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Supreme Court: Treat Men And Women As Interchangeable, Or Get Sued Into Oblivion
The Federalist ^ | June 18, 2020 | Margot Cleveland

Posted on 06/18/2020 9:11:03 AM PDT by Kaslin

The Supreme Court effectively just told Americans that they must consider men women and women men in the workplace. This will not end well.


In a 6–3 decision this past Monday, the Supreme Court rewrote Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While Title VII prohibits discrimination in employment “because of an individual’s sex,” the majority held, in an opinion authored by Justice Neil Gorsuch, that “an employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender defies the law.”

The judicial usurpation of the legislature’s role, however, was but half of the horror of the Supreme Court’s decision. Equally appalling was the court’s faulty analysis of the question of Title VII’s application to transgender persons.

While both aspects of the court’s decision in Bostock v. Clayton County, Georgia, are harmful to our country, Gorsuch’s blinking over the difference between homosexual and transgender claimants damages not just our constitutional order, but civil society. Unfortunately for the country, the resulting cultural war will compete in scope with the fall-out from Roe v. Wade.

A Muddled Conflation of Classifications

The Bostock case served as the lead opinion on Monday, but there were three separate cases before the Supreme Court. Altitude Express v. Zarda also presented the question of whether homosexual employees (or applicants) are within the scope of Title VII’s prohibition on “sex” discrimination.

The final case, R.G. & G.R. Harris Funeral Homes, Inc. v. Equal Opportunity Commission, involved a separate question, one the Supreme Court framed as whether “Title VII prohibits discrimination against transgender people based on (1) their status as transgender or (2) sex stereotyping under Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins.

The Supreme Court combined the cases for purposes of the decision — and there was a very “good” bad reason it did so: Gorsuch’s reasoning collapses when the case of a “transgender” individual — enclosed in quotes because the court leaves that term undefined — is inserted in the parade of hypotheticals the majority used to justify its decision.

Rather than analyze the questions separately, Justice Gorsuch conflated the two separate classifications, analyzed homosexual employees (or applicants), and then added a throw-away conclusory sentence to extend the reasoning to transgender people.

The court’s reasoning went as follows: Title VII prohibits discrimination in employment on the basis of an individual’s sex. For purposes of the decision, the court assumed “sex” meant “biological sex,” while also suggesting the term might mean something broader. “To ‘discriminate against’ a person, then, would seem to mean treating that individual worse than others who are similarly situated,” the court continued, noting also that the “difference in treatment based on sex must be intentional.”

Justice Gorsuch next joined these principles: “So, taken together, an employer who intentionally treats a person worse because of sex — such as by firing the person for actions or attributes it would tolerate in an individual of another sex — discriminates against that person in violation of Title VII.”

The court would later repeat this standard, stating: “If the employer intentionally relies in part on an individual employee’s sex when deciding to discharge the employee — put differently, if changing the employee’s sex would have yielded a different choice by the employer — a statutory violation has occurred.” Then the court illustrated how this standard applies in the context of a homosexual:

Imagine an employer who has a po­licy of firing any employee known to be homosexual. The employer hosts an office holiday party and invites employees to bring their spouses. A model employee arrives and introduces a manager to Susan, the employee’s wife. Will that employee be fired? If the policy works as the employer intends, the answer depends entirely on whether the model employee is a man or a woman. To be sure, that employer’s ultimate goal might be to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation. But to achieve that purpose the employer must, along the way, intentionally treat an employee worse based in part on that individual’s sex.

From this reasoning, the court concludes that “when an employer fires an employee for being homosexual or transgender, it necessarily and intentionally discriminates against that individual in part because of sex.” That is enough, according to the court, “to establish liability under Title VII.”

The Dissent Doesn’t Go Far Enough

Justices Samuel Alito, Brett Kavanaugh, and Clarence Thomas dissented from the court’s opinion, with Alito writing a dissenting opinion joined by Thomas, and Kavanaugh filing a separate dissent. The dissents thoroughly eviscerated the majority’s analysis from a textual perspective, establishing that “sex” does not mean “sexual orientation” or transgenderism.

But none of the dissenters recognized the further flaw in the majority’s opinion—that the standard Gorsuch crafted in the context of a homosexual employee fails to withstand scrutiny when applied to a transgender employee. The court’s opinion, however, muddled the analysis so thoroughly that even the dissenting justices did not realize the majority opinion’s failure to analyze discrimination based on transgender status and homosexual status separately.

In fact, after noting that “this opinion does not separately analyze discrimination on the basis of gender identity,” Kavanaugh allowed that “the opinion’s legal analysis of discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation would apply in much the same way to discrimination on the basis of gender identity.” On the contrary: The opinion’s legal analysis crumbles when applied to transgender people.

Let’s consider an example, much as the majority did to prove its case. During a job interview, Chris, who is a biological male but identifies as a female, is at a luncheon with a potential employer and several co-workers. A top female executive, Susan, excuses herself to use the restroom and Chris likewise excuses himself. The two chat as they walk down the hall and then Chris enters the ladies’ room with Susan, to her shock. Chris explains that he is transgender.

The company does not hire Chris and he sues, claiming sex discrimination. The company counters that it rejected Chris’s application because he had used the ladies’ restroom, making one of its most valuable female employees feel uncomfortable. Is this sex discrimination?

Applying the majority’s standard, it is. That standard says that “if changing the employee’s sex would have yielded a different choice by the employer — a statutory violation has occurred.” Changing Chris from a biological male to a biological female alters the employer’s decision because Susan would have no problem with a female Chris using the lady’s room, because in that case, Chris is a woman.

But Chris isn’t a woman. He is a man. And there’s the rub. The law cannot merely “change the employee’s sex” to determine if there is “sex discrimination,” because there are actual sex-based distinctions, and when an employer considers those, it is not engaging in sex discrimination. Put another way, men and women are not always “similarly situated.”

Balking at the Hard Questions

The majority opinion refused to grapple with simple reality and set to the side the issue of “sex-segregated bathrooms, locker rooms, and dress codes,” saying “we do not prejudge any such question today.” Yet, in the same decision, the court used a running thread of hypotheticals to prove its case in the context of a homosexual employee then blurred the application of its standard in the context of a transgender individual.

For instance, at one point the court wrote:

Take an employer who fires a transgender person who was identified as a male at birth but who now identifies as a female. If the employer retains an otherwise identical employee who was identified as female at birth, the employer intentionally penalizes a person identified as male at birth for traits or actions that it tolerates in an employee identified as female at birth. Again, the individual employee’s sex plays an unmistakable and impermissible role in the discharge decision.

What are those “traits or actions?” The court doesn’t say. That’s for a very simple reason: When you are addressing a case involving transgender individuals, you are not merely talking about general traits or actions — such as bringing a same-sex partner to a company function — but about individuals acting in contravention to biological sex-based distinctions.

The only way, then, to declare discrimination against a transgender individual “sex” discrimination under Title VII, is to view the sexes as indistinguishable. The court’s standard does this, and thus, under the court’s standard, an employer cannot take into consideration biological sex-based distinctions. So, single-sex restrooms, locker rooms, and dress codes are necessarily forbidden.

The facts of this case also mandate a further conclusion: that an employer must affirm a false sex or violate Title VII.

For all the framing of this case as involving an employer who fires an individual “merely for being transgender,” the termination, in this case, occurred when the employee informed his employer that he intended to “live and work full-time as a woman.” We are thus not talking about “traits” and “actions,” but of an individual who declared to his boss that he intended to present himself as a woman and expected others to consider him a woman.

By adopting the standard for transgender claimants that it did, the Supreme Court has just told Americans that they too must consider men women and women men in the workplace. We’re likely to see the same dictate extended to public schools and health care settings.

Make no mistake, this decision launched a second great front in our country’s cultural war, which, along with Roe v. Wade, will continue for generations. In both cases, conservatives have science on their side, even if they don’t (yet) have the Supreme Court.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Government
KEYWORDS: biologicalsex; blackrobesaboveall; bostock; empdiscrimination; judgesvsnature; laws; neilgorsuch; romneymarriage; scotus; sexdifferences; sexualorientation; sogidentity; transgenderactivism
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To: Kaslin

The Court is demanding that we treat a verifiable fact as if it is fluid. That we endorse, mouth and salute an untrue thing...or else...

I vote for or else...


21 posted on 06/18/2020 9:35:08 AM PDT by TalBlack
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To: Kaslin

The Supreme Court has morphed into the Subservient Court...subservient to the leftists.


22 posted on 06/18/2020 9:36:16 AM PDT by antidemoncrat (uff)
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To: dp0622

Pardon a stupid question. I’m called into the boss’s office and fired. “You can’t get away with that, you’re just firing me because I’m gay!”

“You’re not gay. I’ve known you for years.”

“How dare you. And over the years, all those awful jokes about gay people you’ve told me...”

“That was YOU telling those jokes!”

“well, I just remember you laughing at them.”

Now, how would a company have a defense against this? If homosexuality is based on certain behaviors, couldn’t anyone claim this status? It’s upside down now!


23 posted on 06/18/2020 9:38:12 AM PDT by Not_Who_U_Think
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To: Kaslin
The whole decision is so badly flawed that three things will happen concurrently: (1) It will become a litigation weapon for stunted misfits, (2) it will be ignored by anyone who can work around it, and (3) it will quickly bring about the end of gender-segregated organizations in America (starting with women’s sports).

The absurdity of applying “civil rights” protections to people based on SELF-IDENTIFIED characteristics will quickly become obvious to even the most obtuse and partisan misfits wearing black robes in Washington.

24 posted on 06/18/2020 9:43:58 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("We're human beings ... we're not f#%&ing animals." -- Dennis Rodman, 6/1/2020)
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To: 2banana

They aren’t illegal. They just can’t stop men from claiming they’re women and qualifying for them.


25 posted on 06/18/2020 9:44:42 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("We're human beings ... we're not f#%&ing animals." -- Dennis Rodman, 6/1/2020)
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To: Kaslin

Trial Lawyers are salivating.


26 posted on 06/18/2020 9:45:00 AM PDT by Kickass Conservative (Kill a Commie for your Mommy.)
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To: cuban leaf
Well you shouldn't treat people differently if you are a professional.

What about a transgender person that is always brooding around the office and wearing their attitude on their shoulders, negatively impacting other employees (or customers)? Can you fire them for that?

I would. The point is they impact customers and other employers negatively. My Customers and employees are more important to me.

27 posted on 06/18/2020 9:45:15 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
I would. The point is they impact customers and other employers negatively. My Customers and employees are more important to me.

Well, you can't legally fire them just because your employees or customers don't like them. To make this concrete, let's say you had a transgender hostess that the customers of your family diner simply didn't like, and so stopped coming. And they told you that as they left.

You could not legally fire or transfer that hostess for that reason.

I understand that's different than the question of a transgender employee who walked around with an attitude...but good luck proving that. And I say that as someone who has tried employment discrimination cases.

28 posted on 06/18/2020 9:50:52 AM PDT by Bruce Campbells Chin
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To: 2banana

Not illegal, but basically meaningless, since if you are a man, you can just decide to “identify as a woman” that day, apply for those benefits, and you cannot be denied on the basis that you have a penis.


29 posted on 06/18/2020 9:52:28 AM PDT by Boogieman
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To: 2banana

I guess it also means that homes for battered women need to allow men.


30 posted on 06/18/2020 9:53:41 AM PDT by Dutch Boy
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To: Boogieman

It reached the point of comedy in Canada a couple of years ago when some dude identified himself as a “woman” just to get a lower rate on his auto insurance. Seriously. LOL.


31 posted on 06/18/2020 9:55:48 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("We're human beings ... we're not f#%&ing animals." -- Dennis Rodman, 6/1/2020)
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To: Kaslin
So, the Supreme Court says that self-identified characteristics are not grounds for termination.

If I go in to work tomorrow self-identifying as the CEO, that's not grounds for firing me?

I'm thinking of self-identifying as a Supreme Court Justice and delivering edicts from their bench.

32 posted on 06/18/2020 9:55:50 AM PDT by T.B. Yoits
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To: Kaslin
Businesses that can will use employees on a work-from-home arrangement and rate and pay them purely on performance.

Some employers will use contract workers and contract teams (rated and paid on performance) to insulate themselves from lawsuits.

33 posted on 06/18/2020 9:59:08 AM PDT by RoosterRedux
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To: Not_Who_U_Think

There is nothing to keep that from being effective.

and it’s nobody’s fault but, no wait, it’s anyone’s fault who bent over in the first place...pardon the pun.

from our last president to congress to corporations to individuals to higher education.

though the president and congress and higher education are happy with the results.


34 posted on 06/18/2020 10:00:24 AM PDT by dp0622 (The very future of tihe Republic is at stake. We now know dems will do ANYTHING to win.)
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To: Kaslin

If they are interchangeable, or exactly equal, then no man can be fired/sued for sexual harassment. No man can lose his home/car/kids in a divorce. Everyone must register for selective service. All talk about glass ceiling and 76 cents to the dollar will stop. There will not be separate teams for men/women. Hysterics will have to stop yelling about “first woman president.”


35 posted on 06/18/2020 10:03:43 AM PDT by I want the USA back (Never forget Justine Damond, murdered by a NON-WHITE, NON-CHRISTIAN cop. (Oh, and no riots))
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To: 2banana
So female only scholarships, set asides and government contracts are now illegal?

Not only, but female AND male sports are illegal. We are told by this decision there are no sex differentiated traits OR behaviors. It is not that the sexes are undifferentiated, by this logic there are no sexes as a matter of law. One may not claim to be a man or a woman if that self designation creates offense. The court has caught itself in tautological madness. By arguing in support of bad law (sex discrimination without sexual differentiation)they have finessed themselves into a pickle.

36 posted on 06/18/2020 10:06:07 AM PDT by Louis Foxwell (A deep and terrible ignorance born of abject corruption is required to hate our president.)
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To: Kaslin

Oh wow I get to dance for dollar bills and complain when a female gets more of them than I do.


37 posted on 06/18/2020 10:08:27 AM PDT by jughandle (Big words anger me, keep talking.)
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To: Bruce Campbells Chin

The only solution is a complete ban on athletic programs. Having sports for boys only but not girls discriminates against girls. But allowing girls to have their own teams discriminates against insane, delusional boys, who claim to identify as girls but who beat the real girls at their own sport. Teams that allow both boys and girls don’t work either because the best boys do better at almost every sport than the best girls, and that too discriminates against girls. So, no sports hereafter forevermore.

And no bathrooms either. I suppose that single-toilet restrooms are allowed, but we don’t have enough money to renovate schools to gut the present bathrooms and install those facilities. And can you imagine how much pupils will use them to hide while cutting class, to trade or smoke illicit substances, to destroy the equipment unsupervised, or otherwise to violate the various rules? (That was before the social-distancing mandates, which forbid restroom use whatsoever.)


38 posted on 06/18/2020 10:18:43 AM PDT by dufekin (Vote Trump; save lives)
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To: Kaslin

Where my wife used to work, they fired roughly six employees all at once. Not laid off. Fired. Two of them were black and one of those was the worst offender.

The two black women sued for discrimination and both won.

If I owned a business I would avoid at all costs hiring people that were a “governement protected” class. Best to just hire white men. You can still fire them for pretty much any reason, though my white son did win a small judgement when he was fired without cause.

He went on to start a new company that put his former employer out of business. He recently got a $410,000 grant from the government as part of the virus stimulus.


39 posted on 06/18/2020 10:19:16 AM PDT by cuban leaf (The political war playing out in every country now: Globalists vs Nationalists)
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To: Alberta's Child

I don’t know that I’d do it just for that but if I was ever facing prison, I’d damn sure “identify as a woman” to not have to go to men’s prison.


40 posted on 06/18/2020 10:20:46 AM PDT by Boogieman
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