All Fired Up
by
Paul Hein
by Paul Hein
Anne Wedow
is, I trust, jubilant. So is her co-worker, Kathleen Kline. A jury
awarded Wedow 285,000, and Kline 50,000, for getting steamed from
wearing baggy clothes.
In case the
matter isn’t obvious to you, here are the facts: Wedow and Kline
are firemen. Er, make that firewomen. They joined the Kansas City
Fire Department in 1977, as its first female firefighters. They
were issued firefighting clothes designed for men, which were ill
fitting and baggy. This caused them to sustain falls, and burns
caused by steam and hot gasses entering the suits, especially Ms.
Wedow. In addition, they were forced to share sleeping and bathing
facilities with the men. Why, it’s enough to make a girl quit!
But quitting
wasn’t in the cards; litigation was. Not only did a jury bestow
upon them the cash awards mentioned above, but on March 24, the
8th Circuit Court in St. Louis issued a ruling, having
the force of law (forget all that silliness about the division of
powers, and only legislatures making laws!) that female firefighters
must have "adequately fitting firefighting clothing and sanitary
and private facilities--." Jennifer K. Brown, vice president
and legal director of something called Legal Momentum said it was
a "fantastic decision for female firefighters across the country,"
and described it as the first federal appellate ruling to equate
inadequate equipment and facilities to unlawful sex discrimination.
It also, in my opinion, says interesting things about this country,
or at least about the people who control it.
In St. Louis,
there are nineteen female and seven hundred male firefighters. That
works out to over 97% male. Yet throughout the state, and the other
states under the thumb of the 8th circuit (which I’ve
heard local lawyers refer to as the 8th federal circuit
of Siberia) firehouses will have to be remodeled to accommodate
the women, meaning private sleeping quarters and bathing facilities.
Special, no-doubt petite, firefighting clothes will need to be obtained
for them. But, except for the judicial fiat, why? Is there some
inherent advantage in having almost 3% female firefighters, sufficient
to justify the expense of accommodating them?
It wouldn’t
seem so. Indeed, the women themselves have complained about the
hostile reception they received. Allegedly, one male firefighter
affronted them with the remark, "If you want to be a guy so
bad, we’ll all chip in and you can get surgery." Oh, the inhumanity!
But here’s
the thing: democracy! Isn’t democracy just about the best thing
that ever happened to human beings? Our government is so thrilled
about it that it can’t keep it to itself, but is exploding it all
over the place. Afghanistan has been democratized, and see how much
better things are there now. The Iraqis are perhaps a bit reluctant
to adopt democracy, being a people only a few millennia old, but
we’re encouraging them to see its virtues, using bombs and rockets
to underscore our commitment to bettering their lives, if any. And
lucky Iranians will soon feel a soothing wave of democracy sweeping
over them, like a tsunami.
Democracy is
equated with majority rule, but in the case of the would-be firewomen,
the vast majority of firefighters didn’t want them. Nor, to my knowledge,
could the women demonstrate any advantages that would accrue to
the fire department by hiring them (although they could demonstrate
the disadvantages that would accrue from NOT hiring them, in the
form of protracted litigation). But they got hired anyway, and now
their employers will have to spend considerable amount of (other
people’s) money to adapt their facilities to the wishes of the women.
What a striking example of democracy: a fiat imposed by three mindless
judges, on millions of people who will end up footing the bill,
for the benefit of a small minority of firefighters!
Governments
exist to guarantee justice. At least that’s the theory. In fact,
they exist to perpetuate themselves, guaranteeing high-paying jobs
to people of no particular ability except maintaining themselves
in office as long as possible. Judges, like legislators, are susceptible
to the latest sociologic fads, and democracy be damned if some strident
minority makes demands, backed by an organized group of voters.
Long-standing institutions will have to be turned upside down if
feminists, or homosexuals, or the minority de jour, demand it. "Why
rock the boat, when we’ve got it so nice," is the motto of
the bureaucrat, although the boat’s smooth course is over the broken
backs of a beleaguered citizenry.
There’s a lesson
to be learned. If three percent can call the shots, what about those
who aspire to freedom, and limited – if any – government? Aren’t
we at least three percent? What would happen if we flexed our collective
muscles? You know: democracy!
April
17, 2006
Dr.
Hein [send
him mail] is a retired ophthalmologist in St. Louis,
and the author of All
Work & No Pay.
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
Paul
Hein Archives
|