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10-12-2024

Bad Judges: Why Companies Should Not Police Employees’ Extramural Speech

Author: Jason Brennan

Published in: Philosophy of Management

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Abstract

Many businesses police employees’ extramural political speech and beliefs. They refuse to hire potential employees or will fire and blackball current employees for what they say and believe about politics. This paper argues that business managers should, with a few narrow exceptions, forbear from doing so. It grants that some political speech and beliefs, such as racist speech, can indeed be wrongful and presumptive grounds for disassociating with others. However, I argue that we cannot even in principle, even roughly, determine what makes some beliefs bad enough to merit such blackballing. Further, I argue that people in general, and business managers in particular, are likely to be unreliable in practice in assessing which speech or beliefs are unacceptable. Accordingly, businesses should forbear from policing speech because they are likely to be incompetent and unreliable at such policing.

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Footnotes
1
“Extramural” here means speech occurring outside the business, in employees’ private lives, public debate, or social media. “Intramural” speech indicates speech at work. For instance, McDonald’s cashiers may not preach Christianity to customers—a restriction on intramural speech. But if the company forbade customers from witnessing on their free time off company grounds, it would thereby police extramural speech.
 
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Metadata
Title
Bad Judges: Why Companies Should Not Police Employees’ Extramural Speech
Author
Jason Brennan
Publication date
10-12-2024
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Philosophy of Management
Print ISSN: 1740-3812
Electronic ISSN: 2052-9597
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40926-024-00329-9

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