Anonymous wrote:Contributing to the problem is many young adults I know (kids of friends and colleagues, our sitters) graduate from college with very little real work experience because they spent their free time and summers in academic, sports and other extracurricular pursuits. I’ve asked many colleagues (government agencies) what their kids are doing this summer or where they’re working and discovers very few had regular jobs. My colleagues didn’t want them to have to work like they did or felt as if their kids are too good to work fast food and retail jobs.
When I was a hiring manager (entry level IT, help desk and sales for well known media company) of recent college grads, I eliminated candidates with no work experience and often hired candidates who worked retail or restaurants through college because I knew they could hustle and had drive (and I was right).
Anonymous wrote:
Yup. Drive to Loudoun's Ashburn area (Broadlands). Huge influx of South Asians working in the high tech sector. They live in expensive new housing developments with bells and whistles, drive fancy vehicles, and have a SAHP. Their high salaries make it possible.
In a world where SAHP is now a distant dream for most Americans, high paying STEM jobs are being funneled specifically to immigrant South Asians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these plentiful jobs? Do you know a single graduate from 2025?
Law enforcement.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1282003.page
That is one job. That is not plentiful. Computer science grads don’t want to work in law enforcement like MAGA doesn’t want to pick berries.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The White House is hiring staff.
Then you’ll never work in politics again, or worse, end up in jail.
Current White House staff will have the opportunity to work in the next Republican administration under President Vance. Then, with any luck, we will have President Stephen Miller and perhaps even President Charlie Kirk.
Yes, you’ve made it clear you like mediocre white men.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The White House is hiring staff.
Then you’ll never work in politics again, or worse, end up in jail.
Current White House staff will have the opportunity to work in the next Republican administration under President Vance. Then, with any luck, we will have President Stephen Miller and perhaps even President Charlie Kirk.
Anonymous wrote:
Yup. Drive to Loudoun's Ashburn area (Broadlands). Huge influx of South Asians working in the high tech sector. They live in expensive new housing developments with bells and whistles, drive fancy vehicles, and have a SAHP. Their high salaries make it possible.
In a world where SAHP is now a distant dream for most Americans, high paying STEM jobs are being funneled specifically to immigrant South Asians.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The White House is hiring staff.
Then you’ll never work in politics again, or worse, end up in jail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are these plentiful jobs? Do you know a single graduate from 2025?
Law enforcement.
https://www.dcurbanmom.com/jforum/posts/list/1282003.page
Anonymous wrote:The White House is hiring staff.
Anonymous wrote:He needs to go for a Masters.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Americans have always been privileged. I am from Africa and the unemployment rate for college grad has to be around 80%, I don't even think we have an official statistics. I graduated with double bachelor's degree in math and physics and I couldn't find even a teaching job..I went into a deep depression because I felt I did everything right graduated fifth in my class and nothing to show for. Then miraculously I won the green card lottery. It took only 3 months for me to find a job in the US. I was shocked. Now in fairness this was 3 years ago, so if it was in today's economy I probably would be struggling as well.
But I think American college graduates are starting to experience what a lot of college graduates around the world go through year after year. What worries me most is that there is such a high expectation in this country that if you go to college, get a degree, then a job will be ready for you eventually. I think we may have to reset expectations.
If we do that, it means we are expecting that we are no longer exceptional.