Saturday’s New York Times reported the sentencing of 270 predominantly Guatemalan undocumented workers, formerly employed at the nation’s largest kosher meatpacking plant, Agriprocessors, Inc., in Postville, Iowa . The laborers, who had been toiling up to 14 hour shifts without overtime pay, were convicted, condemned to five month prison sentences and deportation, actions calculated, according to ICE special agent Claude Arnold, to demonstrate our commitment “to enforcing the nation’s immigration laws in the workplace (and) to maintain the integrity of the immi
For several years, Mrs. DeWitt worked as a clinical manager at Proctor Hospital in Illinois where she received outstanding reviews from her supervisor. Doubtless she was grateful both for the job and thankful to be covered under the hospitals partially self-funded group health plan, for Mrs.
In session since October 7, 1850, the Indiana Constitutional Convention was now well into its second month. On a blustery Wednesday, November 20th, the Reverend Mr. Steele opened the session with a prayer. After taking up the fugitive slave problem, the session turned to consideration of a report returned by the committee on the State debt and public works on October 26th.
Along with other psychological baggage, each of us bears the burden of a personal view of “human nature” and Karl Marx, it seems, was no different. Marx didn’t use the German word for it; he chose the jaw-breaking Gattungswesen, or “species-being.” It took a century, a messy business with the Czar and his family, two world wars, and a long “cold” one before Oxford’s Gerald Cohen arrived at the common sense observation that Mr.
My thanks to Gregor Koso for posing this interesting question. Law school students learn that penalties and fines are not enforceable in private contractual relationships. At common law, a stipulated amount of “damages” agreed to by the parties will not be enforced by the courts if it is higher than the “actual” damages. On the other hand, where it is hard or impossible to figure out
Nobel prize winning economist Amartya Sen argues that a key measure of “development” is human freedom.
Last night was another productive night for our crew of street walkers in New Haven. We signed up 39 new members of Working America/Working Indiana in the Meadowbrook subdivision in New Haven. Jane Gresham, Howard Traxmoor, Tom Braun, Tom Lewandowski, and I were out for about an hour and a half and heard more tales of woe--especially about layoffs. There does seem to be greater interest in this neighborhood in receiving more information and participating in issue forums.