Essay On Dirty Jobs

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The Bureau of Labor Statistics (2016) stated, “In January, 1.8 million persons were marginally attached to the labor force, down by 337,000 from a year earlier.
These individuals were not in the labor force, wanted and were available for work, and had looked for a job sometime in the prior 12 months.” Wages have decreased over the years because of inflation. People are being cut less paid time-off and less retirement pay.
If this continues to happen, where will all of our labor working jobs and workers go? Dirty jobs range from oil workers to pig farmers. Dirty Jobs can be described as any job that includes labor, hard work and of naturally getting your hands dirty. The dirty jobs are America’s backbone. They keep the nation running and keep …show more content…

The dirty jobs have always been around, but are those workers slowly going extinct. Some can argue this topic from different sides, such as laborious jobs expanding and the opposite of laborious jobs dying. When the pilgrims first settled, it says that they complained about labor jobs and how they needed them to make their settlement (bls.gov). History shows that
America has also had many strikes and acts concerning labor jobs. Workers want their rights, they want to be heard and they want to be treated right. The presentation “Mike Rowe: Learning from dirty jobs” was presented in
December of 2008. The problem presented in this presentation is that dirty jobs are portrayed in the wrong way and that society degrades them. Mike Rowe uses descriptive analysis in this video because he is describing events and relating to real life experiences and encounters. In this TedTalks video, Mike Rowe, host of the Discovery channel tv show “Dirty Jobs” explains what he does and what real people do for a living. Mike
Rowe has performed almost every labor working job and none of the shows are

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