrow-minded and bigoted interpretations many "fundamentalists" in this country espouse, but the REAL liberation theology advocated by Christ. Those of us who know the truth as He preached it have to, MUST be non-materialistic socialists who are our brothers' keeper.
Blame Taft Hartley for this.
The US got rudimentary rights for wage workers later than most 'advanced' democracies (Wagner ACt 1935), and the Reactionary component of business and politics set about undermining these rights from day one. War intervened, but V-day saw the launch of a sustained political and propaganda campaign that has never let up.
Corporate feudalism is the accurate name for it.
Labour law is essentially based on 'master and servant' principles (c/f Atleson's 1983 Values and Assumptions in American Labor Law) and not 'free contract'.
My generation listened to Tennessee Ernie Ford's hit Sixteen Tons. The song was about the coal mines and how the owners bought everything in the mountains and towns around the coal mines. The miners worked all day just to buy milk, bread and needs from their stores. "Sixteen tons and what-a-ya get? Another day older and deeper in debt" was the chorus that can be applied to todays corporations. Another line from the song also applies, "I owe my soul to the company store."