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In the late 1800s, why might a potential new factory employee refuse to sign a yellow-dog contract?

A. because yellow-dog contracts required an employee and his family to live in a company town
B. because yellow-dog contracts required employees to report back to employers with any information regarding labor union organization
C. because signing a yellow-dog contact labeled an employee as a scab and made him or her a potential target of union violence
D. because promising not to join a union would strip the employee of his ability to protest workplace injustices with the support of an organized workers’ group

User F Chopin
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Answer:

d

Step-by-step explanation:

User Varad
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Answer:

D. because promising not to join a union would strip the employee of his ability to protest workplace injustices with the support of an organized workers’ group

User Asad Shah
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