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Essay On Labor Unions

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Labor unions
Struggling with incredibly low wages for the terribly long hours many good workers put in seems terrible doesn’t it? Good thing they invented labor unions. Labor unions grew out of the need to protect many workers from injustice from employers. People suffered when going to work and were mistreated and were treated as if their lives don’t matter. Thankfully United states, followed in the footsteps of the Europeans and created their own labor unions.
Labor unions began to form in the nineteenth century. This started with the founding of the Nation Labor Union in 1866. The NLU IS Different from today’s unions. “Unlike today's unions, the NLU was not exclusive to a particular type of worker. And although the NLU crumbled without making significant gains in establishing workers' rights, its founding set an important precedent in our country” (Union Plus). The NLU …show more content…

During Americas second industrial revolution, many people migrated to cities. There was too many people and not enough jobs for the number of people pouring in. Along with that, many jobs were being taken away by new technologies that were cheaper than hiring workers. Machines took the jobs of those who used to work menial tasks. As time went on in the history of labor unions, the purpose of it started to decline dramatically. Many places began to outsource jobs and many of companies moved to other countries. Union Memberships started to decline drastically. “Between 1975 and 1985, union membership fell by 5 million. In manufacturing, the unionized portion of the labor force dropped below 25 percent, while mining and construction, once labor’s flagship industries, were decimated. Only in the public sector did the unions hold their own. By the end of the 1980s, less than 17 percent of American workers were organized, half the proportion of the early 1950s”(History

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