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Here is today’s premium R&D to accompany today’s premium topic brief on last week’s fast food strikes.
A comeback for labor E.J. Dionne Jr. Last week’s fast-food strike is a hopeful sign for workers’ rights. http://t.co/V1o3ze6eTE
— Andrew Ginsburg (@GinsburgJobs) September 2, 2013
Anyone who supported the fast-food strikes should read this: “Putting Labor Back in Labor Day” http://t.co/uO2Ew2uTNY #829strike — Steven Greenhouse (@greenhousenyt) August 31, 2013
Raising #minimumwage denies more low-skilled workers the opportunity to get a job & receive “on the job” training http://t.co/0xZrAi8JFx — NFIB (@NFIB) August 29, 2013
Who’s Behind the Fast Food Strikes? Working Women. http://t.co/eDSfzyXrHH — Slate (@Slate) September 2, 2013
In the face of more fast food strikes, check out this from July: The Case for Paying People More by @foxjust http://t.co/1xtPqepuPx — Harvard Biz Review (@HarvardBiz) August 29, 2013
Interesting to re-read this at time of fast-food strikes: “McDonald’s $8.25 Man & $8.75 Million CEO Show Pay Gap” http://t.co/SmxfhAfNiT — Steven Greenhouse (@greenhousenyt) August 20, 2013
This 1994 study showed raising the minimum wage did NOT raise unemployment http://t.co/k9qi1aWwbL — Business Insider (@businessinsider) September 1, 2013
Limbaugh: Fast food strike should target Obama http://t.co/JkVmoIEFBw via @Edwards_Bre — POLITICO (@politico) August 29, 2013
No pot of gold at the end of the arches. Fast-food workers walk off the job in the US to raise the basic wage. http://t.co/Y3lUs0AMnm
— smh.com.au (@smh) August 31, 2013
Awkward… McDonald’s ad pops up on news station’s coverage of fast food strike http://t.co/zbTzMpGTwL
— Huffington Post (@HuffingtonPost) August 30, 2013