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Workers of the World, Faint!

Julia Wallace The New York Times
Three years ago, when the Cambodian minimum wage was $61 per month, 200,000 workers took to the streets to ask for a raise. It was the largest-ever strike in the garment sector, but, after just three days, it came to an anticlimactic halt due to police violence and threats against union leaders. Then the "neak ta" appeared. Mass faintings in factories spread throughout Cambodia, and employers' took notice.

Kellogg's Delivers Memphis a Slap In The Face

Steve Payne Labor Notes
Kellogg workers in Memphis have been locked out for three months and replaced by scabs. Sixty percent of the workers are black. The union believe this part of an attempt to make Kellogg nationally union free.

Wolves

Jeff Danziger amuniversal.com

Louisiana Court Rules That 7,000 Teachers Were Wrongfully Terminated

Diane Ravitch Diane Ravitch's blog
Didn’t Arne Duncan say that Katrina was the best thing that ever happened to the schools of New Orleans? Didn’t he celebrate the abrupt firing of all these teachers and their replacement by TFA? Well, yes. The courts say he was wrong.

She Worked Hard for the Money

Misty Upham Daily Beast
SAG nominee Misty Upham speaks from experience when she stands up for domestic workers.