NewsVet said:cyberdad said:IMHO, AAR's trampling of a constitutional guarantee represents the undoing of a lot of the good they've been trying to accomplish.
What "constitutional guarantee?" The First Amendment prohibits the government from limiting your speech -- it says nothing about businesses such as Air America.
Seems to me the suspension of Rhodes was strictly a business decision -- the liberal blogs and message boards are full of comments from outraged Clinton supporters who say they've stopped listening to Rhodes and/or Air America because of Rhodes' attacks on Clinton, both on and off the air.
Freedom of Speech cuts in lots of directions. As a person who claims experience as a journalist, you should certainly know that. Your claim that the First Amendment only applies against government and allows businesses to do whatever they want to their employees, is incorrect. This surprises me. It is a commonly held belief among Conservatives (and some HR departments), but most journalists know better.
Rhodes' contract defines her relationship to Air America; not the employ-at-will assumptions that you and I might make; not your partisan opinion of Randi, AAR or the Broadcasting industry; and not my opinions, either. It is significant that the only substantive comment Rhodes has made so far, is that AAR is in Breach of her Contract. I doubt that either of us knows what is in Randi's contract.
In the meantime, there are dangerous precedents here:
--) That employees lack all privacy from their employers
--) That employees ALWAYS represent their employers 24/7, even
when they are NOT representing their employers.
--) That employers can act after the fact to stifle lawful private behavior
without providing adequate and specific warning, or themselves suffering
demonstrable harm.
I propose that these Legal Precedents are as dangerous to you as they are to me -- or to Randi Rhodes. It would probably be good for this volatile and sometimes capricious industry if we encouraged the media businesses who hire us, to define more realistic and sensible standards and processes for us to conform to that allow us the freedoms of speech, expression, and privacy that we normally expect here in America.
fan