Strike Essays

  • The Strike of 1934

    1843 Words  | 4 Pages

    The Strike of 1934 On May 9th 1934 a organized labor strike started in San Francisco that would snowball into a city crippling strike. The International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) declared a strike for all longshoremen on the west coast, until they received better wages, a union-administered hiring hall, and union membership as a prerequisite for employed longshoremen. The Strike of 1934 lasted for three months, stopping maritime trade in the ports of the Western United States, from San

  • Three Strike Laws

    1735 Words  | 4 Pages

    three-strike laws the solution to America's crime problem? Many, including myself, believe so, but only for violent crimes such as murder, rape, or arson. Some argue that even theft, drug trafficking or possession, and burglary are deserving of the 25-to-life sentence that can be imposed under mandatory minimums for three-strike laws. A three-strike law mandates a 25-year to life sentence for three violations and convictions of a law. While mandatory minimums are not always tied to three-strike laws

  • Lightning Never Strikes Twice

    1098 Words  | 3 Pages

    Lightning Never Strikes Twice 	A few miles off the cost of Cape Cod, sits the island of Nantucket. On this island, during the 1600’s lived the Haley family. Tom Haley was the only tobacco farmer on the island and due to this fact they were extremely wealthy. Their estate was the largest on Nantucket and was located right over a beautiful cliff. Tom and his wife Janice ate breakfast every morning at 6:00am everyday with their son Garnet. Late Thursday night a storm was getting very close to their

  • Zoecon Corporation - Strike Roach Ender

    713 Words  | 2 Pages

    To:          Executive, Zoecon Corporation From: Date:          Thursday, February 17, 2005 Subject:     Strike Roach Ender Introduction Projected Industry Consumers                              Professional Projected Growth Rate of 10% annually          Projected growth rate of 8% annually Projected sales of $4.4 million                Projected sales of $2.7 billion Flea IGR Introduction – Similar Scenario •     Great success of introduction of flea IGR PRECOR into PCO, veterinary

  • Strike: The Impact Of Public Service Workers On Strike

    508 Words  | 2 Pages

    Public Service Workers on Strike Strike! Strike! Strike! Public service workers have jobs that have higher responsibilities than most jobs and they have many benefits. A strike is when workers stop working until they get what they want. Strikers are usually the best way to improve conditions. Although, not all workers who go on strike get what they want. I do not think public service workers should be allowed to go on strike. Additionally, public service workers have jobs that have higher responsibility

  • General Strike Dbq

    605 Words  | 2 Pages

    called a strike. The men demanded more jobs and younger workers demanded better working conditions. The employers didn’t want to use men because women who were covering the men’s gap during the war were more efficient than using men. Women were paid less, but each person worked as well as the men did. Employers didn’t want to negotiate with the employees. As a result, all the stores and the factories of Winnipeg had been shut down and 30,000workers were on the street protesting. The strike was planned

  • General Strike Essay

    1052 Words  | 3 Pages

    Causes of the General Strike In this essay I will discuss the reasons for the start of the general strike, the long and short term causes. In the 1920's Britain was having a hard time on the industrial front. It had begun with the miners, the coal industry wasn't fairing to well and was declining rapidly and had been since 1918. This was because during the first world war the mines were run by the government and the conditions of the mines were good but also the

  • Homestead Strike Essay

    1919 Words  | 4 Pages

    Homestead Steel Strike The Homestead Steel Strike occurred in June of 1892. The strike took place in Homestead Pennsylvania and involved the Carnegie Steel Company and the Amalgamated Association of Iron and Steen Workers (the AA). The Leader of Carnegie Steel Company was Mr. Andrew Carnegie. His company produced such cheep materials that creations like bridges and skyscrapers were not only feasible but affordable. He was creating a revolutionary period for steel and iron factories. The Amalgamated

  • Strike Case Study

    1636 Words  | 4 Pages

    STRIKES A strike is when labour and work is being withheld by the workers of a certain company in support to their demands which were made to their employer or employers yet the employer or employers have not yet met any of the employees’ demand, the workers then result in a strike which can be in the form of a go-slow, overtime bans or a stay-away approach. A strike usually happens as a response to the employee’s grievances (Israelstam, 2011). The Labour Relations Act, 1995 defines strike (cited

  • Employees and the Right to Strike

    519 Words  | 2 Pages

    Employees and the Right to Strike There are many arguments about whether or not Employees should have the right to industrial action. I have looked at many different sources and have brought my research together into this essay. A reason supporting the point that workers should be allowed to strike is so they can fight against poor safety conditions. For instance, working in the nuclear power industry etc, any breaches of safety can have tragic consequences. Furthermore if the employees

  • The Pullman Strike of 1894

    1479 Words  | 3 Pages

    The Pullman Strike of 1894 was the first national strike in American history and it came about during a period of unrest with labor unions and controversy regarding the role of government in business.5 The strike officially started when employees organized and went to their supervisors to ask for a lowered rent and were refused.5 The strike had many different causes. For example, workers wanted higher wages and fewer working hours, but the companies would not give it to them; and the workers wanted

  • Railroad Strike Dbq

    508 Words  | 2 Pages

    The Railroad Strike of 1877 began with workers receiving a 10% cut in their wages, the angered workers, who had their wages cut twice since the previous year, decided to strike. The members of the union refused to go back to work until the pay cut had been returned. This resulted in disrupted rail service from Baltimore to St. Louis. Union tactics during the strike included rioting in the streets and destroying railway equipment. As a result of the strike, the Federal Government had to intervene

  • The Haymarket Strike Essay

    1596 Words  | 4 Pages

    people having the courage to join in, compared to majority, who remained quiet. Eventually, many people rose up against the employers, riots and collective strikes stroke the country, many people protested against the treatment they got from the capitalists. As Jeremy Brecher explains in The Great Upheaval, it all started in July 1877 when many strikes were held across America. The workers halted the operations of the most important business, the railroads. They fought the police, the state militia, and

  • A Meteor will Strike the Earth and Destroy All Life Forms

    1278 Words  | 3 Pages

    A Meteor will Strike the Earth and Destroy All Life Forms “With millions and millions of meteors hurtling around in our solar system, there’s always a chance that one could hit Earth at any moment. But what would be the consequences and how would the Earth be affected if one does happen to hit? If an object from space hit the sea, a huge tidal wave would be formed, hundreds of meters high, which would leave most of the world under water for a period of time, destroying and killing everything

  • The Workers Strike

    1722 Words  | 4 Pages

    The miners’ strike of 1984-1985 was one the most acrimonious industrial disputes Britain has ever seen. On March 6th the National Coal Board (NCB) announced its intention to close 20 coal pits resulting in the loss of 20,000 jobs, revealing as well the plan to in the long-term close over 70 pits. A yearlong strike followed which saw a time of Mass walk-outs, poverty and violence as mining communities all over the country fought to maintain their employment. Ultimately the National Union of Mineworkers

  • Exemplification Essay: Three-Strikes Law is a Mindless Response to Crime

    2569 Words  | 6 Pages

    appeal to the state supreme court. Michael realized the futility of his cause in court and quietly disappeared, and he remains at large today. Recently, one of the most popular proposals in the effort to get tough on crime has been the "three-strikes-and-you're-out" proposal. This law, which is already in effect in Washington state and California, requires that offenders convicted of three violent crimes be sentenced to life in prison without parole. This proposal has received broad-based support

  • The Pullman Strike Dbq Answers

    2087 Words  | 5 Pages

    The Pullman Strike: Taking a Stand for the Workers The Pullman Strike was a disturbing event in Chicago, Illinois history. It occurred because of the way George Pullman, founder of the Pullman Palace Car Company treated his workers. George Pullman was born in 1831, in upstate New York, he was the son of a carpenter. He learned carpentry himself and moved to Chicago, Illinois in the 1850s. From there, he opened up his own railroad company called the Pullman Palace Car Company and it took off from

  • The Right of Lawyers to Go On Strike

    1819 Words  | 4 Pages

    OF LAWYERS TO GO ON STRIKE This section will analyze the issue of whether lawyers have a right to strike. The legal position with respect to the right of lawyers seems clear after the cases of Harish Uppal and even Common Cause : lawyers have no right to strike. In this part, a review of case law will help articulate the legal position with respect to strikes by lawyers. In Harish Uppal v. Union of India, the Court stipulated that: “[…] lawyers have no right to go on strike or give a call for boycott

  • Pullman Strike Case Study

    642 Words  | 2 Pages

    As a leading member of the American Railroad Union and in the Pullman Strike, I am a firsthand witness in the strike. I have heard and witnessed the workers complaints of having low wages and high priced and inadequate living conditions. In response to the 25% wage cut with no corresponding price reductions in housing or food the Pullman workers, many a part of the ARU, found that the situation extremely unjust. The ARU and many workers understand that America is in a time of economic depression

  • Lucky Strike Ad Analysis

    966 Words  | 2 Pages

    Lucky Strike is one of the most famous cigarettes brands known since the early 1900s. A 1929 American Tobacco Company advertisement for Lucky Strike cigarettes contributed in making that brand the top-selling brand in the United States during the 1930s. This Lucky Strike ad uses imagery that illustrates dominant social norms and many other advertising technics in order to convince women to smoke in public. At first glance, a gigantic, sturdy, white male hand breaking a metal chain, and wearing a