xylene
Senior Member
But there is no law to that effect,
That is an unjust situation. DUH.
Hence why the OP is justufied in resenting this pathetic policy., and one isn't looking to upend capitalism by lamenting its existence...
But there is no law to that effect,
I'm in the Wall Street Journal comments section I guess.
"You're a socialist." You're pathetic.
Pay and compensation are highly regulated...????I never said that, not even suggested it. And that's some hyperbolic nonsense btw.
I do know that an employer offering maternity leave benefits needs to offer them equitably, without gross differences in how they are dispensed, because 2nd class motherhood is a sad and pathetic thing to defend.
Pay and compensation are highly regulated in the interest of the public good. That's not socialism. Not even close.
But accusing someone of that is a sad, weak and feeble argument.
Your pay is whatever you can convince your emploiyer you are worth.
Perhaps I'm an atheist or some otherwise anti-American buzz word du jour.
Strive for more.
everyone getting the exact same pay and benefits regardless of position.
Minimum wage and overtime, for example. I just you forgot about those.
You are pulling this 'everyone gets the same pay' thing out of thin air. That's YOUR boogeyman.
Yes, I do beleive an employer that offers a maternity benefit that exceeds what is required by law needs to administer that equitably (note not precisely equally) across employees. Because allowing 2nd class motherhood is not in the common interest and not in the compelling state interest. It should be changed in law. Given the political movement towards greater regulation of and mandatory provision for maternity benefits this is hardly some outlier position.
That is not what I would consider highly regulated in a way that would have anything to diminish wage and benefit disparity.Minimum wage and overtime, for example. I just you forgot about those.
is that the only benefit that you believe should be equal among employees?You are pulling this 'everyone gets the same pay' thing out of thin air. That's YOUR boogeyman.
Yes, I do beleive an employer that offers a maternity benefit that exceeds what is required by law needs to administer that equitably (note not precisely equally) across employees. Because allowing 2nd class motherhood is not in the common interest and not in the compelling state interest. It should be changed in law. Given the political movement towards greater regulation of and mandatory provision for maternity benefits this is hardly some outlier position.
is that the only benefit that you believe should be equal among employees?
My own belief is that it is not the obligation of society or employers to pay for people to have kids.
There is nothing gender related in this original question. Lawyers (without regard to gender) have a different benefit policy than non-lawyers. It is a class difference unrelated to gender.I can't speak to every possible benefit or configuration of compensation. You are asking to exact some 'principle of equal benefits' from me. I don't know. Related to this thread, If they are highly gendered and create second class mothers.
If an employer had a policy of allowing executives dedicated time off to be with their children for school event but not for the proles... That would be unjust.
I do know that maternity leave is a highly gendered issue and extending it to one class of mother over another is not right.