Mayo in eggs?Yea, the gay ones are better...
I love eggs in almost every form, other than adulterated with mayo.
Hurl.
Egg salad.
Hurl.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Mayo in eggs?Yea, the gay ones are better...
I love eggs in almost every form, other than adulterated with mayo.
I may be wrong but I'm guessing the upward swing is tied to 1 ) hey, I haven't seen a significant increase in prices at the gas pump or grocery store and 2 ) I see all these reports saying we are getting good trade deals which means tariffs will be no big deal.Consumer sentiment swings sharply higher in June
“… It was the first improvement in six months, with a more upbeat economic outlook evident across all demographics and political groups.
…
By the university's measure, consumer sentiment is still roughly 20% below President Trump's post-election bump at the end of last year.
- Still, the survey is the latest indication that as tariff drama recedes, so do concerns about the broader economy among businesses and consumers.“
“… The environment is even rougher for people without degrees: High-school graduates ages 18 to 19 with no college averaged an unemployment rate of 14.5% over the past 12 months. That is up from 13.3% over the prior 12-month period.Young Graduates Are Facing an Employment Crisis
Slow hiring is especially daunting for those just starting out; ‘Right now, I’m pretending employment doesn’t exist’
—> https://www.wsj.com/economy/jobs/jo...8?st=SFjPmP&reflink=desktopwebshare_permalink
“… The overall national unemployment rate remains around 4%, but for new college graduateslooking for work, it is much higher: 6.6% over the past 12 months ending in May. That is about the highest level in a decade—excluding the pandemic unemployment spike—and up from 6% for the 12-month period a year earlier.
That rate, based on data from the Labor Department, applies to people ages 20 to 24 looking for work who have at least a bachelor’s degree. (This group is mostly people 21 to 24, since few people graduate college sooner.)
Young graduates typically face a higher unemployment rate than their counterparts who have been in the workforce longer, but the gap is growing wider between older workers and the young. …”
![]()
Wasn’t there a department that was concerned with the Administration editing/censoring/blocking financial reports they produced if they looked bad?
“… The environment is even rougher for people without degrees: High-school graduates ages 18 to 19 with no college averaged an unemployment rate of 14.5% over the past 12 months. That is up from 13.3% over the prior 12-month period.
The Labor Department reported earlier this month that there were about 1.5 million fewer hires in the first four months of this year than in the first four months of last year. …”
![]()
I think so, especially for the black and brown people in the 18-24 demographic who voted for Trump. They will be rewarded bigly...Good thing Biden's no longer in office, though. Things will start really looking up for the 18-24 demographic now.
![]()
The Labor Market for Recent College Graduates
Data on employment outcomes for new graduates and young workers.www.newyorkfed.org
![]()