[quote name='SpazX']AND WHAT IF THE DOCTOR GOES ON BREAK WHILE TRYING TO RESTART YOUR HEART AND YOU DIE!
Jesus, did you
try to misunderstand what I was saying?
Obviously not every job can make the same accommodations. That's why I said what matters is whether or not it actually affects the job. Dress code would be one of the least important things 90% of the time. Who the

cares if some dude in a cubicle wears a tie? Nobody does, it's an arbitrary rule and that company isn't going to collapse because of it, so if there was some religion that somebody belonged to where you can't wear a tie (which afaik does not exist), then it seems like a reasonable accommodation to let them not do that, and completely unreasonable to not hire someone based simply on that.
Christ.[/QUOTE]
The problem is that you don't seem to have much business experience so it is hard to explain how the business world works. The cop thing was something so basic I thought anyone could understand. But you have no idea how maddening it is to work with a unionized employee in a key position who, right in the middle of a challenging assignment with hard deadlines, puts out their lights and packs up their briefcase because the clock just went from 4:59pm to 5:00pm. I would be just as put out if they did it for religious reasons (need to get home by sundown, can't work sabbath, etc). To me it wouldn't matter - allowing this behavior can have a profoundly negative effect on business and morale.
These things may seem small to you but they can have a profound effect on the operation of a business. Allow someone to ditch the tie, eventually someone else stops shaving, someone else wears black sneakers, and when confronted they'll all start whining about the arbitrary nature of uniform rules and how they sort of comply too - until pretty soon your workforce is a whiny bunch of slobs. From experience uniforms and business attire really is a slippery slope affair - you either have it or you don't.
I don't want to live in a country where opportunists and lawyers can sink their claws deeper into the meat of companies facing big lawsuits over clashes with the minutae of religious dogma that ends up having a big affect on the bottom line. I'm not as worried about the big corpos with their armies of high-priced attorneys, but I am concerned for the small corporations who will get further sqeezed by opportunists and their slick ambulance chasers looking to make a buck off of quick-to-settlement religious discrimination cases.
Noone is saying that it would be ok for Wal-Martians to enforce a policy of worshipping Christ or for Ben&Jerry's to only hire communist athiests. I just ask that in the modern industrialized world can we please free business from cowtowing to the minutae of religious dogma. Last I saw we're not governed by the Ten Commanments or Sharia.
[quote name='HowStern']Right. The eeoc says that accomodations for religious reasons are mandatory unless the accomodation imposes "undue hardship" on the company.
I don't believe putting extra clothes (a scarf) over required dress is an undue hardship. That will be argued at the trial, no doubt.
Bob, prince, Bmul, and some others, don't believe this right is fair to the corporations/businesses. But their analogies are so extreme that I don't think they understand the line where "undue hardship" starts and ends.
The real reason the EEO laws are important is because what actually happened.
The girl was denied the job because she showed up to the interview wearing a scarf. Not because she wanted to wear it during her work hours.
Those arguing against the EEO laws seem to forget the newspapers help wanted ads that used to read "Jews need not apply" or the way the Irish came here starving only to be denied work, and that the whole country is made up of immigrants and yet they were all shunned for being immigrants.
Finally we have some civil rights to make some sensible guidelines, And I think they are fair laws, with "undue hardship" being a fairly easy thing to define.[/QUOTE]
Right in this case A&F acted in a ridiculous and possibly illegal fashion. Which is why I said I was going slightly off-topic.