Fifty years ago, hundreds of thousands of Americans came to Washington for "The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom." Their achievements in terms of racial equality were hard-fought and profound. Their agenda for jobs--full employment with dignified work and wages--seems increasingly out of reach. Applying the lessons of the victories of the civil rights movement to a radically restructured 21st century economy, Rabbi Kirschner of Temple Sinai reconsiders the relationship between wage-earning and value in American life.