Class Action on Walmart.. Will the Supreme Court rule in favor of the Working Woman?

Ernst

Well-Known Member
Supreme court to decide if Class Action can progress against Walmart


Walmart could be involved in the largest class action in legal history.

I have been told and I also know that the woman who works at my local walmart who are in management are rather hard core types. The requirement to advance at walmart is to be anti-worker.
These woman may be on to something.



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http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-court-walmart-20110330,0,173597.story
Supreme Court justices, sharply divided along gender lines, appeared poised to reject a nationwide class-action suit that accuses Wal-Mart Stores Inc. of sex discrimination.
Led by Justices Anthony M. Kennedy and Antonin Scalia, the majority of men on the court questioned how Wal-Mart could be held liable for illegal sex bias when its 3,400 store managers across the nation decide who gets promoted and who receives pay raises.
"It's not clear to me: What's the unlawful policy that Wal-Mart has adopted?" Kennedy asked. The company's written policy calls for equal treatment without regard to race or sex.
But Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan — who together mark the first time the court has had three women on the bench — asserted that a corporate policy of letting store managers decide on promotions could result in discrimination against women.
The statistics generated in the case so far strongly suggested that was what had occurred, they said.
A lawyer representing the female plaintiffs argued that Wal-Mart's corporate culture teaches mostly male supervisors that women are "less aggressive" than men and therefore less suited to being managers.
Unconvinced, Scalia called that "an assessment of why the percentage [of women in management] is different," but it is not evidence of an illegal policy. Wal-Mart does not say, "Don't promote women," he said.
"If you have an aggressive woman, promote her," Scalia added.
Ginsburg, who made her legal reputation in sex-discrimination law, said Wal-Mart's experience showed how gender bias could "creep" into the workplace. It isn't "at all complicated," she said.
"Most people prefer themselves. And so a decision-maker, all other things being equal, would prefer someone who looked like him," Ginsburg said.
The case heard Tuesday is the most important and far-reaching job-discrimination dispute to come before the high court in more than a decade. It could determine whether job-bias claims must proceed as individual lawsuits or instead could go ahead as broad, class-action claims that rely mostly on statistics.
The Berkeley lawyers who brought the sex-bias suit against the nation's largest retailer said about two-thirds of Wal-Mart's employees were women when the statistics were compiled five years ago, but men accounted for 86% of store managers.
The lawyers also said women were paid less across the country, even though they had more seniority on average than men.
At issue before the court was whether these findings would allow this single suit to proceed as a class-action claim on behalf of 1.6 million women who have worked for Wal-Mart since 1998. If so, it would be by far the largest job-bias case in American history.
 

Ernst

Well-Known Member
I wonder how the Case of them firing the Dude for testing positive for weed is going.

I pay monthly for the ACLU..

The Walmart effect is what happens when there is no cap on private wealth.
 

NoDrama

Well-Known Member
Wal Mart is publicly traded, its not private wealth, its hundreds of thousands of "investors" now.
 

SCARHOLE

Well-Known Member
So the majority of employees were women, but there bosses were usualy men.
That Sounds like Discrimation to you?

Do you want Affermitave action to replace all male bosses with women?
Why stop at walmat, Men are evil an shouldnt be allowed positions higher than women at any job?

What about the handicap an blacks. Should there be an equal percent of them as employes and as management?
Id bet most of there management wasnt hadicaped, black or female.
What about the women discriminating agingst the blacks, an handicaped by not allowing them to sue Walmat with them.


Stallin loved "caps on private wealth"
 

Serapis

Well-Known Member
My local Wal*Marts have women senior managers.... Walk into ANY Wal*Mart and go to the customer Service counter up front and look on the wall behind it. You'll see a list of the store manager and the assistants. The two stores I shop, all upper management positions are women, 3 are minorties with names like Ramona or Rodriguez.... Go figure...
 

Ernst

Well-Known Member
Wow.. I can see why we spend our time on-line...

So should the Supreme court hear the case?

I'd say yes..

I am all for everyone being millionaires if they want to spend their lives doing that but when one has 2 billion how can that help people who have nothing?
 

BudMcLovin

Active Member
I am all for everyone being millionaires if they want to spend their lives doing that but when one has 2 billion how can that help people who have nothing?
Who cares it’s their money. Why do you think you are entitled to tell them what to do with it? I know you want the government to steal as much as it can from the rich but it’s their property. Why not instead of stealing money from others the government actually teaches school children about economics and personal finance. Oh that’s right they want the population to be stupid and controllable. God forbid they actually learn how to think for themselves.
"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it."
Frederic Bastiat
 

Charlie Ventura

Active Member
WalMart has over one million employees. With an employee count like that, WalMart represents a big fat plum to the unions. Can you imagine dues coming into the union from 1.3 million more members? All of the past propaganda against WalMart has been union driven. If, and when WalMart becomes a closed union shop with collective bargaining privileges, all anti-WalMart propaganda will stop over night.
 

Ernst

Well-Known Member
Who cares it’s their money. Why do you think you are entitled to tell them what to do with it? I know you want the government to steal as much as it can from the rich but it’s their property. Why not instead of stealing money from others the government actually teaches school children about economics and personal finance. Oh that’s right they want the population to be stupid and controllable. God forbid they actually learn how to think for themselves.
"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves in the course of time a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that justifies it."
Frederic Bastiat
The Cap private wealth idea wouldn't change things for 99% of the people of this world directly.
It would eliminate the debt all together.

There reason people struggle is because a large percent of what the actually produce is taken away in one scheme or another. Taxes are just the Federal scheme.

So what about a world where everyone can strive to be what they want to be?
That Government is in the business of managing the Health of the planet and we all leave the place nicer then when we found it?
 

Ernst

Well-Known Member
WalMart has over one million employees. With an employee count like that, WalMart represents a big fat plum to the unions. Can you imagine dues coming into the union from 1.3 million more members? All of the past propaganda against WalMart has been union driven. If, and when WalMart becomes a closed union shop with collective bargaining privileges, all anti-WalMart propaganda will stop over night.
Can you imagine everyone that works for walmart earning a living wage?
I can but it ain't so..

We wouldn't need any sort of union if humans were smart people instead of dumb animals.
 

Charlie Ventura

Active Member
Can you imagine everyone that works for walmart earning a living wage?
I can but it ain't so..

We wouldn't need any sort of union if humans were smart people instead of dumb animals.
And exactly who would determine what that "living wage" would be, Ernst? How much would the "living wage" be? If an employee's skill level and productivity is only worth $10 per hour, and the "living wage" is determined to be $25 per hour, who makes up the additional $15 Ernst? Would the employer have to raise prices to the end consumer to make up the difference? Would the employer just have to eat the difference? Would the taxpayer have to eat it?

Come on Ernst ... use your head.

 

DrFever

New Member
Wal Mart is publicly traded, its not private wealth, its hundreds of thousands of "investors" now.
however the 5 biggest shareholders are the widow and 4 children of Sam they didnt know i am the bastard son so guess i could be 5th child with a share :))
 
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