RicOlie_2 said:
MrBrown said:
RicOlie_2 said:
Absolutely not. Being black is not a choice.
So, you say, what you belief is just a choice.
You could stop believing in God and stop being catholic just at the point? Cool... And you just can start believing homosexuality, just equal as being heterosexuality?
What if a job (out of being a priest) wants you to stop living heterosexual acts?
And, to help the employer to see iof the person is of a belief, sexuality or such thing they don't feel comfortable with, that homosexuals have to wear a rainbow flag, and jews a little star, and islamists a small half-moon, and mormons a little.. uhm.. here I have fo pass, I don't know a fitting symbol important to the mormon belief...
..but, you know.. nothing against these kind of people... it's not to discriminate.. it ius just.. to help normal people see what they are dealing with...
No, that's not what I mean. I don't think I presented my reasons very well. I think that in a free country, employers should have the right to refuse employment just because they don't like a person. That's all I mean, and I think that the employer in question should be the top dog in the business/organization/other for the rule to qualify. If someone under the head of the business is responsible for employing people, the rule should no longer apply unless the boss also refuses to hire that person. At a certain point even that should be prohibited.
But this are two kind of socks, and that's the reason, I think the religion and sexuality of a person has nothing to be discussed in a job application discussion:
If the employer doesn't know on this things, and he feels uneasy with the maybe empoyee, this may be a sign, that the applicant may not fit into the business. Thats normally the main reasin for job interviews: testing, if the applicant fits in.
If a employer refuses to give a job to someone, just because he has another religion, which nothing has to do with the job itself, than this is just a kind of "rascism".
In Germany questions like "What sexuality you have?", "What religion you are part of?" and (for female employees) "Are you pregnant?" are illegal in a job interview, to avoid such form of choosing.
On the other hand, I don't go well with the persons saying "If a person from a minority/female and a person from a majority/male apply for a job, and they are almost equal in knowledge (or whatever for the job is needed) the minority/female person should be favoured, to be not a rascist/sexist whatever." Because thus kind of thinking is just the other way around. Its 'almost' the same as "Hey, we white, christian, men are just superior, because we have balls for everything, a cross to carry for the benefit of all and we get a nice tan in the sun." (okay a bit satirical expressed, but maybe you get it.)
There are som cases, where you are not all wrong:
In a (strict) catholic school, a jew, mormon or even a protestant teacher just won't "fit". In a heterosexual, men aiming, strip club, a gay male tabledancer just won't fit.
But in a company, searching a good IT-engeneer, there is no need, to be heterosexual, male and catholic. If the employer has a problem with a female mormon, which may have just perfect abilities for this job, it is the problem of the employer, for be single minded, not the problem of the applicant to be a female mormon.
Another question:
If you had a son, loving him about 15 years, would you really think he is a different person, if he would come out to be homosexual, knowing it about 3 years or so? Would you really see him as a different person? What would you say to him: "No, I am not your father anymore, I can't accept that you.. love male. Stop it! I will not help you with the problems you will have to face, because of single minded persons, like me."
Now think another way. Lets say your father had been atheist, but in your childhood, you really found your true belief in god. Finding the teachings of the catholic chuch of hope and salvation quite a true into your heart. What do you hope to hear from your father? "Hah! You fool! 'Believing' in what cannot exsist. Out of my house of true knowledge."