By MELISSA WELLHAM
Both Derek Zoolander and Samantha Brick have taught us that being really, really ridiculously good-looking isn’t always easy. But this week, one woman has actually been discriminated against for being too attractive.
But don’t stress about it too much, because the justice system says that it’s totes okay.
Stop the world, I want to get off.
In Iowa on Friday, their Supreme Court ruled that a dentist was acting legally when he fired his assistant because he thought she was attractive and he was worried he might start an affair.
The details of the case are as follows: a dentist called James Knight from Iowa dismissed his assistant Melissa Nelson. He acknowledged that she had been an excellent employee for ten years – but said that he and his wife were worried that his superficial attraction to Nelson was a strain on their marriage.
The court acknowledged that Nelson had not encouraged any of his advances, or behaved unprofessionally, but nonetheless found “that bosses can fire employees that they and their spouses see as threats to their marriages”.
So “threat” might be the wrong word to use in this situation, given that Nelson didn’t actually do anything. She was fired for the sole reason that Knight was worried he might have ‘impure thoughts’ about her.
Top Comments
Um, if it's his business, doesn't he have the right to employ who he wants??? Different matter if it's a supervisor who wants someone sacked, but surely an owner , especially of a very small business , has every right to make the call?
Oh my goodness! I completely get this - if it was the other way round and you were a doctor/dentist/manager and there was an employee who you thought was attractive and there was obviously mutual attraction and a spark. Yes if I had a husband and I was spending every day with this other person at work I might be concerned and confronted by feelings that aren't comfortable or constructive for a work environment. And yes if you are 100% stable in your relationship you shouldn't have these feelings - but how many of us can say categorically that we are 100% stable in our relationships, even after 10-15 years when you might be having less sex or your relationship may be on the rocks. It is not the employees fault I agree and it sucks that she had to lose her job because of it - but it is his practice. That is the benefit of having your own business. If you have an employee you feel uncomfortable working with, you are the boss and you know that you would be more productive without them there. The lambourghini comment was more sexist than the situation itself. But if this was a female dentist firing her male nurse, would we be as upset? I think not.