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80,000 new jobs were created last month. But 4 million people graduated from college already this year.



Photo Above - ICE agents keeping us safe from migrant nannies. If she's detained, does this count as a new job opening?

80,000 new jobs created, just after high school and college graduation? That doesn’t sound like enough. An annualized job growth of less than 1 million a year. One quarter of the 4 million people who received college degrees so far in 2025. (See links below)

It’s impossible to determine how many new jobs actually HAVE been created in 2025 so far. The department of labor statistics keeps changing the numbers. Suffice it to say, none of the narratives served up so far even come close to 2 million new jobs.

Of course, only 62% of kids who enroll in college actually graduate. The other 40% drop out, quickly default on their student loans, and then are baited on election day by promises of student loan forgiveness.

Being a barista is a job any high school graduate could do. Like telemarketing, debt collection, Amazon picking, Uber. Those jobs are now going to college graduates. Because a college diploma proves that you at least had the tenacity to persist at college for 4, 5, or 6 years after public high school graduation.

Don’t laugh – the “tenacity” angle is EXACTLY what corporate HR offices focus on. They mostly actually don’t care what your college degree is in, if they’re hiring for a typical entry level position. If you have the sheepskin, you make it past round one.

Back to the 80,000 new August jobs. I don’t have confidence in this number. It could be half as many, or twice as many, based on the kind of revisions we’ve seen over the past several months. And when we get to October, November, and December it will just get worse. “Holiday Hiring”. Everyone is told that if you hustle and work all the overtime demanded, you’ll likely be kept on after January 1st.

Because people will believe anything. Even Amazon pickers and the thousands of guys who signed on as temporary/probationary ICE roundup agents. They all believe – to a man – that their jobs will be made permanent. Which is why they’re working overtime to chase down nannies, lawn crews, and Home Depot day labor. The government has given them a quota, and keeps track on how well they meet it. Why would you chase after a Tren de Aragua cartel soldier, tatted and armed, when you could safely take down a nanny and then stop at Starbucks for a latte afterwards to celebrate?

The government also claims that 1.6 million migrants were deported this year. Do you believe that? Or that illegal border crossings are down 92%. About the only statistic I potentially WOULD believe is that no detainees were actually eaten by ‘gators at Alligator Alcatraz yet.

Trump didn’t create the job crisis, and so far he isn’t fixing it. People began dropping out of the workforce permanently during the pandemic. They’re no longer counted as unemployed if they don’t file with their state unemployment offices. Able bodied adults who don’t see the point. And with so few new jobs – mostly as baristas and pickers – can you blame them?

I’m just sayin’ . ..



US employers likely added a modest 80,000 jobs last month, a sign that the labor market has cooled

30+ US College Graduation Statistics for 2025
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3Dogmatic · 46-50, M Best Comment
The trades need people too. Electricians, plumbers, welders etc…

No college required and get paid while you learn. Two years and you can make 100k+
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@3Dogmatic marked as best comment. I can count dozens of my friends who graduated from high school telling their families that they would become doctors, lawyers, or university faculty. i know exactly one lawyer from that cadre of posers. and he no longer works as an attorney.

Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40
Actually the trades is an excellent point my husband was a highly qualified electrical engineer until he retired early he actually started out as an apprentice electrician at the beginning so there is good money in those trades. The problem is it is not fashionable jobs and one has to get your hands dirty and for some work.
My husband actually owned an electrical company and we tried on numerous occasions to get apprentices only on occasion to be told by the job centre that they didn't see that anyone would want to train to do it
Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40
@SusanInFlorida We have been there trying to get apprentices, lots will say yes but you have to be reasonably smart and dedicated to actually get there. Electrical is not as bad as plumbing that is seen as a dirty job by most as soon as the plumber requires the apprentice to put their hands in blocked drains, toilet they don't want to know anymore
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@Avectoijesuismoi on the other hand, crossed pipes won't electrocute you . . .
Avectoijesuismoi · 36-40
@SusanInFlorida Normal domestic will hurt a bit but some voltages they come with dustpan and brush and sweep up the ashes
joe438 · 61-69, M
The good students I have in class are already employed while they’re in school. They balance both and take a better job when they graduate- sometimes in the same company.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@joe438 its easier to score weed at the fast food drive through if the workers are mostly hispanic. The secret word at KFC used to be "extra biscuits"
joe438 · 61-69, M
@SusanInFlorida hmm. I knew McD had a secret menu. I didn’t figure that weed was a secret herb or spice.
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@joe438 most bars and fast food places can hook you up. but not if this is your first time through the door.
AthrillatheHunt · 51-55, M
We need to create like a 1/4 mill jobs every month just to break even
This comment is hidden. Show Comment
SusanInFlorida · 31-35, F
@jshm2 so your theory is that government statistics have always been believable, and lying started 8 months ago?

how did the $37 trillion national debt occur then?

 
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