"(T)o say that the individual is culturally constituted has become a truism. . . . We assume, almost without question, that a self belongs to a specific cultural world much as it speaks a native language." James Clifford

Thursday, August 17, 2023

Walmart: Encroaching on Employees' Private Lives

In 2023, Walmart relaxed its policy requiring anyone applying for a job at the company to get a drug test, including for marijuana, which at the time was legal in several U.S. member states. Once hired, however, employees were still subject to random testing. An employee in a member state in which the drug is legal could be fired even if the person is never affected by the drug while working. I contend that the practice is unfair, unethical, and an over-reach in terms of the nature of a labor contract. 

The ethical principle of fairness is violated because both marijuana and alcohol can impair the brain and yet the company only tests for one even where both drugs are legal. An argument can be made that the alcoholic personality is less than suitable, and yet taking marijuana outside of work (with no impact during work hours) is reason enough for an employee to be fired. Whereas alcohol can inducive hostility and even aggression, marijuana has a calming drug—something that could actually help busy cashiers.

Besides being unfair, the policy of even random tests for marijuana is invasive, beyond the legitimate scope of an employer’s reach—assuming that the employee using marijuana is never “high” at work. In selling one’s labor, an employee does not agree to a company’s management being able to control the employee’s legal activities outside of work if those activities do not affect the employee’s work. Sam Walton, the founder of Walmart, was against marijuana; for him to impose his ideological opposition on others where the drug is legal was over-reaching and impious; he was not a god. An argument can also be made that it is none of the company’s business, literally and figuratively, whether an employee uses the drug where it is illegal, again as long as the employee is not “high” at work. Law enforcement is the job of police, not a company’s managers. Of course, if an employee is convicted of a crime, an employer may not permit convicted employees to continue. In the case of Walmart, it hires people who have criminal records, which shows just how nonsensical the policy of random testing for marijuana is (especially as more and more U.S. member states legalize recreational use of the drug). In terms of a contract between an employer and an employee, an employer who presumes to dictate an employee’s recreational activities imposes a cost on employees that is not offset by the monetary compensation.

Imagine what would happen if a labor union informed a company’s management that an abrasive supervisor must be subject to drug and alcohol tests and fired for any positive results, or else the employees would strike. Suppose too that the supervisor does indeed have a problem with alcohol, but is not under its influence while at work. Still the union insists that the company fire that person. Suddenly, the company’s management would object with a mighty roar, How dare employees tell us what we cannot do on our days off! The nerve! Well, it goes both ways, folks. The attitude is the same: the unethical vice of invasiveness (in peoples’ personal, not work-related lives) is noxious and may even point to a toxic organizational culture.

See: Walmart: Bad Management as Unethical