Anonymous wrote:The people posting about how graduates should have fast food and retail experience don’t realize that many of those jobs have gone to full time year round workers including new legal workers (asylum seekers can legally work after a year).
We now live in CA where the minimum fast food wage is $20 an hour. My 16 year old applied to 10 fast food jobs in May and June. He got 2 interviews. When he said he could only work full time in the summer but could not work over 20 hours in the fall when school started he wasn’t hired.
The only jobs his friends got were life guarding and the attractive girls were hired as hostesses in restaurants.
Anonymous wrote:The people posting about how graduates should have fast food and retail experience don’t realize that many of those jobs have gone to full time year round workers including new legal workers (asylum seekers can legally work after a year).
We now live in CA where the minimum fast food wage is $20 an hour. My 16 year old applied to 10 fast food jobs in May and June. He got 2 interviews. When he said he could only work full time in the summer but could not work over 20 hours in the fall when school started he wasn’t hired.
The only jobs his friends got were life guarding and the attractive girls were hired as hostesses in restaurants.
Anonymous wrote: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).
It's a choice. My kids were collegiate athletes and chose internships (all of which ended in job offers) vs playing their sport or "training" like a lot of their teammates. And yeah, my kids had jobs upon graduation and a lot of their teammates did not.
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:“Sorry kids that learned to code like we said to. The market is full and we’re still bringing in the same # of “temporary” foreign tech workers. They’re really stacking up and using master’s programs to prolong their stay here and outcompete you. Have you looked into the trades?”
Anonymous wrote: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).
I agree with this.
I am an attorney now. I started working retail jobs at 16 years old. It gave me My own money and taught me how to act in a workplace. Another colleague who had similar jobs used to remark about the new attorneys who seemed to have very little understanding of how to get along at a job because they had never worked. We both agreed that we learned some of our most valuable work and people skills in our part time retail jobs in HS and college.
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: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:Anonymous wrote:I’d rather be a recent grad with parents to lean onto for next few years than a middle aged man whose career is being destroyed with little prospects who has two teenagers, a mortgage and family to support and now elder care to also manage.
True. And the grads I've talked to understand this. But knowing things cou be worse doesn't really change their situation.
Anonymous wrote:Apart from all the hustle to earn money and get a job...
He needs to use online platforms to learn new skills in computers,
he needs to get certified more by using free resources,
make apps and put it on app-store,
get a masters,
tutor kids in CS,
take online classes,
work on his health and appearance,
change his diet to a more healthy diet,
learn how to cook/do laundry/clean/declutter,
start selling stuff on FB marketplace,
pick up stuff from Trash Nothing website and resell,
Sell all the crap in the house at FB marketplace,
Write children books
Think of an online game
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: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.