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Domestic Workers' Rights: A Matter of Ethics-Forward.com - 0 views

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    This article explains that the immigrants who work in our house as helpers or housekeepers today are no better off than immigrant workers hundreds of years ago. They have virtually no protection from exploitation. Whether a minority women working in a suburban home, or the immigrant working the tomato farms of Florida, laborers are bent at the will of their employer. Usually, this is not positive, as profit is usually the only goal for greedy business-people.
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Money, Income, and Poverty - 0 views

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    "Women earn less money than men, have fewer assets, and are far more likely to live in poverty. Furthermore, the gap between the rich and poor is growing wider."
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    The following article deals with women in the work force and more specifically their incomes. The article is relevent due to the fact Ehrenreich is a women in the work force. The article compares the wages of women and men to see discrepencies among the genders. The article deals with what women face as part of the labor force as well.
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Nickel and Dimed - 0 views

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    "...documents the daily tribulations of retail, housecleaning, and restaurant workers: daily humiliation from management, the inability to take time off for illness without docking pay, recriminations for promoting unions, company health insurance that is still unaffordable, etc"
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    This quote comes from a personal blog but highlights important points about the hardships she endures while performing the various duties.
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Gale Power Search - Document - 0 views

  • Though Ehrenreich still sees hope and a strong drive to succeed within this community, she fears a future uprising as people "are bound to tire of getting so little in return and to demand to be paid what they're worth. There'll be a lot of anger when that day comes, and strikes and disruption."
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    This quote can be seen as the modern day version of The Grapes of Wrath. As the cyclical theory repeats itsself in history, the people of modern time are experiencing the same problems as the migrant workers. The author again evokes the passion to show the consequences of the poor treatment of workers
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Literary Reference Center - powered by EBSCOhost: Down and out in America - 0 views

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    "But one of the big shocks for me, almost from the beginning, was how little privacy or rights you have in the workplace. Very early, the first or second flay of my life as a waitress, I was warned by a coworker that my purse could be searched at any time. I just didn't believe that could be legal. But I have since, of course, checked with labor lawyers, and it's true. At work, you have no privacy as to your personal effects, purse or backpack, in any state that I know of." In the workplace, you have no privacy. Instead, you're just another machine who's under the control of the bigger business. Privacy, a right we often take for granted, is almost always denied to minimum wage workers.
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Bill Moyers Journal . Transcripts | PBS - 0 views

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    "...the typical middle class, like, "Well, I should look for something better," you know. And then, I began to figure out, if you're paid very little, it could be a disaster to change jobs. Because you might have to go one, two, three weeks without any paycheck at all. And that's not doable." For a low wage worker, there is not the option of finding something better. No matter how hard the work is, or how bad they're treated, they must stay in the conditions just to survive.
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TIME - 0 views

  • In her book on the working poor, Nickel and Dimed, Barbara Ehrenreich describes this housing process: Unable to afford housing with a kitchen, the worker cannot purchase foods to prepare in bulk and cannot store or freeze these foods. Such workers are sometimes entirely dependent on meals they can purchase and eat immediately, such as fast-food
    • Vivas T
       
      This article portrays the harsh conditions of the low class worker because these workers are "unable to afford housing with a kitchen", similar to Barbara in N and D, which leads to a connection to FFN because due to these low class workers, fast food chains thrive and are able to prosper the the distribution of cheap food in great quantities.
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    I can't even imagine not being able to afford a house with a kitchen. This really puts a new perspective on things, and adds to the sympathy felt for all the low wage workers.
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Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • In Nickel and Dimed, Ehrenreich shows that the federally set minimum wage adds up to a monthly income that barely covers the basic necessities that one needs to survive. As such, many workers need a second job in order to feed, clothe, and house their families
    • Vivas T
       
      This article portrays the harsh treatment of the worker through their minimal salary which "barely cover the basic necessities that one needs to survive". As a result, if someone has a family, this will result in multiple jobs and physical as well as mental setbacks, which Ehrenreich displays in N and D.
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- Gale - Enter Product Login - 0 views

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    "Ehrenreich stresses the physical difficulties in the kind of labor she performs for these experiments. Her health is often in jeopardy, and yet she cannot do everything in her power to heal and become well." For workers, a day off is not an option. No matter how bad their back pain is or how sick they feel, they must show up and give it their all, no matter what the price.
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    I agree, and this also shows the harsh treatment and conditions of workers in the workplace which result in these injuries. Also, a legitimate fear grips all the low class workers which prevents them from taking days off, due to the fact that they might be fired for it.
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Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • When one is charged a little bit at a time until the expense grows beyond expectations, that is called being "nickel and dimed." In 2001's Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting By in America, essayist and social critic Barbara Ehrenreich applies this notion to minimum-wage workers. She argues that their spirit and dignity are chipped away by a culture that allows unjust and unlivable working conditions, which results in their becoming a de facto, or actual without being official, servant class.
    • Vivas T
       
      The definition of "nickel and dimed" portrays the fact that the employers are clearly benefiting more than the low class worker. The definition illustrates that the low class workers and losing, or being "charged", more than they are gaining, and soon they will be in grave danger, illustrated through a vision of debt. As a result, this debt relates to the "unlivable working conditions" that these workers have to put up with and also relates to their membership in the "servant class".
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Class and Caste - 0 views

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    This article is about the disparity between the social classes. The article references "Nickel and Dimed" to emphasize the horrible jobs the lower class engages to make a linving. The article highlights the inequalities between the classes, and how "Nickel and Dimed" supports the theme of social inequality.
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Worked Over and Overworked-New York Times - 0 views

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    "...slamming the car into Michell and sending him to the hospital with a broken kneecap, a badly torn shoulder, and two herniated disks. Michell was so devoted to Wal-Mart that he somehow returned to work the next day, but a few weeks later... He was fired soon afterward,...to dismiss workers whose injuries run up Wal-Mart's workers' comp bills." This article shows a direct comparison to Fast Food Nation. Kenny Dobbins was also a loyal worker, and when injured on the job he was fired due to a request of compensation. Mike Mitchell caught 180 shoplifters in a two- year period, but when injured on the job, Wal-Mart did not have his back. The article shows the theme of profit over treatment of the worker. The article also has interesting facts/statistics about the middle and low class laborer of the modern day.
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Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) Getting by in America - 0 views

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    "Ehrenreich then examines the general social issues underlying her experiences. The constant problem of housing is caused by the rich competing with the poor for living space, with the rich inevitably coming out on top."
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    The following article gives a brief summary of the novel. The article tells of Ehrenreich's purpose and method of finding minimum wage jobs to support herself. Ehrenreich comes to the conclusion that the cause of the terrible conditions of the poor class is do to social inequality. Social inequality leds to competition which always ends with one side losing to benefits the other.
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In 'Bright-sided,' Barbara Ehrenreich Questions Positive Thinking-NYTimes.com - 0 views

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    Barbara Ehrenreich wants to make clear that she is not a spoilsport. "No one can call me a sourpuss," she declared. "I have a big foot in the joy camp." She is the author of "Dancing in the Streets," a history of "collective joy," she notes, and a lot of fun at parties.
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    Ehrenreich has been labeled as a pessimist, one who brings out the worst in the society we live in. This could be true, as she describes that she was shocked to see such cheerfulness after being diagnosed with breast cancer in "Bright Sided". Ehrenreich is not a "sourpuss" but rather a realist who tells it like it is.
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    It is hard not to be pessimistic when confronted with the horrible conditions of the working class. How can you sugar-coat people struggle with starvation and crowded into one bedroom homes?
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    Wordd
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    The Joads are always optimistic, and they're even more impoverished than these people.
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The American Dream - 0 views

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    "Through her personal study, Ehrenreich sees the futility of the American dream as her various co-workers desperately attempt to break through their social strata and leave the life of the "working poor" behind. But housing and transportation costs, medical bills, and the price of basic needs create obstacles that are often insurmountable. "
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    This article deals with the American Dream. Many people start in the business world with the American dream of advancing through hard work. Through "The Jungle", Jurgis never succeeds by working hard. Ehrenreich also finds that working hard in America does not sustain a person. A person must struggle daily to survive.
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Bill Moyers' Journal: Respecting the Dignity of Labor - 0 views

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    While Barbara Ehrenreich has a powerful quote in this article, Andy Sterns is much more so, "Well, the good news is this isn't Rwanda or Darfur or some impoverished country. This is the greatest country on earth with the greatest amount of wealth. The problem isn't about the wealth. It's about distribution. And the truth is we are seeing America's growing apart instead of growing together."
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    This quote epitomizes the problems that the American economy faces today. The rich keep getting richer, and the poor are getting poorer. The problem is not a lack of wealth, but rather a deeper division between social classes. The ideals of this nation have not come to pass.
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    The rich are benefiting from the labor of the poor. The rich hardly have to work to make money anymore.
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DC Restaurant Workers Underpaid, Unsafe And Likely Subject To Discrimination - 0 views

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    speaks to the unethical practices of many restaurant workers
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    The article is mostly statistics but, but it shows how widespread unethical business practices are. The fact that nearly a third of every statistic published is someone being underpaid and or forced to work unpaid overtime speaks to badly these workers are taken advantage of.
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Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • However, off the printed page, women have primarily played second-class roles, kept in place by men determined to dominate them.
    • Vivas T
       
      This article displays the similarities between women and the poor working class due to the evidence of social classes in each. In each group, there is a higher group which attempts to keeps the other group in place. This relates to women as well as the treatment of workers and the lack of ethics which businesses have due to their unreachable strength and tactics to suppress workers.
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    id have to disagree very stronly, im sorry
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Gale Virtual Reference Library - Document - 0 views

  • It is the tone of a woman almost in touch with her anger, who is determined not to appear angry, who is willing herself to be calm, detached, and even charming
    • Vivas T
       
      This article illustrates a connection between low class workers and women during Virginia Woolf's time due to its description of Woolf's tone in the story. Similar to workers, women try not to "appear angry" and instead try to appear "calm, detached, and even charming". This depicts the hatred that lurks in every oppressed group, such as women and low class workers, who are not able to stand up to the great force above them.
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Gender - 0 views

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    "Until comparatively recent times, most women lived in such a world, for discrimination based on gender was the rule in almost every culture. Yet even in the most repressive times and places, writers of both sexes have protested the discrimination against women that was so thoroughly woven into the fabric of society that many people simply could not recognize the inequities."
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    This article focuses on women in literature. The main issue in feminist literature is the inequalities between the genders. The opportunities presented to each gender skew towards the male portion of the population. "A Room of One's Own" provides prominent examples of the discrepancies between females and males.
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