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    Newspaper Article Review The author’s article I have reviewed was Julia Preston. Ms. Preston is a former Mexican Correspondent who has also covered the federal courts. Ms. Preston currently works as the National Immigration Correspondent at the New York Times. In her article she goes into detail about immigrants and whether or not they are taking jobs from Americans and lowering wages by working for less. In addition, she provides a few words spoken by both the Republic nominee Donald Trump and

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    David K. Shipler is the author of various books, including The Working Poor: Invisible in America. While this book is one of his most famous, Shipler also wrote Arab and Jew: Wounded Spirits in a Promised Land, which won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction. Shipler was born in New Jersey in 1942, where he grew up and went to school. After highschool he attended Dartmouth College, in New Hampshire, which is a Private Ivy League College and one of only nine colleges chartered before the American

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    hundreds include muckraker Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle and John Steinbeck’s The Grapes of Wrath. The quandaries that plague the characters of the aforementioned novels parallel that of modern day exposés, such as Class Matters, by Bill Keller, Nickel and Dimed, by Barbara Ehrenreich, and Fast Food Nation, by Eric Schlosser, all of which harness and expose the falsehood of The American Dream as a result of wage slavery, class separation, and monopolization of major industries. The delineations that exist

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    Roanoke Restaurant

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    Hospitaliano at the Bistro Roanoke has rapidly become the dining capitol of Texas. I love food I should know. This little town has a wide variety of restaurants that have been growing for quite some time now. It has brought quite a bit of attention to food lovers like myself, and you know what they say everything is bigger in Texas. If you are searching for a deliciously remarkable experience. Look no further than the Italian Bistro. The Italian Bistro owned by Chef Skender Lajqi and brother Visar

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    be blind to race, respectful of the elders, and to love his or herself. She often told Mae Mobley, the little girl she raised, “You is kind. You is smart. You is important” (Stockett). The same goes for all people and was recognized in Nickel and Dimed: On (not) Getting by in America. “If you’re made to feel unworthy enough, you may come to think what you’re paid is what you’re actually worth” (Ehrenreich). Stop putting each other down, the insults will never get anybody

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    Minimum wage is an important and hot topic throughout the world, especially America. The minimum wage is the lowest amount of salary that an employer can give to their employees for their work. The federal minimum wage is covered under the Fair Labor Standards Act, also known as FLSA. The FLSA covers standards for government, local, and state employees, including overtime pay and record keeping. This protects the rights of the employers. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, FDR, was the first president to

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    to squat down and pee in front of a health worker (who has no doubt had to do the same thing herself.) (Ehrenreich 14). Drug tests trample on the pride of job seekers. Low-wage people have to endure unfair situation. Also, in her book, Nickel and Dimed, a waitress, Gail, is on the verge of being homeless because she cannot afford the deposit and first month’s rent required to lease an apartment. Another waiter, Joan, lives in her van parked behind a shopping center at night and showers in other co-worker’s

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    In Nickel and Dimed (2011), the middle-class woman Barbara Ehrenreich explores the working conditions and the living standards of the working class. Ehrenreich encounters situations that she finds unbearable and she questions how some things can be generally accepted

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    Minimum Wage In America

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    Barbara Ehrenreich establishes her claim on how society and the government are detrimental to people in poverty. The negative generalization that minimum wage workers experience in America affect their ability to move from the low class and into the middle class. I agree with Ehrenreich because many people who are in poverty are categorized as lazy and many people also believe that poverty does not occur on a large scale in the US. While government assistance does exist, most individuals surpass

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    Ehrenreich managed to track and find a couple of people that worked low paying jobs and for a time they couldn’t afford to settle down. “This spring, I managed to track down a couple of people I had met while working on my 2001 book, “Nickel and Dimed,” in which I worked in low-wage jobs. I woman I called Melissa in the book was still working at Wal-Mart, though in nine years, her wages had risen to $10 an hour from $7” (322). Hard working people work for wages that barely allow them to provide

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