Winstonm, on 2016-November-15, 21:13, said:
Kaitlyn, what you have to determine is whether or not your supposition is accurate. Is there really a higher risk of litigation from Afro-American hires or are you simply expressing a fictionalized account based on yours or someone else's (whom you believe) personal bias?
Donald Trump's father was sued for not renting to African Americans. Isn't it more likely that refusing to hire Afro-Americans and trying to hide it with silence will lead to discrimination lawsuits rather than not?
Clearly I need to do some research to answer your first question.
i think it is very unlikely that whites win as often or as much money or are as costly to litigate against in discrimination cases than blacks.
However, I do not know in how many of the cases the lawsuit had merit.
Probably in some cases, the lawsuit had no merit but the suing black had reason to think he was being discriminated against. It could be as simple as the boss drawing straws and a couple of whites getting promoted ahead of the black. The black wasn't discriminated against but he thought he was. So he sues and it costs the employer money. If it was a white employee, the suit never would have happened.
I don't think it's my own bias but I know that I would have that fear and would be surprised if others who actually were in a position to hire people didn't have the same fear whether it was justified or not. And I'm not even saying that it's justified, as long as the fear is there, blacks are getting hired less. I really don't see how you can argue with that. And I'm all for changing the situation so that the fear isn't there and blacks do not get hired less. Because I don't think that people that run businesses really have it in for blacks. They are simply looking out for the bottom line.
Your question about hiding not hiring blacks: If you have to hire 100 people, and none of them are black, you are going to get caught, so you have to suck up the fear of being sued because you're getting sued anyway. And isn't this just a great position for an employer to be in - they have to risk being sued in order to avoid being sued - all because the courts may award a black person who says he was discriminated against a payment or make it expensive for that not to happen.
If you are a small business owner and hire six people, you're probably not going to get caught. You could simply give a test to your applicants and say you took the highest grades. I would hope that would stand up in court.
Donald Trump's father lived in a different era. If the lawsuit issue was gone, I think very few people today would have a blanket policy to not hire blacks.
But your post and PassedOut's last post are telling me that I need to look deeper into the situation before continuing, because I am coming to a point where I need to gather some facts to back me up. While it is not possible to find out how many people refused to hire a black because of fear of a lawsuit, it is possible to find out how successful these lawsuits are, and it might even be possible to find out how costly they are when they aren't successful. Whether the suits had merit or not is going to be a lot harder to find out, for whether the suit was won is probably more correlated with the relative skills of the lawyers than the merits of the case.