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EEOC goes to bat for drunken steelworkers; strikes out
Power Line, by Paul Mirengoff
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Original Article
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Posted By:StormCnter, 2/23/2013 6:10:56 AM
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| We sometimes hear of the savings that could be realized by eliminating “waste, fraud, and abuse” at federal government agencies. But substantial savings might also be achieved if only we could eliminate absurdity. Consider a lawsuit brought by the United States Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) against United States Steel and the United Steelworkers Union under the Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA). The suit challenges a practice, approved by the Union, of alcohol testing of probationary employees. EEOC alleged that the practice violated a provision of the ADA that prohibits medical testing
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Reply 1 - Posted by:
Spidey, 2/23/2013 6:40:59 AM (No. 9192005)
These tests are administered to try and project what kind of long term employee someone would be. If they´re habitual drinkers,chances are they´d have high absenteeism rates.
A story about 6 months ago showed union workers on the freedom tower in Ny would go out and get smashed on their lunch.A drinking problem doesn´t fall under the disabilities act,i don´t think because it´s a self inflicted disease.
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Reply 2 - Posted by:
StormCnter, 2/23/2013 6:57:09 AM (No. 9192021)
More than job attendance, #1, it´s about on the job safety.
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Reply 3 - Posted by:
Country Boy, 2/23/2013 7:14:17 AM (No. 9192034)
I´m with #2.
Drinking on the job for construction union workers USED to be a tradition. But in most situations, not allowed anymore.
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Reply 4 - Posted by:
trapper, 2/23/2013 7:22:44 AM (No. 9192042)
America has become a nation of twittering, tsk tsking old nannies. In pre rustbelt America, when men made things in hot, dirty, dangerous factories, EVERY factory had a bar, or two or three, across the street where some of the men routinely drank their lunch. Some of these men had fingers missing from running punch presses, or scars from other accidents. They showered in the factories after their shift and left their dirty work clothes in lockers rather than track it all home. They were used up by the time they were 55, but glad to have the good paying factory jobs rather than the back-breaking farm work many left behind. A beer or two at lunch was not too much to ask, and no one would think of depriving them of it.
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Reply 5 - Posted by:
MissMolly, 2/23/2013 7:36:03 AM (No. 9192057)
#4, that was before OSHA, worker´s comp insurance and the EEOC. No employer can afford to take those chances today.
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Reply 6 - Posted by:
ROLFnader, 2/23/2013 7:42:02 AM (No. 9192068)
I worked on a union project in the early seventies in northern MN doing concrete forming/carlpentry. Payday was on Wednesday and the steelworkers would congregate around the cutting torch cart every Thursday morning to cure their hangovers with large doses of pure oxygen.
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Reply 7 - Posted by:
Chuzzles, 2/23/2013 9:03:29 AM (No. 9192217)
Since this is such a litegious society #4, they are also trying to avoid frivolous lawsuits by drunk employees who injure themselves and blame the company.
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Reply 8 - Posted by:
JimS, 2/23/2013 9:33:12 AM (No. 9192278)
Too bad the judge didn´t reprimand the silly EEOC attorney and allow US Steel to recover all legal costs from the EEOC´s budget. This lawsuit, courtesy of the same idjits who are threatening to sue companies who use pre-hiring background checks of job applicants to weed out felons and ex-cons. Discrimination there too, doncha know? Ted Kennedy´s ADA is one of the worse pieces of legislation in the last 80 years. It is overly broad, vague, and subject to administrative interpretation without common sense. It allows government agencies to claim disability discrimination when there is none and to throw the full force of the government on whoever they choose.
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Reply 9 - Posted by:
lakerman1, 2/23/2013 10:23:18 AM (No. 9192352)
You have to realize that the EEOC is a rogue organization. Some silly lawsuits came out of Ronald Reagan´s presidency, unconnected to the administration, or even to the head of the EEOC, Clarence Thomas.
The EEOC, remember, sued the City of San Antonio, back in the 1980s, for rejecting police applicants with felony records. The EEOC argued that disproportionate black applicants were rejected because blacks have higher felony record incidences. the EEOC lost. The EEOC sued a small lamp manufacturer in Chicago, during the 1980s, for hiring too many mexican americans and not enough blacks. The Company hired from the neighborhood, which was located in an hispanic area. And the funniest of all was the EEOC lawsuit against Hooters for failing to hire men as servers. Hooters struck back by putting up billboards of a mustached middle aged man in a hooters server T shirt. The EEOC gave up. Important to consider is that the EEOC, with a flock of attorneys, can crush a small company, just in legal fees. So alot of companies simple cave in to ridiculous demands.
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Reply 10 - Posted by:
Salt5792, 2/23/2013 10:50:36 AM (No. 9192393)
The EEOC is also making it illegal not to hire convicted criminals. The inmates are in charge of the asylum.
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Reply 11 - Posted by:
otronome, 2/23/2013 11:43:52 AM (No. 9192460)
Just because DC´s standard includes (demands?) drunks, felons, liars and hardened criminals doesn´t mean everyone else has to lower their standards
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Reply 12 - Posted by:
ColonialAmerican1623, 2/24/2013 12:17:59 AM (No. 9193024)
I am for testing all employees, including federal employees like Zippy.
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As the bipartisan Gang of Eight works to complete a comprehensive immigration reform bill, there has been a growing consensus among Senate Republicans that the bill — so far seen by no one outside the Gang — should be the subject of multiple hearings and extended consideration inside the Senate Judiciary Committee. But on Sunday there were signs that consensus does not extend to the Republicans inside the Gang. Appearing on CBS, longtime immigration reform advocate and Gang member Sen. John McCain suggested the immigration issue is so familiar to lawmakers that multiple hearings will not be necessary.
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Via Fox Nation, newly released statistics show that illegal immigrant infiltration along the U.S.-Mexico border is increasing markedly despite recent statements to the contrary by Department of Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano: “I can tell you having worked that border for 20 years, it is more secure now than it has ever been. Illegal apprehensions are at 40-year lows,” Napolitano told reporters this week in Houston. But figures released Thursday by Customs and Border Protection to Fox News tell a different story. Arrests are actually up 13 percent
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/8/2013 5:11:33 AM
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The White House press corps should ask President Obama this question: You’ve told Iran’s leaders that if they come close to marrying a nuclear warhead with a missile that can hit the United States or our allies, they should expect a U.S. military attack on their soil. (Snip)Administration officials would never admit it, but the main reason for their being tougher on Iran than North Korea seems tied to American domestic politics as much or more than anything else, specifically the standing of Israel and oil versus Korea and Japan.
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How Texas Became Texas and Why It Matters
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New York Times, by Bryan Burrough
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AS a Texas-raised journalist, I can tell you two things with confidence about my native state. One, its economy has been humming nicely for years. Two, this appears to greatly offend a certain breed of Northern writer, several of whom have descended on the state in an attempt to rebut stories of a “Texas miracle.” (Snip) “Texas has a long tradition of looking outside the government for support — and often finding it. That predates the Texas revolution and was reinforced by the rise of the cattle kingdom and the oil booms.”
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Left Celebrates the Death of Rick Warren’s Son
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/8/2013 4:55:58 AM
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ATF pulls license of one particular gun shop
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Hot Air, by Jazz Shaw
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/8/2013 4:53:04 AM
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It took little more than the headline of this article to begin raising eyebrows Gun shop that sold to mother of Newtown shooter loses license (Reuters) – The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms said on Friday it had revoked the federal license of a Connecticut gun retailer that sold a weapon to the mother of Adam Lanza, who killed 26 people at an elementary school in December. The agency on December 20 revoked the license of Riverview Gun Sales in East Windsor, Connecticut, ATF spokeswoman Debora Seifert said.
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/8/2013 4:43:43 AM
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La Jolla´s jagged coastline is strictly protected by environmental laws to ensure the San Diego community remains the kind of seaside jewel that has attracted swanky restaurants, top-flight hotels and some of the nation´s rich and famous, including billionaire businessman Irwin Jacobs and former presidential candidate Mitt Romney. Tourists flock to the place. So do birds. Lots of birds. And with those birds comes lots of poop. So rather than gasping in amazement at the beautiful views, some are holding their noses from the stench coming from the droppings that cake coastal rocks and outcroppings near its business district.
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America’s Foes Call Obama’s Bluff
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FrontPage Magazine, by Daniel Greenfield
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/8/2013 4:38:19 AM
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How America Lost Its Four Great Generals
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 3:01:19 PM
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The quasi-official ideology of the U.S. armed forces holds that generals are virtually interchangeable, that individual personalities don’t matter much, that ordinary grunts are in any case more important than their leaders, and that what really counts are larger systems that make a complex bureaucracy function. There is some truth to all of this. But for all of the bureaucratic heft of the services and the heroism of ordinary soldiers, it is hard to imagine the Civil War having been won without Grant, Sherman, and Sheridan—or World War II without Marshall, Eisenhower, Patton, Bradley, Arnold, LeMay, Nimitz, Halsey,
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Weekly Standard, by Charlotte Allen
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 2:56:23 PM
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Last August a 28-year-old gay-rights volunteer named Floyd Corkins entered the office lobby of the Family Research Council (FRC), a Christian traditional-values group headquartered in Washington that condemns homosexual conduct and opposes same-sex marriage. Corkins took a gun from his backpack and fired three shots at building manager Leo Johnson, one of them wounding the unarmed Johnson in the arm before he wrested the gun from Corkins. On February 6 Corkins pleaded guilty to three felonies: committing an act of terrorism while armed, interstate transportation of a firearm and ammunition
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Star-Telegram [Ft. Worth, TX], by Deanna Boyd
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 1:36:14 PM
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FORT WORTH -- For 21/2 years, Germain Gardea kept his wives in the dark. The 38-year-old flight instructor spent weekdays in Arlington with his first wife, Jennifer Saldivar, and their young son. On weekends, he left town for his job as an instructor at a flight school, residing in Grapevine with his second wife, Leslie Gardea, who traveled during the week. To keep the women from finding out about each other, he created fake divorce documents on the Internet and filed his first wife´s taxes, marking her as single without her knowledge. But the deception came crashing down in May after Leslie Gardea
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 6:04:56 AM
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Eliana Johnson reports that four Republican members of the Senate Judiciary — Jeff Sessions, Chuck Grassley, Mike Lee, and Ted Cruz — are calling for transparency from their GOP colleagues in the “Gang of Eight” that is drafting immigration reform legislation. In a letter to John McCain, Lindsey Graham, Marco Rubio, and Jeff Flake, the four Judiciary Committee members express concern that an immigration reform bill will be rushed through Congress without proper oversight in the form of hearings and robust debate. They note that the Gang has “secretly met for months” without consulting
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Posted By: pineledger- 4/7/2013 7:43:42 AM
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Michelle Obama has admitted that she is already tired of the bangs she first sported in January. The First Lady said in an interview with Entertainment Tonight: ´Bangs are a day-by-day proposition. They´re starting to grow out, get a little irritating.´ Still, she hasn´t let her hairdo woes get her down. ´It´s okay,´ she said after her initial complaint. ´We´ll be good.´ The first indication that her hairstyle was becoming a burden came about last weekend, when Malia, 14, was spotted adjusting her mother´s hair during the White House Easter Egg Roll.
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Posted By: JoniTx- 4/7/2013 12:18:14 PM
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Sen. John McCain says he doesn´t understand the threats from some of his Republican colleagues to filibuster a bill on background checks to buy guns. "I don´t understand it," the Arizona Republican said on Sunday of the threat coming from Sen. Rand Paul,Sen. Ted Cruz, Sen. Mike Lee and nine other Republicans. "The purpose of the United States Senate is to debate and to vote and to let the people know where we stand.” "What are we afraid of? ... If this issue is as important as we all think it is, why not take ... it up and debate?"
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Posted By: Oblio- 4/6/2013 6:51:15 AM
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President Obama´s biggest gaffe yesterday when speaking of California Attorney General Kamala Harris was not in flirtatiously complimenting her as "the best-looking attorney general," but in introducing an observation from the system of beauty into a forum that was about the system of power.What´s that, you say? Irin Carmon does a great job in Salon in laying out the bounds of propriety for when it´s appropriate to talk about a woman´s looks as a general matter. But I´ve long felt we lack a solid theoretical underpinning for easily discussing these issues, and why precisely it is that
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Posted By: STLstudent- 4/7/2013 5:13:55 PM
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Recent research indicates that the number of people who do not consider themselves a part of an organized religion is steadily on the rise. Interestingly enough, though the number of those religiously unaffiliated is increasing, there is little to no trend in the number of those who express atheist or agnostic beliefs. People aren’t saying they don’t believe in God. They’re saying they don’t believe in religion. They are not rejecting Christ. They are rejecting the church. This begs the question, “Why are we losing our religion?”
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Posted By: Ribicon- 4/7/2013 2:43:40 PM
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Los Angeles — Some people have had it with TV. They´ve had enough of the 100-plus channel universe. They don´t like timing their lives around network show schedules. They´re tired of $100-plus monthly bills. A growing number of them have stopped paying for cable and satellite TV service, and don´t even use an antenna to get free signals over the air. (Snip) Last month, the Nielsen Co. started labeling people in this group "Zero TV" households, because they fall outside the traditional definition of a TV home. There are 5 million of these residences in the U.S., up from
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Mediaite, by A.J. Delgado
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Posted By: StormCnter- 4/7/2013 5:00:16 AM
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On Friday, Sean Hannity brought Pat Smith, mother of the late Sean Smith, on his radio program. The 34-year-old information management officer was one of four Americans murdered in the Benghazi embassy attack on September 11, 2012. In the chilling interview, a distraught Ms. Smith, in tears, pleaded for answers and spoke of the efforts to silence her. Ms. Smith first relayed how her son, prior to the attack, requested additional security in advance and warned the State Department: He did tell them, ahead of time, he typed it into his little typewriter over there,
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Vanishing workforce weighs on growth
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Washington Post, by Jim Tankersley
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Posted By: Dreadnought- 4/6/2013 11:28:59 PM
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Put out an all-points bulletin: Millions of Americans have gone missing from the workforce. Every month that those would-be workers are gone raises the odds that they might never come back, dimming the prospects for future economic growth. The vanishing trend is more than a decade old, but it accelerated during the Great Recession. Throughout 2012, economists held out hope that it had stopped. But then came Friday’s jobs report, and hopes were dashed. The Labor Department reported that the U.S. labor force — everyone who has a job or is looking for one — shrank
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Obama critic apologizes for his ´poorly chosen words´ on gay marriage
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The Hill [Washington DC], by Alexandra Jaffe
Original Article
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Posted By: JoniTx- 4/6/2013 12:18:19 PM
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Neurosurgeon Ben Carson, considered by some to be a potential Republican contender for president, apologized to Johns Hopkins University for the "poorly chosen words" he used in expressing his opposition to gay marriage last month.“I am sorry for any embarrassment this has caused,” Carson said in the letter, reported in New York Magazine.(Snip) "Although I do believe marriage is between a man and a woman, there are much less offensive ways to make that point. I hope all will look at a lifetime of service over some poorly chosen words.” Carson will remain as commencement speaker at Johns Hopkins,
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The Secrets of Princeton
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New York Times, by Ross Douthat
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Posted By: Oblio- 4/7/2013 8:08:09 AM
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Susan Patton, the Princeton alumna who became famous for her letter urging Ivy League women to use their college years to find a mate, has been denounced as a traitor to feminism, to coeducation, to the university ideal. But really she’s something much more interesting: a traitor to her class. Her betrayal consists of being gauche enough to acknowledge publicly a truth that everyone who’s come up through Ivy League culture knows intuitively —
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Is going gluten-free healthier for everybody?
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The Week, by Staff
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Posted By: NorthernDog- 4/7/2013 11:28:27 AM
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Gluten-free diets are all the rage, but they can be dangerous if not done right. What is gluten? It´s the spongy complex of proteins, found naturally in wheat, rye, and barley, that gives elasticity to dough and allows it to rise. When flour is moistened and either kneaded or mixed into dough, gluten molecules form an elastic, microscopic latticework that traps the carbon dioxide produced when yeast ferments, causing dough to inflate like a hot air balloon. Baking hardens the gluten, which helps the finished product keep its shape. Wheat — and gluten — is ubiquitous in the American diet.
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Beyonce, Jay-Z celebrate 5th anniversary in Havana, Cuba
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Los Angeles Times, by Nardine Saad
Original Article
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Posted By: Fiesta del sol- 4/6/2013 8:20:04 AM
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Beyonce and Jay-Z celebrated their fifth wedding anniversary in Cuba this week. The couple, who married on April 4, 2008, took in the sights of Old Havana, visited a school, dined on a rooftop terrace and strolled the fan-filled streets in their island best.(snip).The power couple declined to answer journalists´ questions about their visit to the island nation, but some outlets are reporting that the moguls are there as tourists, though that would be illegal because of the half-century embargo the U.S. has on the Communist country. However, the Miami Herald said Washington has issued special licenses for
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