This week, America First Legal, a right-wing conservative organization founded by Stephen Miller, fired off a letter to the EEOC accusing the Los Angeles Dodgers and Guggenheim Partners of violating Title VII because of their publicly commitment to ...
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Title VII requires harm; not just hate

This week, America First Legal, a right-wing conservative organization founded by Stephen Miller, fired off a letter to the EEOC accusing the Los Angeles Dodgers and Guggenheim Partners of violating Title VII because of their publicly commitment to workplace diversity, equity, and inclusion.

But there's the legal twist: AFL didn't name a single person who was denied a job, demoted, fired, or otherwise harmed. Nor did it claim any injury to itself. 

That matters. Because under federal law, and organization can file an EEOC charge:

1. On someone else's behalf—but you need their permission or some connection to the case.
2. On its own behalf—but only if you've actually been harmed.

AFL checks neither box here. It's not a plaintiff. It's a political organization with a vendetta against DEI. Filing an EEOC charge isn't the same as rage-posting on X.

So what happens now? The EEOC doesn't need a formal charge to open an investigation. A Commissioner Charge—filed by any sitting EEOC commissioner—can kickstart an inquiry if there's reason to believe an unlawful employment practice occurred. AFL's letter is effectively a political provocation, daring the Commission to act. And with the EEOC's current composition, it just might.

Procedure aside, let's talk some substance. Is having a DEI mission statement illegal? No. Is recruiting from underrepresented communities unlawful? Also no. Is having resource groups illegal? No, as long as they are open to everyone.

Title VII bans using race, sex, or other protected traits as deciding factors in employment—not talking about diversity, tracking it, or fostering inclusion.

If an employer uses identity as a plus factor or sets hard quotas, that's where the legal risk grows. But mission statements and resource groups? They're not smoking guns. They're best practices, unless, of course, you're trying to drag us back to 1963.

Not every DEI policy is illegal. Not every disagreement is discrimination. And not every right-wing nonprofit gets to play the role of victim without an actual victim. That's called political theater.

The "Restoring Biological Truth to the Workplace Act" isn't about truth, it's about protecting bigotry

It's called the Restoring Biological Truth to the Workplace Act.

But let's be honest: it's just a license to discriminate.

Senator Jim Banks' recently introduced bill isn't about truth. It's about control. And cruelty. It would allow employees to misgender their transgender colleagues with impunity and prohibit employers from enforcing any workplace policies that require respect for a person's gender identity.

If this bill becomes law, no employer with 15 or more employees could:
  • Establish or enforce rules on the use of pronouns that align with a person's preferred gender;
  • Permit employees to use bathrooms, locker rooms, or changing areaa that align with a person's preferred gender;
  • Otherwise force an employee to respect the gender identity of another employee; or
  • Retaliate against any employee who speaks out against discrimination based on the rights described above.

Employers who do try to enforce such basic dignity rules could be sued.

Senator Banks, the bill's sponsor, says it's about protecting workers from being compelled to affirm left-wing gender ideology. "This bill is about protecting common sense,” Banks says. "Americans shouldn’t fear losing their jobs simply for acknowledging the basic reality of biological sex."

This is not about protecting speech. It's about protecting harassment.

Letting one employee invalidate another's identity—on purpose, and as policy—isn't free speech. It's targeted harm. And it strips employers of the ability (and responsibility) to create a safe, inclusive, and respectful workplace.

When your "freedom" depends on denying someone else their dignity, their humanity, and their right to exist, you're not fighting for liberty. You're just a bully.

Respect isn't ideology.
Dignity isn't political.
And bigotry wrapped in legislation is still just bigotry.

You want to avoid a labor union in your business? Then don't do this.

Two pediatricians at Cleveland's University Hospitals used an internal physician directory to contact colleagues about forming a union. In response, they say that UH disciplined them for trying to unionize. They've filed unfair labor practice charges with the NLRB.

Section 7 of the National Labor Relations Act protects employees' rights to engage in concerted activity—including organizing a union and discussing it with co-workers. That protection applies whether you're a warehouse worker or a pediatric subspecialist.

An employer can restrict employee use of internal systems—like email or directories—for nonwork purposes, including union organizing. But:

The policy must be applied consistently, and
It cannot be enforced selectively against union activity.

An employer certainly can't enforce restrictions only when union talk makes it uncomfortable. So even if UH has a policy limiting directory use (which is far from clear), targeting only the doctors organizing a union is likely unlawful anyway.

Aside from the legalities, from a union-avoidance perspective this move is as shortsighted as it is risky. Retaliation, real or perceived, doesn't silence organizing. It fuels it. It validates the exact concern these employees are raising—that leadership is unresponsive, punitive, and unwilling to listen.

What should UH have done instead? Focus on what it can control: create space for employees to raise concerns broadly—about staffing, workloads, management responsiveness—and actually act on that feedback. When employees feel heard and respected, they're much less likely to seek outside representation.

By trying to stamp out this spark, however, UH may have just dumped gasoline on it. Because nothing grows union support faster than a heavy-handed reminder of why employees are organizing in the first place.

WIRTW #764: the 'substack' edition

Introducing Authoritarian Alarm: 
A New Home for a Critical Conversation

For the past 18+ years, I've written about the intersection of law, policy, and the American workplace. But more and more, the news I feel compelled to cover—and the commentary I'm driven to write—has expanded far beyond employment law and HR drama.

Because the truth is, something much bigger is happening in this country.

America today barely resembles the nation it claims to be. In our institutions, our politics, and even our public discourse, we're beginning to mirror the authoritarianism we've spent the last 249 years claiming to oppose. We're becoming what the Founding Fathers created this country to resist.

So I've launched something new: Authoritarian Alarm—a Substack newsletter dedicated to tracking America’s quickening slide into authoritarianism. My first post is now available: We've become everything we've fought against for 249 years.

If you've valued my perspective on these issues before, I hope you'll join me there. Subscribe, share, and help me sound the alarm.

Because silence is complicity.
And democracy doesn't defend itself.


👉 Subscribe now for free to Authoritarian Alarm: https://jonhyman.substack.com




Here's what I read this week that you should read, too.

The Kids Are Organizing—and the Law Can’t Keep Up — via Michael VanDervort's Labor Relatedly

The National Labor Relations Act worked for 90 years. Suddenly, it's in the crosshairs — via William B. Gould IV, professor of law emeritus at Stanford Law and chairman of the National Labor Relations Board, writing at the Los Angeles Times




This CEO's Rant Against HR Went Viral. It's a Lesson in What Not to Do — via Suzanne Lucas, the Evil HR Lady, writing at Inc.


A Meme, a Minister, and a Judge Who Was Not Amused — via Eric Meyer's Employer Handbook Blog


Jury awards $6.2M to ex-law firm employee who was paid less than male colleagues — via ABA Journal Daily News

Worker pessimism, uncertainty and disconnect reach 'critical levels,' survey finds — via HR Dive

Without HR, you're not running a business. You're running a liability factory.

"I want to be the first company without HR."

That's the viral line from Jennifer Sey, who founded XX-XY Athletics in March 2024. She thinks Human Resources is just the "social-justice police." According to her, they are nothing more than a department of hall monitors: "They produce nothing. They monitor our words. They tell us what we can and cannot say. They inhibit creativity. It's bad for business."

Let's clear this up:
HR is not the problem.
HR is not your censor.
HR is not some DEI-driven thought police force trying to ruin your fun.

What HR is—done right—is the foundation of every successful, scalable, and sustainable company. It's the function that recruits the people who build your business, builds the culture that retains them, and puts the guardrails in place to keep you out of court and off the front page.

Want innovation? You need people.
Want people? You need culture.
Want culture? You need HR.

Who's addressing burnout, fixing dysfunction, making sure your managers actually know how to manage, and keeping you out of court? Spoiler alert: It's HR.

Any company that wants to grow needs HR to have a real seat at the table, shaping strategy alongside finance, operations, marketing, tech, and every other core function.

If your idea of "freedom" is the ability to ignore harassment, pay women less than men, deny accommodations, and build a company where "disruption" means no rules and no respect—then you're not running a business. You're running a liability factory.

HR doesn't kill creativity; it enables it—by creating a workplace where people feel safe enough to take risks, speak up, and do great work.

Requiring employees to be respectful human beings isn't a threat to your bottom line. It's the bare minimum.

So no, HR isn't the problem. HR is the reason your company hasn't burned to the ground.

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