These nuts made half of the effort to survive in order to volunteer for artificially intimidating situations and entertain millions of strangers. Then I remember where I am and why I am here. Since Ehrenreich knows that most viewers are most likely to be related to humor, this irony is not just to use it. Attract readers and provide some links they will not normally bring together.
Barbara Ehrenreich is a writer and political activist and is called "veteran" by "New Yorker". She is a popular columnist and journalist, but in America it is best known for Nickel and Dimed: On (Not) (Figure 1). This is an automated ethnographic magazine on her 3 month experience. An immersive recording secret reporter tried to survive with minimum wage. Ehrenreich started her explanation with a detailed introduction. It will help to establish experimental rules, introduce her method, build journalist integrity, and then indeed dig into the experience that will pose several ethical issues. When talking to Harper's editor, she said "How to rely on unskilled wages" (1), especially "About 4 million women are about to enter the labor market through welfare reform" (1) For reliable "$ 6 or $ 7 per hour" (1)
Designed with nickel and dim, Barbara Ehrenreich. Ehrenreich investigated the minimum wage labor in ordinary cities, tried to find work in several different cities, to survive at the minimum wage to obtain housing. During the work of Wal-Mart, even hard-working and gentle people can not afford shirt at Wal-Mart. The half-life of truth of Samuel Absman. Subtitles here - "Why do we all know that they have an expiration date?" Means the subject of interest. There are several layers of surprise and inspiration; de facto change, measurement error, and human bias ("Scientometrics is the science of science")
Ehrenreich, author of Nickh and Dimed, explains as follows. "Frustration" (Barbara Ellenriich, Nickel, dark). This low wage seems to exert spiritual pressure on people struggling under them. Do they have the right to receive a salary that matches their progress? Keeping the lowest wage so low in today's society is like kicking people in case of failure. Fifty years ago, the least income workers were getting more than today's inflation rate. It is a big insult to the backbone of the economy that has nearly doubled in the past half a century. If the minimum wage is consistent with our productivity, today's minimum wage will be $ 19.