freediver wrote on Jul 5
th, 2019 at 7:32pm:
That's the legal point I am making. You cannot write into your contract a right to rape your employee in the same (legal) sense that you cannot write into your contract a right to fire someone for their religion views.
For a start it is not the "same (legal) sense" - as you are comparing a "right" to do something with a stipulation that you cannot do something. Its apples and oranges. Plus the fact that rape is illegal anyway, and obviously no organisation is able to put a clause in a contract saying their employees can do it. Not vilifying people on the basis of sexual orientation, on the other hand, is not illegal - funnily enough. So your comparison is absurd.
And whether or not an organisation is allowed to specifically put in their contract that someone must not express their religious views, the point is RA didn't do that, as they didn't need to. Their clause was the perfectly reasonable (to the standards of our society) stipulation that he must be respectful of all people equally in their public statements - regardless of sexual orientation. That this happened to conflict with Folau's actual religious views isn't really RA's problem, and it doesn't mean they are persecuting Folau for his religion. Otherwise where do you draw the line? Do you have to give allowances to nazis who claim that calling for jews to be burned in ovens is a legitimate expression of their "religious views"?
freediver wrote on Jul 5
th, 2019 at 7:32pm:
His right comes from his football skills. His football skills were not considered in terminating his job as a football player. It was entirely based on him expressing his religious views, which had nothing to do with his job.
100% wrong. As an international football player and a role model, he has a moral responsibility and obligation to uphold accepted community standards. Also it absolutely is part of the job description - and I can show you the contract to prove it.