New U.S. college grads now have higher unemployment than the average worker

Filled area chart of the gap between recent U.S. college graduates' unemployment rate and all workers' rate, 1990 to 2026, as a 12-month average. For most of the period the gap sits below zero, shaded slate and labeled ADVANTAGE, meaning grads had lower unemployment than the average worker. It is deepest at about 2.7% below zero in 2010 during the Great Recession. The line crosses zero in February 2019 and rises into a terracotta wedge above zero labeled PENALTY, reaching a record 1.4% by 2026.

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Unrequited instinctuality can be leveraged into something good

CIA and FBI face BLOODBATH as Trump unlocks new loophole to detonate Obama’s Deep State

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Top Oncologist Sounds the Alarm: ‘This Is Nuremberg Tribunal Material’

Vitamin C is more than ‘immune support’ — William Wallace

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SPLC paid for KKK cross burnings, robes and hoods, recruitment, living expenses, racist merch: explosive indictment

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Problems with FIML and how they can work to our advantage

Ajanta Caves: Buddhist cave monuments dating from the second century BCE 

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