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what happens to most college students after graduation?
The 18-34 year-old demo is one that grew up on great wealth and what we're facing could be the first real financial jolt we've seen. Sixty-five percent of college seniors plan to live with their parents after they graduate. When you consider that they also have an average of three credit cards and 73 percent will graduate with student loan debt, that makes sense. From a college student who has no savings, to a recent graduate trying to move out of his parents' house, to young people who are trying to stay afloat living on their own, this half-hour takes a look at the personal side of our economic crisis.
revolution, food shortages, higher education myth, and what to do?
The following few videos I recently came across are extremely disturbing. Gerald Celente, a legendary trend forecaster who has accurately predicted every major world event since the 1987 stock market crash and the fall of the Soviet Union and CEO of Trends Research Institute, is now warning Americans (and the world) to prepare for a broad economic collapse, potential bank holidays, ghost malls, civil unrest, food riots, and possible revolution by 2012. The only possible salvation is a new technological innovation as revolutionary as fire or the wheel.
how many college grads are actually able to get a job?
Consider the following results from a recent study performed by the National Association of Colleges and Employers to find out really how many college graduates are able to obtain jobs.
Statistics do not lie. Now here's the million dollar question: Do you have a Plan B?
we're on the brink of a depression (and much more)
While America's at record debt, Obama sanctions the Federal Reserve to print yet another $1 trillion of new money, sealing the fate for us and our posterity to endure higher taxes and hyperinflation in the near future. California is over $20 billion in debt and is on the brink of fiscal and infrastructural collapse. God forbidding -- threats of rioting and breakdown in social order are prompting FEMA & DHS to work with the UN to prepare for martial law are becoming self-fulfilling prophecies.
college seniors from Cal, Stanford, Ivies fight over $27,000 per year jobs
The impact of the worsening recession can be felt by graduating students attending some of the most elite universities in the U.S. such as UC Berkeley, Stanford, and Ivy League colleges. Because of a contracting economy, companies are unwilling to hire but are increasingly ready to fire employees every day. As a result, many college students from the class of 2009 and beyond are competing for jobs to teach in low-achieving schools in programs such as Teach For America for as little as $27,000 a year!
a guide to limited liability companies (LLCs)
LegalZoom.com (an online "TurboTax-H&R Block" for your legal document needs) just sent me a really nice guide to forming your own LLC which comes handy if you are thinking of being serious in real estate investments or starting/investing in business ventures. It contains valuable information about which state is best to form your LLC and the benefits of built-in liability protection and tax savings.
how the rich handle money problems
When the rich have money problems, they use their financial integrity, developed through many years of facing and solving problems with the five financial intelligences, to solve those problems.
how the poor handle money problems
"The poor see money problems only as problems. Many feel they are victims of money. Many feel they are the only ones with money problems. They think that if they had more money, their money problems would be over.
how the middle class handle money problems
Do you see yourself in this situation?
While the poor are the victims of money, the middle class are prisoners of money. In describing the middle class, rich dad said, "The middle class solve their money problems different. Instead of solving the money problem, they think they can outsmart their money problems.
who gets what? Obama's stimulus infrastructure spending by state
Click on any state for details on likely spending projects. The funds listed are the state's total allotment for roads and bridges. The projects are those each state will likely recommend for funding to the U.S. Transportation Dept., which has the final say. There is additional federal money for mass transit, Amtrak and water projects. The job creation numbers are rough estimates.






good content
He was to say "what a load of crap!" just for the sake of irony, but I'll refrain
great job i love the picture