Summary Of Barbara Ehrenreich's Nickel And Dimed

Words: 304
Pages: 2

After reading about Barbara Ehrenreich’s personal experience in Nickel and Dimed, the image of the constant drug tests employees had to take stayed with me and made me ponder. When applying for jobs such as waitressing or sorting clothes at Walmart, Ehrenreich talks about how drug testing was either threatened or mandatory; however, she strongly believes that they are not necessary and invade the privacy of citizens. For example, she rebukes drug tests when she writes, “What surprised and offended me most about the low-wage workplace…was the extent to which one is required to surrender one’s basic civil rights and—what boils down to the same thing—self-respect” (Ehrenreich 208). The author’s statement illustrates her disapproval for employees