United Packinghouse Workers of America Essays

  • Immigrant Worker Ethics

    1698 Words  | 4 Pages

    report is to discuss my opinion on the question “Do I agree with the recommendations of the Human Rights Watch (HRW) in regards to work safety particularly when it comes to immigrant workers?” I will provide information on past and current safety related issues as they apply to the meat packing industry and immigrant workers. I will discuss the recommendations of the HRW. I will provide my opinion and consider some of the utilitarian and deontological considerations, and conclude this report with a

  • The Jungle by Upton Sinclair: Fame for the Wrong Reason

    2809 Words  | 6 Pages

    In the early 1900’s America begin to transform rapidly. Many immigrants started moving to the United States in the early 1900’s with the hopes of living the “American Dream.” However, that glittering and gleaming American lifestyle is merely a distant ideal for the immigrants living in Packingtown, the meatpacking district of Chicago. Upton Sinclair’s The Jungle portrays life through the eyes of a poor workingman struggling to survive in this cruel, tumultuous environment, where the desire for

  • Progressive Era Reform In Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

    1047 Words  | 3 Pages

    uncovers significant corruption taking place with the country’s rapid industrialization. He was labeled a “muckraker” for exposing the system that privileges the powerful. Upton Sinclair states that the paramount goal for writing his book was to improve worker conditions, increase wages, and put democratic socialism as a major political party. The book shocked the public nation by uncovering the unhealthy standards in the meatpacking industry it also resulted in a congressional investigation. The main

  • Upton Sinclairs "The Jungle"

    1021 Words  | 3 Pages

    Several years before and after the turn the turn of the twentieth century, America experienced a large influx of European immigration. These new citizens had come in search of the American dream of success, bolstered by promise of good fortune. Instead they found themselves beaten into failure by American industry. Upton Sinclair wanted to expose the cruelty and heartlessness endured by these ordinary workers. He chose to represent the industrial world through the meatpacking industry, where the

  • Upton Sinclair's The Jungle

    855 Words  | 2 Pages

    treatment. Within the novel, he is able to show the brutality of the conditions workers faced and a disgusting insight into the meat packing industry. One of Sinclair’s strongest literary devices used in the novel was his attention to detail; he could create vivid, though unpleasant, images of “Durham’s” meat packing plant into the reader’s mind. Probably the most memorable description in the novel was that many worker”s “peculiar trou... ... middle of paper ... ... very good ending. The last

  • The Jungle by Upton Sinclair, Jr.

    612 Words  | 2 Pages

    picture of social conditions the book is as exact as a government report” (Sinclair, The Industrial Republic 115-16). To get a direct knowledge of the work, he sneaked into the packing plants as a pretended worker. He toured the streets of Packingtown, the area near the stockyards where the workers live. He approached people, from different walks of life, who could provide useful information about conditions in Packingtown. At the end of seven weeks, he returned home to New Jersey, shut himself up in

  • Theodore Roosevelt Administration: Fighting Corruption and Big Businesses

    1230 Words  | 3 Pages

    Roosevelt was the 26th president of the United States of America serving between 1901 and 1909. Roosevelt succeeded as President after the assassination of the then President William McKinley. President Roosevelt was among the most visible Progressives during his time because of his ability to handle domestic and foreign affairs with monumental results expanding the Executive branch of government. Square Deal As a primary means of supporting blue collar America, Roosevelt’s policies were directed primarily

  • Upton Sinclair The Jungle Summary

    1631 Words  | 4 Pages

    Towards the end of the 19th Century a major reform movement approached the United States. This is known as the progressive movement or “Progressive Era.” “Progressivism is the term applied to a variety of responses to the economic and social problems rapid industrialization introduced to America. Progressivism began as a social movement and grew into a political movement.” thousands of new jobs and companies were created in the United States, because

  • Muckrakers In The Progressive Era

    1253 Words  | 3 Pages

    million children, ages ten to fifteen, were working in America. By 1910, that number increased to two million (Davis). Children as young as five could be found in glass making factories, canneries and home industries. Their workday could be as long as eighteen hours and would only get paid a fraction of what an adult would. Yetta Adelman, a Polish garment worker said “I was twelve years old but I wasn’t. Compared to a child [born] here in the United States, I was twenty (McGerr 18).”

  • Impact of Globalization on African Americans

    2653 Words  | 6 Pages

    For many years black people in the United States have struggled for their rights and their piece of the American dream. Now that the world is moving toward a new global era the African American person, worker and human has been left out of this turn in the century and, the system is letting them hang their selves. Globalization has made it so that anyone with the right equipment and knowledge can chat or do business anywhere in the world with just a few clicks of a couple of buttons. Globalization

  • JIMMY HOFFA

    8922 Words  | 18 Pages

    The day Jimmy Hoffa didn't come home By Pat Zacharias / The Detroit News On July 30, 1975, James Riddle Hoffa left his Lake Orion home for a meeting. Paroled from federal prison three years earlier, the former Teamster president had recently announced plans to try to wrestle back control of the union he had built with his bare knuckles from his protege -- now adversary -- Frank Fitzsimmons. Anthony Giacalone, a reputed captain of organized crime in Detroit, was supposed to meet Hoffa that day. James