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Political views question WITHOUT talking about your political views 5

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foco JS

Mechanical
Aug 15, 2017
3
I work for a mechanical engineering design consulting firm. We primarily work with customers on consumer goods projects. We also work with artists frequently because we have many different high end 3D printers and we like to keep them running so we print out artwork. An artist recently came to us with a project that is very politically dividing and it doesn't align with the views of the company or the people at the company. We are small in numbers and all similarly politically minded.

We have turned down projects in the past that were not in line with our ethical standpoints but they were also borderline illegal so that was pretty easy. We just really don't want to do this particular political project.

My question is this, is it ethical to turn this down because we don't want to do it? I don't want it to turn into a supreme court cake situation... Is it okay to give them an absurdly high price instead of just saying no? (I suppose that creates a whole different situation if they accept the higher price.)

Please help me with this. Also, please try to keep your political opinions out of it.
 
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"...turn it down because we don't want to do it?"

Exactly what happened to the cake situation.

"...absurdly high price instead of just saying no?"

It'll turn into the cake situation if you ever do something similar for a political view that aligns with your company's viewpoint...and you charge a lower price.

You may be able to turn it down if it's borderline vulgar or even slightly mean spirited.

Best to talk with the company lawyer how to handle it...

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This is normally the space where people post something insightful.
 
If it would turn into a supreme court case, (ie you are discriminating against someone in a protected class), I would say it is absolutely unethical, to refuse or to offer too high a price either way. If you are even considering discriminating against someone because of race/religion/sexuality I think it speaks to the fact your company is highly unethical to begin with. If it purely a political piece (say a statue of trump with Hitler moustache, or some confederate monument, or even something less extreme), then there is no ethical issue refusing the work, and no risk of a supreme court case coming from your refusal. Simply state your company doesn't want to do something that can be seen as endorsing their political opinions.
 
For clarification the cake situation I was referring to was when a wedding cake company turned down a homosexual couple because they were homosexual. I'm not sure if the decisions from that apply to political orientation or if it is restricted to sexual orientation. This particular project isn't vulgar or mean spirited, but the thing that the project idolizes is quite vulgar and mean spirited. Do you think that is enough?
 
Political views are not a protected class and your company should have a right to refuse the work. I would just tell the artist your company doesn't want to do political work, but are fine working with the artist on their other works. Musicians frequently refuse to allow politicians to use their songs without consequence. There is a law that TV stations need to allow campaign advertising from all parties iirc but I doubt that applies here.
 
Thanks, that is really helpful. We would never discriminate against someone for race/religion/sexuality, I wasn't sure if political fell into that same category.

This is really helpful, thanks.
 
... funny how this even gets to be part of the equation. Political correctness at its worst... where it becomes part of the scope.

Dik
 
Unless it is illegal, I consider the work fair game. I may not agree with it, but my job is to make the item, not provide my personal view on it. Why companies waffle over this kind of stuff is beyond me... if you are worried about what might come in the door, don't provide the service.

Dan - Owner
URL]
 
"WE have turned down, WE don't want to do it..."

Was that decision made by the owner? If not, then refusing that business based on your personal beliefs instead of doing the job, is the only obvious ethical problem.
 
Cake: Customers were refused because of the customers' belief.

Art: Service "no quote" because of the nature of the end product.

There should be a difference here.

Service providers can and do "no quote" all the time for many reasons.
 
You need legal advice for your own jurisdiction. Law on this varies greatly from place to place.

 
No quotes and "don't want it" prices are done regularly by most successful businesses, there's nothing unethical about it nor are you obligated to give a customer a reason why you don't want to do the work. This is why whomever is reviewing quotes needs a solid background in manufacturing, preferably one stemming from time on the shop floor. I've seen many audits that found purchasing dummies and junior engineers receiving three "don't want it" quotes and blindly paying an absurd amount simply because they sent work to the wrong type of shop.

Personally I'd simply tell the customer no quote and not give a reason. If you want to play the game a bit, in addition to absurd price you can also leverage an absurd lead time to make the customer go elsewhere.
 
Are you sure you want a review stating you charge absurdly high prices? Word gets around quickly these days.
 
As mentioned, political views are not a protected by law. So, yes, you can turn them down, raise prices, extend lead times, give or not give a reason... pretty much whatever you want! (Of course you'll get bad reviews if you're a jerk about it or whatever.)

Some more detail:
At least right now, there are three federal laws which protect six characteristics. Basically, all forms of harassment or discrimination based on these six characteristics directed to either employees or customers is not ok.

The six characteristics protected by law are:
• Race
• Gender
• Religion 
• National origin 
• Age (over 40)
• Disability

The three federal laws granting the protections are:
• Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 - prohibits discriminating based on race, gender, religion, and national origin.
• Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 (ADEA)
• Amended Americans with Disabilities Act 2008 (ADAAA) 
 
I think you have a pretty good idea what you are being asked to print. If I am correct, there is a company in Minnesota that recalled one of their 3D printers when learning what they were being used for the same thing. They were worried about bad press and their equipment getting tied up in some legal battle.
 
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