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  • The promotion process doesn't necessarily select the best qualified for actually doing the job.

  • Age is just a number as long as the person has a skill to do the job. Yes change its always uncomfortable but if a person can deliver its a win for a... company  more

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Interview Trick: This simple interview trick helped him land 3 job offers - here's what he did - The Times of India


Job hunting can really mess with your head - especially when you're months in with no luck. One man recently shared how he was stuck in that exact loop, going from interview to interview for nearly eight months with nothing to show for it. Then he made one small mental switch - and suddenly, things started to click.He wrote about his experience on Reddit, and it clearly struck a nerve. His post... has since taken off, with people chiming in about confidence, desperation, and how much your mindset actually shows during interviews.According to him, he stopped walking into interviews like he needed the job. Instead, he started acting like he already had another offer lined up - even when he didn't. It wasn't about lying to recruiters, but more about tricking himself into feeling less desperate."I don't actually have another offer most of the time," he admitted. But just thinking that way made a huge difference.Once that pressure was gone, his whole vibe shifted. He wasn't overthinking every answer or trying too hard to impress. He stopped rambling, stopped apologising for every small pause, and didn't panic if he messed up a response. Basically, he started showing up as himself instead of a nervous version trying to "perform." Another big change? He flipped the script. Instead of seeing interviews as a one-way test, he started treating them like a two-way conversation. He began asking better questions -- not just to look smart, but because he genuinely wanted to know if the company was right for him.In the next four months, he landed three job offers - after getting nowhere for most of the year. Of course, he admits timing and luck probably helped, but he's convinced his new mindset played a big role. One interviewer even told him he came across as "grounded," which he took as a sign that he no longer seemed desperate.The most ironic part? He pointed out that the kind of confidence that helps you get hired is usually something people only feel after they already have options. So sometimes, you just have to fake it till you get there.A lot of people online related hard to this. Many said the difference in mindset is exactly why job hunting feels easier when you're already employed - you walk in knowing you can say no, and that changes everything. Others admitted they used to over-explain, fill every awkward silence, and end up sounding less clear because they were trying too hard.The takeaway is pretty simple: skills matter, sure - but how you carry yourself can quietly make or break the whole interaction. more
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  • Focus on working and doing your job. Work is a place to do work and stay focus. Perhaps this will help you think more positive about your fellow... employees. People sometimes focus on the wrong thing at work and everybody’s opinion is their opinion.  more

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  • This is amazing. Professional advice

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Man Says One Interview Trick Helped Him Land Multiple Job Offers: 'Kind Of Embarrassing To Admit'


A man shared how a simple change in mindset during job interviews helped him stay calm, ask better questions and eventually receive multiple offers after months.

A man who struggled for months to get hired says one small change in his interview mindset completely changed the way recruiters responded to him. His post on Reddit has now sparked a wider discussion about confidence, desperation and... how people present themselves during job interviews.

The man shared that for nearly eight months, he was unable to make progress despite attending interviews. Things only started changing after he stopped treating interviews like one-sided opportunities and began seeing them as conversations where he also had a choice.

He Changed The Way He Approached Interviews

In a post shared on Reddit, the man explained that he started pretending he already had another job offer before every interview. He admitted that this was not actually true most of the time, but it helped him change his attitude. "I don't actually have another offer most of the time," he wrote.

According to him, this mental shift helped him feel less nervous and more confident while speaking to recruiters. Instead of trying too hard to impress interviewers, he began focusing on whether the company itself was a good fit for him.

He explained that this change affected the way he answered questions as well. "I stopped over-explaining answers, stopped apologising for pauses, stopped trying to save every question I fumbled," he said.

The man added that he started asking more thoughtful questions during interviews because he was genuinely trying to understand the company instead of simply trying to get selected.

The New Mindset Brought Results

Over the next four months, the man said he received three job offers after struggling for a long time before that. While he admitted that timing and luck may also have played a role, he felt the mindset shift made a real difference.

One interviewer even told him he seemed "very grounded," which he believed meant he no longer came across as desperate during conversations.

"The irony is the attitude that actually gets you hired is the one you can only fake until you have enough offers to feel it naturally," he added.

Users Relate To The Experience

The post received strong reactions from other users, many of whom agreed that confidence can completely change interview performance. A user commented, "Been doing that since my 2nd job. This is the way."

Another wrote, "This is also why you job search WHILE you have a job. Your mindset is completely different, knowing you can walk away and be okay. The desperation factor doesn't come into play and people can usually tell."

A person shared, "This is actually so true - when you walk in like you need the job, you try to control EVERYTHING. I used to overexplain, fill every silence, and end up sounding less clear, which would sometimes confuse the interviewer too lol." Another user added, "Attitude can be everything. It can affect your body language subconsciously."
 
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  • J M

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    When you take the supplies away from the workplace that is illegal. On another note, it sounds like you should start looking for a new place of... employment before the supply police start giving out tickets. Best of luck -  more

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  • What can we do to stop these states from harming are communities from these costs?

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I'm a former Amazon recruiter. Here's my '5 Ps' rule for job seekers.


This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Lindsay Mustain, a former Amazon recruiter in her 40s who lives in Washington. It has been edited for length and clarity.

Before I began my business about intentional career design, I was a recruiter. My most recent role was at Amazon, where I led talent acquisition and employer branding strategies.

Over my career, I've hired thousands of... people and reviewed countless résumés.

At Talent Paradigm, which I started in 2017, my small team works with thousands of clients on generating salary increases for them, based on what I call the "theory of hireability."

Think about bottled water. You can get water from your sink for basically free; meanwhile, people are willing to pay $9 for a bottle of water at an airport. Fundamentally, they're the same thing -- H2O -- but they have completely different perceived values.

The same thing happens when job searching.

The forces that determine what the market would pay for a product are the way people would pay for your candidacy. Those are rooted in the four Ps of marketing: product, promotion, place, and price.

In my theory of hireability, there's a fifth principle that changes everything: perception. I believe the job market isn't logical; it's psychological, and the only thing you need to change is your perceived value.

Together, these form what I call the five Ps of career ascension.

When I was recruiting, I'd sit with a hiring manager before a job was posted and ask what they wanted: Who are they looking for? What kind of experience? If a candidate looked like the answer to that specific problem, they were at an advantage.

Many people market themselves with facts like, "I have 10 years of experience in operations." What actually works is marketing the benefit -- what you actually can do for the company.

For example, if you're shopping for a new vitamin C serum, you're not going to buy it based on how much vitamin C it has; you'll buy the one that says it reduces dark spots in two weeks.

Your résumé is basically the same thing. The commodity candidate only markets their features -- tasks, duties, years, titles -- while the candidate of choice markets the transformation: What did they change? What impact did they make? It's powerful to include a percentage, a dollar sign, and numbers. Make it clear what the company gained because you were in the room.

In marketing, promotion is what you do to get people to know about and purchase the product. For job candidates, the goal is for employers to want to meet with you.

A lot of times, people's go-to move for promotion is the open-to-work banner on LinkedIn. However, from my observations, I don't think it actually helps -- and could actually hurt.

Strategic visibility is real promotion. Building your brand on LinkedIn attracts people into your world and creates referred opportunities. It can be a virtuous cycle -- you share content and thought leadership, engage with others, and create visibility in your field.

When you intentionally shape that narrative, a hiring manager feels like they already know you.

You can buy a product in-store or online; for candidates, place is where employers find you.

I asked hundreds of hiring managers what they'd think if someone applied 17 times over 12 years. The overwhelming response was that there must be something wrong with the applicant -- if they were any good, the company would've hired them already.

Shift yourself from being active to being perceived as passive, so you don't come across as trying too hard. The goal is to be found, or to be referred.

With active applicants, it's very apparent they're job searching, whether it's the open-to-work banner on their profile or a post about how they were laid off from their last job and asking if anyone could help. They're spamming DMs with their résumé and asking about job openings.

Passive job seekers are typically those who are employed, who recruiters source, or who are referred by others. The underlying belief is that people who are good at their jobs are usually too busy to look for other jobs.

As a recruiting leader, I aimed for at least 40% of my hires to come through employee referrals, because that's where I consistently saw the highest quality and best hires.

There are different ways to price products. There's commodity pricing, like the rollback price at Walmart. In the job market, this is the job board pool of commodity candidates, and the salary floor wins.

Then, there's asset pricing, which is paid according to the value, such as a limited release of Air Jordans. Last year, I was at the mall, and the line for the sneaker store was out the door. The competition is what's driving up the price; the line actually increased the perceived value.

When your product is premium, has a strong brand, and is not widely available, you stop negotiating for a number; instead, you become an asset that everyone wants to have.

You don't have to take the minimum because there's somebody willing to pay more right behind that first person.

Focusing on perception is the most important thing that you can do when you're job searching.

I've talked about perception in each of the other four Ps. It isn't its own individual thing; it's the multiplier -- the difference between being the commodity candidate and the candidate of choice.

It's why, when I was at Amazon, one of the first questions I asked candidates was, "Are you interviewing anywhere else?" I wanted to know if they were top talent, and if so, I could fast-track the process. The only time I could do so was if they had other options, because we didn't want to lose them.

It can be the exact same candidate, exact same talent. It's not experience. It's not qualifications. The only thing that's really changing is what everyone around them now believes to be true -- perception.
 
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The job market is brutal but some parents found a cheat code


Experts recommend internships, networking skills, and financial boundaries over costly coaching services.

You know the old script.

Work hard in school, get into a decent college, keep your grades up, then walk into a respectable first job that lets you move out, pay your bills, and start building a life.

That story has not matched reality for a lot of recent graduates.

Global entry-level job... postings have dropped by twenty-nine percentage points since January 2024, according to Randstad data published by the World Economic Forum. Youth unemployment in the United States sits around 10.8%, more than double the overall rate of about 4.3%, based on Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers compiled by High5.

Parents feel that pressure.

Nearly two-thirds of parents with Gen Z kids ages eighteen to twenty-eight are still providing financial support, and more than half say it is straining their own finances, according to the 2026 Wells Fargo Money Study covered by TheStreet.

Now, in a twist that feels very 2026, some of those parents are not just covering rent. They are paying thousands, and sometimes tens of thousands, for private "early-career" coaching that promises to crack the brutal entry-level job market for their kids.

That is the cheat code.

Job market reality for new grads

The uncomfortable truth is that new grads are running into a tougher hiring wall than older workers.

The proportion of jobless Americans who are new entrants, including recent college graduates, climbed to 13.4% in mid‑2025, the highest level since 1988, according to the Richmond Fed data highlighted by Axios.

At the same time, global entry-level roles have fallen sharply, even as employers complain about "talent shortages," Randstad's analysis of 126 million job postings cited by World Economic Forum found.

This is not just a temporary slowdown.

U.S. unemployment is expected to peak around 4.5% in early 2026, with hiring staying slow and the quits rate below pre‑pandemic levels, a sign that workers do not feel confident about finding better jobs, according to J.P. Morgan.

BlackRock chief executive Larry Fink told attendees at the firm's 2026 Infrastructure Summit that he is "worried that when this year's college graduates enter the workforce, we could see the highest unemployment rate among them in years," even without a recession, according to TheStreet's coverage of his remarks.

When I look across that data as a personal finance reporter, what jumps out is not just a bad year for hiring. It is a slow structural shift that makes early career missteps more expensive, and more visible, than they were for prior generations.

More Personal Finance:

Parents turn to career coaching

Against that backdrop, a new booming business has emerged.

Parents of college students are paying thousands of dollars, and sometimes more than $50,000, for early‑career coaching that starts as early as freshman year, focused on internships, networking, and landing that first job, according to Bloomberg.

Coaches like Beth Hendler‑Grunt, who runs New Jersey-based firm Next Great Step, now work with students in small groups and one‑on‑one, helping them polish résumés, practice interviews, and map out internship strategies.

Packages at firms like Next Great Step typically range from about $4,200 for group programs to as high as $15,000 for more intensive support, with some families spending upward of $50,000 once travel and additional services are included, according to Fortune's coverage.

Those programs do not just target traditional soft skills.

In my analysis, this is the part that feels most like a "cheat code." The value is not only in the coaching itself, it is in compressing a messy, months‑long trial-and-error phase into a highly structured playbook that wealthier families can just buy.

What high-priced coaching really buys

So what do parents actually get for that money, beyond a lighter savings account.

First, they buy time and structure.

A six‑month program with Next Great Step is designed to help students secure a "coveted" summer internship and move closer to their target roles, essentially turning sophomore and junior summers into career assets instead of afterthoughts, according to Yahoo Finance.

Second, they buy a professionalized approach to a process many students would otherwise run on vibes and random job boards.

67% of Gen Z workers regularly receive career advice from parents, and 44% say their parents helped write or edit their résumé, according to a Zety report on "career co‑piloting." That support often spills into awkward territory, with 21% admitting their parents contacted a potential employer for them, according to the same survey.

High-end coaches offer a way to transfer some of that energy to a neutral third party who knows how hiring actually works.

But it is also true that these services sit on top of a stressful foundation, as shown by some recent data.

Early career stress by the numbers

* Global entry-level job postings have fallen by 29 percentage points since January 2024.

* Youth unemployment in the U.S. was about 10.8% in 2025, compared with 4.3% overall.

* The share of unemployed Americans who are new entrants to the labor force reached 13.4%, the highest level since 1988.

* Sixty‑four percent of parents with Gen Z kids ages eighteen to twenty‑eight still provide financial support, and 56% say it strains their finances.

When I line those numbers up against coaching price lists, the emotional logic makes sense.

If your kid is graduating into a market with fewer entry-level jobs, higher youth unemployment, and rising competition, a $5,000 or $10,000 package can feel like "insurance."

The question, especially for personal finance readers, is whether it is good insurance.

Smarter ways parents can support their kids

There are real benefits to structured coaching, but you do not need a five‑figure contract to give your kid an edge.

Many colleges already offer résumé reviews, mock interviews, and basic job-search training through their career services offices, which Bloomberg notes are often underused compared with private coaches.

Universum's 2026 Talent Outlook describes the job market as "stabilizing, but not necessarily accelerating," and points out that employers want new grads who can show concrete value, not just degrees, according to comments from executive Kortney Kutsop cited by Yahoo Finance.

That means parents can do three lower‑cost things that still move the needle.

First, push for real work experience.

Internships, campus jobs tied to relevant skills, and project-based freelance work matter more in a world where entry-level roles are scarce and applicant tracking systems filter ruthlessly.

Second, help your kid build basic networking habits instead of doing the networking for them.

Zety's survey shows that parents often contact employers or even complete test assignments, which may help in the short term but leaves young adults underprepared to advocate for themselves once they are hired.

Third, set clear financial boundaries.

45% percent of parents with adult children provide financial help, with an average of $1,442 per month, often for essentials like groceries, rent, and cell phone bills, according to research from Savings.com. That generosity can be life‑changing, but it can also quietly derail parents' own retirement plans if there is no end point.

If you are already covering rent, groceries, or health insurance, a five‑figure coaching package could be the difference between staying on track for retirement and working several extra years.
 
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How Mediators Can Use LinkedIn to Build Visibility, Relationships and More Business


A lot of mediators are underutilizing LinkedIn, even though it can be an incredibly effective tool for visibility, relationship building and business development.

Some have profiles that haven't been updated in years. Others occasionally share a speaking engagement or article, but there's no real consistency or visibility strategy behind it. And many still assume LinkedIn is mainly for job... seekers or people actively trying to sell services.

Meanwhile, lawyers, business professionals and in-house counsel are researching people online constantly. They're looking at LinkedIn profiles, articles, speaking engagements, recommendations, activity, comments and overall visibility. And when they're deciding who to hire as a mediator, familiarity matters more than many people realize.

People often choose mediators they know, have heard speak, have seen around the industry or feel some level of connection to professionally. LinkedIn gives mediators a way to build that familiarity consistently over time instead of relying entirely on referrals, conferences and existing relationships.

That doesn't mean mediators need to become influencers or spend hours posting every day. In fact, some of the strongest LinkedIn strategies for mediators are relatively simple and relationship-driven. The key is understanding how to use LinkedIn as a visibility and relationship-building tool rather than just a place to occasionally post updates.

Link to Your LinkedIn Profile Matters More Than You Think Your LinkedIn Profile Matters More Than You Think

One of the biggest mistakes I see mediators make is treating their LinkedIn profile like an online résumé instead of a positioning tool.

Your profile is often one of the first things someone looks at after hearing your name. That means it should immediately communicate your background, the types of matters you handle, your experience, your approach, your credibility and what differentiates you.

A lot of mediator profiles are surprisingly vague. They list past roles and credentials but don't really explain who they are, what they focus on or why someone would want to work with them.

Your headline alone is valuable real estate. Instead of simply saying "Mediator at XYZ," you can use that space to communicate much more clearly what you do and the types of matters you handle.

Your About section matters significantly too. This is where people should quickly understand your experience, areas of focus, mediation philosophy, credibility and communication style.

And honestly, personality matters more than many mediators realize. Parties and lawyers are often evaluating whether someone feels approachable, thoughtful, credible and practical. A profile that sounds stiff, overly formal or generic misses an opportunity to create connection.

Recommendations are another area many mediators underutilize. Strong recommendations from lawyers, former judges, clients or other professionals reinforce credibility in a very meaningful way.

Link to Visibility Builds Familiarity on LinkedIn Visibility Builds Familiarity on LinkedIn

One thing I think many mediators underestimate is how much visibility influences professional decision making. Lawyers are busy. In-house counsel are busy. People are constantly being introduced to new mediators, arbitrators and professionals. The mediators who stay visible tend to stay top of mind.

That visibility can come from posting thoughtful commentary, sharing speaking engagements, discussing trends in litigation or dispute resolution, commenting on legal developments, highlighting articles or podcasts, engaging with lawyers and law firms and participating in industry conversations.

Visibility compounds over time. Someone may not need a mediator today, but six months later they might remember seeing your content consistently and feeling familiar with your perspective and expertise.

I hear versions of this all the time from professionals:

* "I see your posts everywhere."

* "I feel like I already know you."

* "I've been following your content for a while."

That's how visibility gradually turns into opportunities.

Link to What Mediators Can Actually Post About on LinkedIn What Mediators Can Actually Post About on LinkedIn

This is usually the first question people ask: "What should I post?" The good news is that mediators already have far more content opportunities than they realize. For example, mediators can post about:

* trends they're seeing in disputes

* communication issues that derail negotiations

* lessons from years of practice

* litigation trends

* negotiation insights

* conference takeaways

* procedural developments

* professionalism

* emotional intelligence

* preparation mistakes lawyers make

* effective advocacy in mediation

A lot of mediators think they need groundbreaking content ideas, but honestly, thoughtful observations based on real experience often perform best.

For example, a mediator could share common mistakes that make settlement harder, what clients wish lawyers understood better during mediation, why preparation matters, how tone influences negotiations or communication habits that help move difficult conversations forward.

Those are the kinds of insights lawyers actually find useful.

And importantly, LinkedIn content doesn't need to sound overly polished or academic to be effective. Some of the strongest posts are conversational, practical and grounded in actual experience.

Link to Thought Leadership Works Well for Mediators Thought Leadership Works Well for Mediators

Mediators are actually in a very strong position to create meaningful thought leadership content because they sit at the intersection of litigation, negotiation, communication, psychology, business relationships and problem-solving.

That creates opportunities for content that goes beyond simply discussing legal developments. For example, mediators can write about:

* managing difficult conversations

* handling conflict professionally

* negotiation dynamics

* client expectations

* communication under pressure

* leadership during disputes

* emotional intelligence in litigation

* practical lessons from years of negotiations

This type of content often resonates strongly because it feels practical and experience-driven. People increasingly want perspective more than generic information. That's one reason mediators can stand out so effectively on LinkedIn when they share thoughtful observations consistently over time.

Link to LinkedIn Is Also a Relationship-Building Tool LinkedIn Is Also a Relationship-Building Tool

One of the biggest mistakes professionals make on LinkedIn is treating it only as a publishing platform. LinkedIn is also one of the best relationship-building tools available if you use it intentionally.

Your notifications tab alone can create significant networking opportunities. You can see who changed jobs, who got promoted, who spoke at an event, who wrote an article, who won an award, who's actively posting again and who's engaging in conversations relevant to your practice.

That creates natural opportunities to reconnect with people without awkward outreach.

A simple message saying:

* "Congratulations on the new role."

* "I saw your article and really enjoyed it."

* "I realized it's been too long since we caught up."

* "I can't believe you've been at your company for X years!"

Those small interactions matter. Many mediators rely heavily on conferences and in-person networking, which are still incredibly important, but LinkedIn allows relationship-building to continue between those moments. That consistency helps people stay connected to you professionally over time.

Link to Commenting on LinkedIn Is Extremely Underrated Commenting on LinkedIn Is Extremely Underrated

One of the easiest ways for mediators to increase visibility on LinkedIn is by commenting thoughtfully on other people's content.

And honestly, this is something very few professionals do well. A thoughtful comment on a lawyer's article, a litigation post, an industry development, a conference takeaway or a court decision discussion can create visibility with a highly relevant audience very quickly.

It also keeps your name consistently appearing in conversations tied to your area of expertise. The key is writing comments that add actual value or perspective instead of generic responses like:

* "Great post."

* "Interesting."

* "Thanks for sharing."

Strong comments often lead to profile views, new connections, conversations, referrals and invitations to speak or collaborate. And unlike creating original content, commenting usually takes very little time.

Link to Speaking Engagements and Articles Should Be Repurposed Speaking Engagements and Articles Should Be Repurposed

Another huge missed opportunity is that many mediators create valuable content once and then never use it again. Conference presentations, CLE panels, webinars, podcasts, articles, interviews and legal commentary can all become LinkedIn content.

One conference panel can easily generate several LinkedIn posts, short observations, article ideas, follow-up discussions and networking opportunities. A webinar can become multiple content posts, a LinkedIn article or short discussion points. A lot of professionals dramatically underestimate how much value already exists inside the work they're doing every day.

Link to Consistency Matters More Than Frequency Consistency Matters More Than Frequency

One thing I always tell professionals is that consistency matters much more than posting constantly. Many mediators disappear from LinkedIn for six months and then suddenly post heavily for one week after a conference or article publication. That usually doesn't build sustained visibility.

Meanwhile, someone posting once a week, writing a few thoughtful comments, sharing occasional articles and staying engaged periodically often builds much stronger visibility over time. Also, LinkedIn visibility compounds gradually. People may not publicly engage with every post, but they're paying attention quietly in the background.

Over time, that visibility can lead to:

* stronger familiarity

* referrals

* speaking invitations

* article opportunities

* professional relationships

* increased credibility

* more mediation opportunities

A lot of those opportunities develop slowly and indirectly, which is why consistency matters so much.

Link to Your Online Presence Increasingly Shapes Professional Reputation Your Online Presence Increasingly Shapes Professional Reputation

Another reason LinkedIn matters more now is because it increasingly shapes professional reputation beyond the platform itself. Search engines pull heavily from LinkedIn. AI search tools increasingly surface LinkedIn profiles, articles, interviews, posts, speaking engagements and broader visibility signals.

That means your LinkedIn presence increasingly influences how people perceive your expertise and credibility online. For mediators, that matters because trust and reputation are such significant parts of the decision-making process. A strong LinkedIn presence reinforces credibility, visibility, familiarity, professionalism and industry positioning. And honestly, when professionals are absent online entirely, that absence becomes noticeable too.

Link to Your Homework Your Homework

If you're a mediator and have been largely ignoring LinkedIn, spend the next month becoming more intentional about visibility and relationship-building on the platform. Start by:

* updating your profile

* refining your headline and About section

* reconnecting with past contacts

* commenting thoughtfully on industry conversations

* sharing one observation or insight each week

* paying attention to what lawyers and clients are discussing online

LinkedIn is no longer just a place to keep an online profile. For mediators, it has become one of the most effective ways to stay visible, reinforce credibility and remain connected to the lawyers, clients and referral sources who influence opportunities. The mediators who consistently show up, share thoughtful perspective and stay engaged professionally are often the ones people remember when the right matter comes along.

Stay in Touch! Connect with me on LinkedIn, Threads, YouTube, Instagram, sign up for my email list and follow my blog. Obtain a copy of my LinkedIn Secrets guide.
 
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Pair behind BBC's biggest ever on-air blunder share truth about what happened


EXCLUSIVE: Congolese finance graduate Guy Goma was visiting the BBC's London HQ for a job interview when he was accidentally put live on air. Here's how it unfolded

Twenty years ago this week, a legend was born. It rose from the ashes of a cock-up so all-encompassing, that it tipped the balance - in the process becoming a moment of shining TV triumph.

Who could forget the shocked face of... Congolese finance graduate Guy Goma, who was visiting the BBC's London offices for a job interview, when he realised that he was live on News 24?

Now he's written a book with Elliott Gotkine, the producer who put him on air by mistake. Here the pair tell us all about the broadcast that changed both of their lives...

If you ever think you're having a tough day, take a moment to consider Guy Goma. On Monday, May 8, 2006, he was already staring down the barrel of a job interview in his second language.

A French speaker, from Brazzaville in the Republic of the Congo, he was waiting in reception at BBC Television Centre, in west London, to discuss a role in IT support. It must have been nerve-racking - even before Elliott Gotkine showed up. What happened next would go down in history.

"That morning was a big shock for me, to be honest," Guy recalls. "It was stressful. I prepared myself for the job interview, but there was no expectation to go on live TV. But like I always say, 'thank God for everything.'"

Elliott, a frazzled young producer on News 24, was searching for a guest who was due on air within minutes. It was the late technology expert Guy Kewney, who was giving his verdict on a court case involving Apple Computer Inc.

Looking up his target online, Elliott saw a man with "pale skin, a red beard, a wry smile." But then a receptionist pointed him in Guy Goma's direction.

"I went over to Guy and I said 'Guy Kewney?'" Elliott, now 50, explains. "'Yes,' he says. 'Come with me, we're on air in five minutes.' I haven't got time to hang around and chat, so we run through the corridor, up the stairs, into the newsroom. I hand him to the floor manager."

New to the broadcast world and keen to impress his potential employers, Guy tried his best to roll with it all. Still, he wasn't expecting the makeup artist trying to powder his face. "I told her 'no, I don't need that'", he says.

He was ushered to a stool and within seconds, presenter Karen Bowerman was sitting in front of him. Guy, 58, says: "I knew her, because I had been watching the news. She sat and so many screens just went on. I saw my face.

"I said to myself 'God, what's going on here? I'm lost'. She sat talking. I said 'I don't know this subject, I'm lost, completely lost to be honest'. I said 'God help me'."

It sounds like the kind of anxiety dream that might follow a full week of scrolling through TikTok. But it also made Guy a hero. Because rather than screaming and running away, as any mere mortal might have done, he decided not to cause a scene.

He explains: "As soon as I realised 'it's not me,' I just remembered something my mother was always telling me. 'If you notice something, try to solve the issue.' That came straight away on me.

"I think at the beginning, the journalist didn't realise. But then she noticed my English was not fluent and tried to cut it short."

His next few moments of polite word salad were among the finest seen on television, as he did his best to answer Karen's questions. Then he went back to reception, had his interview and didn't get the job.

Elliott, meanwhile, was left to face the music. He says: "I sent an email to my entire department saying 'look, this guy could barely speak English, let alone form a cogent argument on the court case. It's not good enough.'

"The penny hadn't dropped yet. Then a producer approaches our desk and says 'have you got a Guy Kewney as a guest?' 'Yeeees?' 'He's waiting in stage door reception - apparently he's been waiting there quite a while.'"

At that point, Elliott finally twigged. He rushed to meet Kewney, who was understandably "not very happy," and a replacement segment was quickly pre-recorded. But even then, the nightmare wasn't over.

He explains: "When I go off shift, I leave a note to the person replacing me saying 'whatever you do, run this interview.' And they don't. In fact, they interview a friend of his instead."

For the next few days, it seemed like the omnishambles may have slipped by unnoticed. But the first stories showed up in the newspapers that Saturday, making Guy an immediate star.

Elliott left the BBC soon afterwards, going on to work for companies like CNN and Bloomberg TV. And until two years ago, he had no contact with Guy, who now lives a quiet life in Hackney, east London, and works with people with learning disabilities.

The pair have reconnected over their book, which tells the story of their shared Worst Monday Ever in even more agonising detail, and the impact it had on their lives. And seeing them together, it's clear they share a rather touching bond.
 
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  • You're simply operating on fear, job security is simply an illusion, either option works.

    -1
  • Which job is more satisfying for you ? follow that job. money can be made through various other ways also. A stable job is needed at first and think... about some online business which can be done at any time online.. more

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Using AI in the Hiring Process: Legal Risks for Employers


Artificial intelligence is now embedded across the employment lifecycle, from recruiting and hiring to performance management, compensation and workforce planning. While these tools can drive efficiency and data‑driven decision‑making, they also can create legal risk, if used without appropriate safeguards.

Employers commonly use AI to draft job descriptions, target job ads, source candidates and... screen or rank résumés based on keywords, experience or inferred skills through the following types of tools:

* Agentic Sourcing: AI agents now act as "teammates" that continuously scan professional networks (like LinkedIn) and market analytics to build talent pools before a role is even open.

* Semantic Screening: Moving beyond simple keywords, AI now uses skills-based matching to analyze the context of a candidate's experience to determine if their actual skills match the role, rather than just looking for specific job titles on a resume.

* Video & Multimodal Analysis: AI-enhanced interview platforms analyze video interviews not just for what is said, but for communication style and technical competency, providing a summary for human recruiters to review.

* Automated Scheduling & Engagement: Chatbots handle 24/7 candidate queries and interview scheduling, which has reportedly cut "time-to-fill" metrics by 40-50% in high-volume sectors like retail and healthcare.

Risks Associated with AI Tools Used in the Hiring Process

These types of screening tools may disproportionately exclude candidates based on protected characteristics, even if the criteria appear neutral on their face. For example, résumé filters that correlate years of experience, graduation dates or career gaps with lower scores can disadvantage older applicants. Similarly, automated screening may screen out individuals with disabilities if tools rely on speed, communication style or non‑essential job criteria. Additionally, when it comes to applicants who might need an accommodation, chatbot interfaces may not offer alternative methods for applicants with disabilities. When this happens, the employer has failed to engage in the interactive process, as required by the ADA and similar state disability discrimination laws.

As an employer, it is important to treat every AI tool used in the hiring process as if it were a human recruiter whose decisions must be validated, explainable and defensible. To accomplish this, employers who rely on AI to streamline their recruiting process should implement the following:

1. Disclose AI use in hiring materials and candidate communications and obtain consent.

2. Maintain a central AI recruiting and hiring inventory, which identifies:

3. Require AI vendors to provide validation studies linking outputs to job-related criteria. Vendors must also be able to provide documentation of training data sources and bias-mitigation methods. Employers should include these requirements in AI vendor contracts. Employers should also be prepared to independently test the tools to determine whether they are improperly excluding certain types of candidates.

4. Conduct periodic adverse-impact analyses to monitor selection rates, drop-off points in agentic sourcing funnels and auto rejections triggered before human review.

5. Consider prohibiting fully automated rejection without human review or set clear processes for when humans must override AI decisions and who has authority to deviate from AI recommendations.

6. Provide non-AI alternatives to video interviews and ensure scheduling bots can accommodate disability-related timing needs and religious observances.

New and Emerging Regulations on the Use of AI in the Hiring Process

Although there is no comprehensive federal law governing the use of AI in the hiring process, AI tools will be treated as part of the employment decision and subject to existing federal laws such as Title VII, ADA and the ADEA. Under these laws, employers remain liable for discriminatory outcomes produced by AI, even when the tools are created and supplied by a vendor. In other words, "the AI algorithm did it" is not a defense.

And, States and local governments are beginning to regulate the use of AI in the hiring process. For example:

* New York City has enacted a law that applies to Automated Employment Decision Tools that substantially assist or replace hiring decisions. The NYC law applies to resume screening, ranking, video analysis and other tools and requires the employer to conduct an annual independent bias audit and a public posting of the audit summary. The law also requires at least 10 business days' notice to candidates that AI will be used and the notice must include instructions for requesting an alternative selection process or reasonable accommodation. The law provides for a $500 penalty for the first violation and for any additional violations occurring on the same day as the first. The penalties can increase to up to $1,500 for each subsequent violation.

* Illinois has two overlapping AI hiring laws. Effective January 1, 2026 the Illinois Human Rights Act was amended to expressly regulate employer use of AI in employment decisions. The amendments make it a civil rights violation for an employer to use AI in recruitment, hiring, promotion, termination or other employment‑related decisions in a manner that results in discrimination, including disparate impact, on the basis of any protected class (such as race, sex, age, disability, religion or national origin). Critically, the statute explicitly prohibits employers from using ZIP codes as a proxy for a protected class when deploying AI tools. Additionally, under the Artificial Intelligence Video Interview Act, effective since 2020, Employers using AI to evaluate video interviews for Illinois‑based positions must disclose the use of AI, explain how it works and what characteristics it evaluates, obtain advance applicant consent, restrict sharing of interview videos and delete videos upon request. Where employers rely solely on AI video analysis to select candidates for in‑person interviews, they must also collect and report demographic data to assess potential bias. Illinois employers using AI‑driven hiring tools must also consider the Illinois Biometric Information Privacy Act (BIPA), which strictly regulates the collection, use, storage and disclosure of biometric identifiers such as facial geometry, voiceprints, or fingerprints, requires advance written notice and informed written consent, mandates retention and destruction policies and provides a private right of action with statutory damages

* Colorado: The Colorado Artificial Intelligence Act (CAIA), which, as proposed, would be the most comprehensive U.S. law on the subject, applies to "high-risk AI systems" that make or substantially influence consequential decisions, including hiring. The law was enacted in 2024 and is scheduled to take effect on June 30, 2026 but is likely to be further amended before then. Under the proposed law, employers would be required to: exercise reasonable care to prevent algorithmic discrimination, maintain AI risk-management policies, conduct impact assessments, provide notice when AI meaningfully influences decisions and offer appeal and human review. It is important to note that employers with fewer than 50 full-time employees that do not train on their own data are exempt from the many requirements under the law.

* California: The California Civil Rights Council's Fair Employment and Housing Act regulations on AI, which became effective on October 1, 2025, clarify that existing California antidiscrimination law fully applies when employers use AI, algorithms or other automated decision systems (ADS) in employment decisions. The regulations broadly define covered tools to include any computational process that makes or assists decisions about hiring, promotion, training or other employment benefits, and they require employers to ensure such tools do not discriminate based on protected characteristics. Employers must treat AI tools the same as human decision‑makers, avoid unlawful medical or pre‑employment inquiries, provide reasonable accommodations and not rely solely on automated systems where FEHA requires individualized assessments. Employers remain responsible for outcomes even when using third‑party vendors and must retain AI‑related records for at least four years, with the regulations encouraging bias testing and documentation to demonstrate compliance.

Takeaways for Employers

AI can streamline hiring but it can also magnify legal exposure if it is used without appropriate safeguards. Employers should therefore treat AI as a regulated decision infrastructure, not experimental HR technology. It therefore must be validated and monitored. The company must be able to explain how and why it is used. And, finally, AI tools used in the hiring process must always be subject to human intervention and judgment. The steps reflect not only emerging best practices but also the direction of state and local regulation, which focuses on transparency, validation, bias monitoring, human oversight and documented accountability for AI-assisted hiring decisions. As jurisdictions continue to regulate AI in employment, employers that embed these safeguards now will be best positioned to mitigate legal risk, demonstrate compliance across jurisdictions and adapt as AI specific hiring laws continue to expand.
 
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The pipeline from university radical to would-be assassin


Those wondering where the seemingly endless supply of violent leftists comes from need look no farther than our public universities.

Last weekend delivered yet another grim headline: political violence, an attempted presidential assassination, once again treated as a mystery by the left.

The alleged perpetrator, we are told, was not some fringe drifter living off the grid, but an award-winning... teacher. This is a detail that would have seemed ironic a generation ago, but now seems almost predictable.

Reports indicate that the individual had a record of professional accolades and community involvement, the sort of résumé typically invoked to prove the impact of leftist ideologies.

If one wishes to understand what is happening to our country, there is no need to search for obscure explanations.

Alongside that résumé, there are early indications of ideological commitments and public expressions that fit comfortably within the increasingly militant strain of contemporary progressive activism and most university classrooms.

After such events, the public conversation follows a well-worn script. We are told this is an isolated incident. We are urged not to "politicize." And yet, the same voices that warn against generalization in this context have no hesitation attributing sweeping moral guilt to entire categories when it suits the prevailing orthodoxy.

One is tempted to ask: How often must this pattern repeat before we permit ourselves the unfashionable act of noticing it?

It's as if there are some mysterious places we send young adults to be indoctrinated to hate their country, hate their bodies, and hate God. The only thing worse is if we are footing the bill for tuition.

So let us ask, with due sobriety: Are there institutions in our country where young minds are being shaped, not merely to critique, but to despise?

Now that you mention it, yes, there are.

The university as moral re-education center

As a Christian and conservative professor, I have spent years calling attention to what occurs inside our universities.

Earlier this month, my college at Arizona State University formally adopted a Native American land acknowledgment as official policy.

These statements are often presented as benign gestures of historical awareness, but their actual function is quite different: They are meant to problematize the legitimacy of American land ownership and to "expose" what are called "structures of oppression."

In practice, this language is not descriptive but rather accusatory. It does not invite inquiry; it prescribes judgment.

At the same time, faculty are encouraged to "decolonize" their curricula. That term, which sounds like a meaningless academic exercise, carries a very specific ideological payload. It teaches that Western civilization, particularly the United States, is not merely flawed but fundamentally illegitimate, built upon "white supremacy" and sustained by "structural violence."

And if a system is fundamentally illegitimate, what follows?

Historically speaking, one does not reform such systems. One dismantles them. And so you find ASU professors calling for armed resistance to the United States.

From theory to rhetoric to action

This is not some abstract speculation. It is a demonstrable reality.

Across the country, we have seen:

* Professors at American institutions openly defending or rationalizing political violence as a form of "resistance." If intersectionality calls you "oppressed," it's fine to be violent.

* University departments issuing statements framing America as inherently oppressive while praising movements aimed at its transformation.

* K-12 educators using classroom time to advance ideological positions that portray students' own nation, heritage, and even biological identity as sources of moral guilt.

Consider the broader pattern:

* At Harvard and Columbia, student groups and faculty responses to recent global conflicts have included rhetoric that many Americans would recognize as moral inversion, where acts of violence are reframed as justified expressions of resistance.

* Diversity, equity, and inclusion programs across major universities and corporations routinely instruct participants to view American history through a lens of oppression, often discouraging dissent as a form of harm.

* "Decolonization" and the anti-settler, anti-whiteness initiatives increasingly reject the very idea of objective truth, reason, and even science, casting them as instruments of power and white supremacy.

One begins to see the progression:

Step 1: Teach the youth that America and Christianity are evil.

Step 2: Teach that dismantling them is justice.

Step 3: Act surprised when someone takes the final step.

Step 4: Cash your state employee checks.

What of oversight?

All of this brings us to a question that is at once practical and unavoidable: Where are the Arizona Board of Regents and similar institutions in other states?

Is it merely a ceremonial body, an occasion for polite applause and catered wine and cheese receptions, or does it exist to provide actual oversight of the institutions entrusted to it?

Public universities are not private salons for ideological experimentation. They are taxpayer-supported institutions with a mandate to educate, not indoctrinate; to pursue truth, not enforce orthodoxy.

In Arizona, professors sign an employee contract agreeing not to undermine the Constitution. And yet, when faculty openly promote ideas that undermine the constitutional order they are employed under, the response is silence or, worse, complicity.

Meanwhile, those who raise concerns find themselves subject to scrutiny, marginalization, and, in some cases, professional penalty.

What are we paying for?

American families send their children to universities like ASU at considerable cost. It is easily tens of thousands of dollars per year and sometimes far more when all expenses are counted and taxes are factored in.

What do they expect in return? An education in truth. Training in reason. Preparation for responsible citizenship. Maybe even a little wisdom and fear of God.

But that is not what they get. Instead, their kids receive instruction in grievance. Classes about envy and training to hate your neighbor. Formation in ideological hostility. Encouragement to view their own country, their own traditions, even their own families as objects of suspicion or contempt.

And occasionally, as we are now forced to confront, something worse: calls for violent resistance by professors on the state tax dime.

A modest proposal

If one wishes to understand what is happening to our country, there is no need to search for obscure explanations.

It is happening, in large measure, in our universities. And it is paid for by taxes in the very country these professors hate so much. Parents don't know how bad it is and continue to send their children, paying tuition, into these ideological training camps.

And -- this is the uncomfortable part -- we don't stop paying for it. It's much worse than you think, and it is time to say enough is enough. No more state checks for those who hate America. They are free to start their own private university and teach their hatred there.

I have documented these trends extensively. I will continue to do so. If you would like to keep updated on what goes on within our universities, you can subscribe to my Substackas I report from within the belly of what some call the Devil's University.

If you find yourself in conversation with someone who asks, in genuine bewilderment, "What is happening to America?" you might offer a simple reply: "Look at the institutions shaping the next generation."
 
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Hands-On HR Internship Tasks


I'm looking for an HR-savvy intern who can jump straight into day-to-day work across three core areas: Recruitment & Onboarding * Screen incoming résumés in our ATS and flag high-potential profiles. * Conduct first-round video or phone interviews using our standard question set. * Coordinate new-hire paperwork, orientation schedules, and first-week check-ins. Employee Relations * Receive and log... minor employee grievances, prepare summary notes, and route them to the HR manager. * Plan and execute quarterly team-building events, from venue research to post-event feedback collection. * Assist with the annual performance-review cycle by distributing forms, tracking completion, and compiling data. Training & Development * Monitor completion of mandatory e-learning modules in the LMS. * Prepare slide decks or handouts for in-person sessions and collect participant feedback. * Keep our training calendar and attendance records up to date. Acceptance criteria 1. All candidate screenings, interview notes, and onboarding documents entered into the ATS within 24 hours. 2. Grievance logs and performance-review trackers kept current with zero missing entries. 3. Training records updated weekly; attendance accuracy ≥ 98%. You'll work closely with me via Slack and Microsoft Teams; we use Google Workspace, BambooHR, and Trello to keep everything organised. Clear communication, attention to detail, and a proactive attitude are essential -- if you spot a process we can improve, I want to hear about it. Ready to gain real, end-to-end HR experience? Let's talk. more

The pipeline from university radical to would-be assassin - Conservative Angle


Last weekend delivered yet another grim headline: political violence, an attempted presidential assassination, once again treated as a mystery by the left.

The alleged perpetrator, we are told, was not some fringe drifter living off the grid, but an award-winning teacher. This is a detail that would have seemed ironic a generation ago, but now seems almost predictable.

Reports indicate that the... individual had a record of professional accolades and community involvement, the sort of résumé typically invoked to prove the impact of leftist ideologies.

If one wishes to understand what is happening to our country, there is no need to search for obscure explanations.

Alongside that résumé, there are early indications of ideological commitments and public expressions that fit comfortably within the increasingly militant strain of contemporary progressive activism and most university classrooms.

After such events, the public conversation follows a well-worn script. We are told this is an isolated incident. We are urged not to "politicize." And yet, the same voices that warn against generalization in this context have no hesitation attributing sweeping moral guilt to entire categories when it suits the prevailing orthodoxy.

One is tempted to ask: How often must this pattern repeat before we permit ourselves the unfashionable act of noticing it?

It's as if there are some mysterious places we send young adults to be indoctrinated to hate their country, hate their bodies, and hate God. The only thing worse is if we are footing the bill for tuition.

So let us ask, with due sobriety: Are there institutions in our country where young minds are being shaped, not merely to critique, but to despise?

Now that you mention it, yes, there are.

As a Christian and conservative professor, I have spent years calling attention to what occurs inside our universities.

Earlier this month, my college at Arizona State University formally adopted a Native American land acknowledgment as official policy.

These statements are often presented as benign gestures of historical awareness, but their actual function is quite different: They are meant to problematize the legitimacy of American land ownership and to "expose" what are called "structures of oppression."

In practice, this language is not descriptive but rather accusatory. It does not invite inquiry; it prescribes judgment.

At the same time, faculty are encouraged to "decolonize" their curricula. That term, which sounds like a meaningless academic exercise, carries a very specific ideological payload. It teaches that Western civilization, particularly the United States, is not merely flawed but fundamentally illegitimate, built upon "white supremacy" and sustained by "structural violence."

And if a system is fundamentally illegitimate, what follows?

Historically speaking, one does not reform such systems. One dismantles them. And so you find ASU professors calling for armed resistance to the United States.

This is not some abstract speculation. It is a demonstrable reality.

Step 1: Teach the youth that America and Christianity are evil.

Step 2: Teach that dismantling them is justice.

Step 3: Act surprised when someone takes the final step.

Step 4: Cash your state employee checks.

All of this brings us to a question that is at once practical and unavoidable: Where are the Arizona Board of Regents and similar institutions in other states?

Is it merely a ceremonial body, an occasion for polite applause and catered wine and cheese receptions, or does it exist to provide actual oversight of the institutions entrusted to it?

Public universities are not private salons for ideological experimentation. They are taxpayer-supported institutions with a mandate to educate, not indoctrinate; to pursue truth, not enforce orthodoxy.

In Arizona, professors sign an employee contract agreeing not to undermine the Constitution. And yet, when faculty openly promote ideas that undermine the constitutional order they are employed under, the response is silence or, worse, complicity.

Meanwhile, those who raise concerns find themselves subject to scrutiny, marginalization, and, in some cases, professional penalty.

American families send their children to universities like ASU at considerable cost. It is easily tens of thousands of dollars per year and sometimes far more when all expenses are counted and taxes are factored in.

What do they expect in return? An education in truth. Training in reason. Preparation for responsible citizenship. Maybe even a little wisdom and fear of God.

But that is not what they get. Instead, their kids receive instruction in grievance. Classes about envy and training to hate your neighbor. Formation in ideological hostility. Encouragement to view their own country, their own traditions, even their own families as objects of suspicion or contempt.

And occasionally, as we are now forced to confront, something worse: calls for violent resistance by professors on the state tax dime.

If one wishes to understand what is happening to our country, there is no need to search for obscure explanations.

It is happening, in large measure, in our universities. And it is paid for by taxes in the very country these professors hate so much. Parents don't know how bad it is and continue to send their children, paying tuition, into these ideological training camps.

And -- this is the uncomfortable part -- we don't stop paying for it. It's much worse than you think, and it is time to say enough is enough. No more state checks for those who hate America. They are free to start their own private university and teach their hatred there.

I have documented these trends extensively. I will continue to do so. If you would like to keep updated on what goes on within our universities, you can subscribe to my Substack as I report from within the belly of what some call the Devil's University.

If you find yourself in conversation with someone who asks, in genuine bewilderment, "What is happening to America?" you might offer a simple reply: "Look at the institutions shaping the next generation."
 
more

The pipeline from university radical to would-be assassin


Those wondering where the seemingly endless supply of violent leftists comes from need look no farther than our public universities.

Last weekend delivered yet another grim headline: political violence, an attempted presidential assassination, once again treated as a mystery by the left.

The alleged perpetrator, we are told, was not some fringe drifter living off the grid, but an award-winning... teacher. This is a detail that would have seemed ironic a generation ago, but now seems almost predictable.

Reports indicate that the individual had a record of professional accolades and community involvement, the sort of résumé typically invoked to prove the impact of leftist ideologies.

If one wishes to understand what is happening to our country, there is no need to search for obscure explanations.

Alongside that résumé, there are early indications of ideological commitments and public expressions that fit comfortably within the increasingly militant strain of contemporary progressive activism and most university classrooms.

After such events, the public conversation follows a well-worn script. We are told this is an isolated incident. We are urged not to "politicize." And yet, the same voices that warn against generalization in this context have no hesitation attributing sweeping moral guilt to entire categories when it suits the prevailing orthodoxy.

One is tempted to ask: How often must this pattern repeat before we permit ourselves the unfashionable act of noticing it?

It's as if there are some mysterious places we send young adults to be indoctrinated to hate their country, hate their bodies, and hate God. The only thing worse is if we are footing the bill for tuition.

So let us ask, with due sobriety: Are there institutions in our country where young minds are being shaped, not merely to critique, but to despise?

Now that you mention it, yes, there are.

The university as moral re-education center

As a Christian and conservative professor, I have spent years calling attention to what occurs inside our universities.

Earlier this month, my college at Arizona State University formally adopted a Native American land acknowledgment as official policy.

These statements are often presented as benign gestures of historical awareness, but their actual function is quite different: They are meant to problematize the legitimacy of American land ownership and to "expose" what are called "structures of oppression."

In practice, this language is not descriptive but rather accusatory. It does not invite inquiry; it prescribes judgment.

At the same time, faculty are encouraged to "decolonize" their curricula. That term, which sounds like a meaningless academic exercise, carries a very specific ideological payload. It teaches that Western civilization, particularly the United States, is not merely flawed but fundamentally illegitimate, built upon "white supremacy" and sustained by "structural violence."

And if a system is fundamentally illegitimate, what follows?

Historically speaking, one does not reform such systems. One dismantles them. And so you find ASU professors calling for armed resistance to the United States.

From theory to rhetoric to action

This is not some abstract speculation. It is a demonstrable reality.

Across the country, we have seen:

* Professors at American institutions openly defending or rationalizing political violence as a form of "resistance." If intersectionality calls you "oppressed," it's fine to be violent.

* University departments issuing statements framing America as inherently oppressive while praising movements aimed at its transformation.

* K-12 educators using classroom time to advance ideological positions that portray students' own nation, heritage, and even biological identity as sources of moral guilt.

Consider the broader pattern:

* At Harvard and Columbia, student groups and faculty responses to recent global conflicts have included rhetoric that many Americans would recognize as moral inversion, where acts of violence are reframed as justified expressions of resistance.

* Diversity, equity, and inclusion programs across major universities and corporations routinely instruct participants to view American history through a lens of oppression, often discouraging dissent as a form of harm.

* "Decolonization" and the anti-settler, anti-whiteness initiatives increasingly reject the very idea of objective truth, reason, and even science, casting them as instruments of power and white supremacy.

One begins to see the progression:

Step 1: Teach the youth that America and Christianity are evil.

Step 2: Teach that dismantling them is justice.

Step 3: Act surprised when someone takes the final step.

Step 4: Cash your state employee checks.

What of oversight?

All of this brings us to a question that is at once practical and unavoidable: Where are the Arizona Board of Regents and similar institutions in other states?

Is it merely a ceremonial body, an occasion for polite applause and catered wine and cheese receptions, or does it exist to provide actual oversight of the institutions entrusted to it?

Public universities are not private salons for ideological experimentation. They are taxpayer-supported institutions with a mandate to educate, not indoctrinate; to pursue truth, not enforce orthodoxy.

In Arizona, professors sign an employee contract agreeing not to undermine the Constitution. And yet, when faculty openly promote ideas that undermine the constitutional order they are employed under, the response is silence or, worse, complicity.

Meanwhile, those who raise concerns find themselves subject to scrutiny, marginalization, and, in some cases, professional penalty.

What are we paying for?

American families send their children to universities like ASU at considerable cost. It is easily tens of thousands of dollars per year and sometimes far more when all expenses are counted and taxes are factored in.

What do they expect in return? An education in truth. Training in reason. Preparation for responsible citizenship. Maybe even a little wisdom and fear of God.

But that is not what they get. Instead, their kids receive instruction in grievance. Classes about envy and training to hate your neighbor. Formation in ideological hostility. Encouragement to view their own country, their own traditions, even their own families as objects of suspicion or contempt.

And occasionally, as we are now forced to confront, something worse: calls for violent resistance by professors on the state tax dime.

A modest proposal

If one wishes to understand what is happening to our country, there is no need to search for obscure explanations.

It is happening, in large measure, in our universities. And it is paid for by taxes in the very country these professors hate so much. Parents don't know how bad it is and continue to send their children, paying tuition, into these ideological training camps.

And -- this is the uncomfortable part -- we don't stop paying for it. It's much worse than you think, and it is time to say enough is enough. No more state checks for those who hate America. They are free to start their own private university and teach their hatred there.

I have documented these trends extensively. I will continue to do so. If you would like to keep updated on what goes on within our universities, you can subscribe to my Substack as I report from within the belly of what some call the Devil's University.

If you find yourself in conversation with someone who asks, in genuine bewilderment, "What is happening to America?" you might offer a simple reply: "Look at the institutions shaping the next generation."
 
more

I Watched 50 Hours of YouTube Tutorials in One Week. Here's the System That Saved Me.


I Watched 50 Hours of YouTube Tutorials in One Week. Here's the System That Saved Me.

A few months ago I was deep in a panic spiral about a job interview. Backend role, mid-level, and the recruiter casually mentioned that "system design questions might come up." I had a week. I had a vague memory of what a load balancer was. I did what any reasonable person does at 11 PM on a Tuesday with a third... coffee in hand: I opened YouTube.

And then I just kept opening YouTube.

By Sunday I had watched, by my rough count, about 50 hours of content. System design videos, mock interviews, whiteboard explainers, a long detour into how Netflix actually works, and somehow a 90-minute documentary about Erlang that I cannot defend to you. My brain felt full. My notes were a disaster. And when I tried to actually answer a practice question, I drew a blank.

Fifty hours. Blank.

That experience kicked off about two months of figuring out what I was doing wrong, because I knew it wasn't the videos. The videos were good. The problem was me, or more specifically, the way I was watching them. I was confusing input with learning, which I now realize is the single most common mistake people make with YouTube as a study tool.

This article is about the system I ended up with. It's not magical. It does not require you to wake up at 5 AM. But it has changed the way I learn from videos so completely that I genuinely cannot watch a tutorial the old way anymore.

Why "just watching" is a trap

Here's what was happening during that 50-hour week. I would start a video at normal speed. After about four minutes I'd get bored, bump it to 1.5x, then 2x. I'd open a second tab to take notes. The notes would last for maybe ten minutes before I gave up because typing while listening at 2x is genuinely impossible. Then I'd just watch passively, telling myself I'd "rewatch the important parts later."

I never rewatched anything. Nobody rewatches anything.

What I was actually doing was using YouTube as ambient television. The information was washing over me, my brain was producing little dopamine hits at every "aha" moment from the instructor, and I was confusing the feeling of comprehension with actual comprehension. There's a name for this in cognitive science, the "fluency illusion," and it's brutal. It's why you can finish a textbook chapter, feel great, and then bomb the quiz.

The fix isn't to watch slower or take more notes. The fix is to stop treating videos as content to consume and start treating them as documents to interrogate.

That sentence is the whole article, basically. Everything below is just the practical version of it.

Step 1: Decide your question before you press play

This sounds obvious but I'd never actually done it. Before I open a video now, I write down one sentence in a scratchpad: what am I trying to find out from this?

For the Netflix system design video, the question wasn't "how does Netflix work" (too vague, no real answer possible). It was "how does Netflix handle the spike when a popular show drops at midnight in multiple time zones?" That's a question with an actual answer, and it gives me something to listen for.

If I can't write that sentence, I usually don't watch the video. Sounds harsh but it saves hours.

A friend of mine who's doing a PhD told me she does the same thing with academic talks. She writes the question on a sticky note and puts it next to her laptop. If the talk doesn't address her question by the halfway mark, she closes it. No guilt.

Step 2: Get the transcript out of YouTube

This was the breakthrough for me. YouTube transcripts are right there, three dots, "Show transcript," done. You can copy the whole thing. But raw transcripts are awful to read, no punctuation, no structure, just a wall of "and then like the load balancer kind of routes the request um."

For a while I was cleaning these up by hand, which is insane. Then I started pasting them into ChatGPT and asking for structured notes. That worked but had a few problems: ChatGPT would hallucinate things the speaker never said, the timestamps disappeared, and for any video over about 30 minutes the transcript would get truncated.

I went through a small graveyard of tools trying to solve this. Otter.ai is great for meetings but overkill for YouTube. Some Chrome extensions worked but felt sketchy. Eventually I started using ChatYT, which I'll get to in more detail later because, full disclosure, I'm now one of the people building it. (More on that at the end.) The short version is, I needed something that read the whole transcript, kept the timestamps intact, and let me actually ask questions about the content rather than just summarizing it.

But the tool matters less than the principle: get the words out of the video and into a format you can search, quote, and interrogate. Even just copying the transcript into a Notion page and using Cmd-F is a thousand times better than scrubbing the YouTube timeline trying to find "the part where he talked about caching."

Step 3: Ask the video your question

This is the part that feels weirdest at first.

Once the transcript is somewhere I can interact with it, I treat the video like a person who already finished talking and is now waiting for me to ask follow-ups. I'll literally type things like:

- "What did the speaker say about cache invalidation?"

- "Did they explain why they chose Cassandra over DynamoDB?"

- "Was there a part where they discussed cost?"

And I get answers, with timestamps, so I can jump to the exact moment in the video and verify. If the speaker contradicted themselves or hedged, the answer reflects that. If they didn't address my question at all, I find out in 10 seconds instead of watching the whole video hoping it shows up.

The first time I did this with a 90-minute talk, I got the three things I actually needed in about four minutes. I felt like I had cheated. I think I had, in a sense, cheated the format. Which is fine. The format was already cheating me.

Step 4: Generate the notes you'd never write yourself

I'm a bad note-taker. My handwriting is illegible and my typed notes look like someone fed Wikipedia to a paper shredder. So this step changed everything for me.

After I've asked my main questions, I ask for structured notes in a specific format. My current default is:

- A 200-word summary at the top

- Five to seven key points, each with a timestamp

- Any specific claims that have numbers or sources, called out separately

- A "things I should look up" section for terms I didn't recognize

That last one is underrated. Whenever an instructor mentions a paper, a tool, or a concept I don't know, it goes in that list. I batch them at the end of the week and spend an hour going through them. This is where most of the real learning has happened for me, weirdly. The video was the entry point; the rabbit hole was the education.

Step 5: Make it a flashcard problem, not a video problem

This is the step almost nobody does, and it's the one that actually makes things stick.

After the notes are done, I take the five or six most important facts and turn them into flashcards. I use Anki because I'm a masochist, but anything works. Quizlet, RemNote, paper index cards, whatever.

The reason this matters: a fact you've reviewed three times over a week is roughly ten times more likely to be in your head a month later than a fact you read once. There's actual research on this (Karpicke and Roediger, 2008, if you want to get nerdy) but you don't need the research. You can just notice that you remember literally anything you've quizzed yourself on, and almost nothing you've only read.

For my system design interview, I ended up with about 80 flashcards drawn from maybe 12 videos. I went through them every day for a week. The interview went fine. The recruiter asked about consistent hashing, which had been one of my flashcards, and I gave a clean answer because I'd been forced to actually retrieve it from memory five days in a row.

If I'd just watched 50 hours of video, I would have failed. I know this because I tried that already.

What this looks like end to end

Let me make this concrete. Here's what learning a new topic from YouTube looks like for me now.

I want to learn the basics of Kubernetes. I write down my question: "Why would I use Kubernetes instead of just running Docker containers on a VM?" I find a 45-minute video by a creator I trust. Before I press play, I open the transcript in ChatYT and ask my question. The answer points me to three sections of the video, total runtime maybe 12 minutes. I watch those 12 minutes at 1x, taking actual notes because I'm only watching the part that matters. After that I ask for a structured summary of the rest, scan it, find one thing I didn't know about (the difference between a deployment and a stateful set), and add it to my "look up later" list. I generate four flashcards. I close the tab.

Total time: about 25 minutes for a 45-minute video, and I'll actually remember it.

Compare that to how I used to do it. I would have watched the whole 45 minutes at 1.75x, opened a Notion page, written three sentences before getting distracted, and forgotten everything by Friday.

A few honest caveats

This system isn't for everything. Some videos are meant to be experienced, not extracted. A great storytelling video, a comedy special, a music breakdown, the documentary about the guy who built a working pipe organ out of telephone parts (real, look it up, it's wonderful), those don't get transcripts and questions. Those just get watched.

The system is for tutorials, lectures, talks, interviews, and explainers. Anything where the goal is information transfer, not entertainment. If you find yourself watching a "10 things you didn't know about X" video for actual learning, ask yourself if you're being respected as a learner. The answer is usually no.

Also, this whole approach makes you watch fewer videos, not more. That felt wrong to me at first. I was used to measuring "studying" by hours logged. Now I measure it by questions answered and flashcards retained. The hours have dropped. The retention has gone way up. I have to keep reminding myself this is the goal.

The disclosure I promised

I mentioned ChatYT a few paragraphs ago. I should be straight with you: I'm one of the people who built it. It came directly out of the process I described in this article, because I got tired of duct-taping transcripts and ChatGPT together and I figured other people were probably doing the same thing.

You don't need ChatYT to use this system. Any tool that lets you query a transcript will work. NotebookLM is solid if you're already in the Google ecosystem. Otter.ai will do it if you're willing to fight the interface a bit. Even copy-pasting the transcript into Claude or ChatGPT works for shorter videos. The system is the system. The tool is just plumbing.

But if you want the plumbing I built, it's at chatyt.io. There's a free tier; I'm not going to pretend it's a hard sell.

What to actually try this week

If you've read this far, here's the smallest possible version of this system you can try tomorrow.

Pick one tutorial video you've been meaning to watch. Before you press play, write one sentence about what you want to learn from it. Open the transcript. Search for the words from your question. Read those sections. Watch the corresponding 5 minutes of video at normal speed. Make two flashcards.

That's it. That's the whole thing, in maybe 20 minutes.

You will learn more from that 20 minutes than I learned from my 50-hour week. I promise. I have the receipts.

If this resonated, I write occasionally about how I'm trying to actually learn things instead of just feeling like I'm learning them. Sometimes I'm wrong. Often I'm tired. But the experiments are real.
 
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Labor market goes digital, but skills gap looms


From job fairs shifting online to AI-powered platforms, Vietnam's labor market is embracing digital transformation; yet, experts warn that worker adaptability and skills training remain the decisive challenges ahead.

From physical job exchanges to AI-integrated digital platforms, the labor market in the country is entering a new era. Recruitment is becoming faster and more convenient, while labor... supply and demand are being restructured for transparency and efficiency to meet the demands of the digital economy.

Job hunting at one's fingertips

On a late April morning, Pham Thuy Ngan in Xuan Thoi Son Commune, Ho Chi Minh City bypassed the commute to the Ho Chi Minh City Employment Service Center's job fair. Instead, she connected with recruiters via video call from her home computer. After just 20 minutes of interviewing, she has secured a trial offer.

This is becoming the new norm. Recent job exchanges have seen a surge in online participation, particularly among young workers, signaling a clear shift from traditional models to digital environments. Director Nguyen Van Hanh Thuc of the HCMC Employment Service Center noted that IT applications have significantly expanded market access, allowing workers to browse hundreds of vacancies simultaneously while enabling businesses to streamline recruitment.

The private sector is also driving this digital wave. The "Vua Tho" (King of Craftsmen) app has connected hundreds of thousands of workers nationwide in just over a year. According to its founder, the platform currently hosts 200 job categories with over 100,000 workers and 600,000 customers. Workers accept jobs directly through the app and gain access to insurance and vocational training.

On a national scale, the National Job Exchange (vieclam.gov.vn) officially launched on April 14. This unified platform connects workers, enterprises, and regulators, marking a milestone in modernizing the labor sector. Within its first fortnight, the floor bridged thousands of job seekers with employers, currently hosting over 60,000 vacancies and 5,000 active profiles.

Deputy Minister of Home Affairs Nguyen Manh Khuong emphasized that with a labor force of 53.6 million and millions of businesses and households, a unified digital platform is essential to eliminate market fragmentation and accelerate connections.

Labor market transformation hinges on worker adaptability

For businesses in the seafood, textile, and processing industries, the shortage of skilled labor is becoming increasingly evident. Ms. Le Hang, Vice President of the Vietnam Association of Seafood Processing and Export (VASEP), stated that this sector currently provides livelihoods for over 4 million direct workers, but still faces difficulties in recruiting and allocating labor effectively across regions. When data is interconnected, businesses can be more proactive in accessing human resources and more effectively regulate labor distribution between regions.

From a management perspective, digitizing labor market data helps authorities closely monitor supply and demand, thereby developing appropriate policies. This also serves as a basis for implementing social security programs that target the right groups and meet their needs. The labor market is moving towards greater digitalization and connectivity. For these platforms to be effective, the collaboration of the State, businesses, and workers is essential. When data is interconnected, skills are enhanced, and policies are appropriately designed, the labor market will operate more efficiently, becoming a crucial driver of sustainable economic growth.

However, digital transformation in the labor sector is not just about technology. Experts believe that the decisive factor still lies in the adaptability of workers. According to the International Labour Organization (ILO), the biggest challenge today is not only unemployment but also the gap between workers' skills and market demands. In many developing economies, the informal sector remains large, and training has not kept pace with actual needs. Therefore, along with investing in digital infrastructure, it is necessary to promote retraining and upskilling. Digital skills, soft skills, and the ability to adapt to a flexible work environment will become decisive factors in the coming period.

By staff writers - Translated by Anh Quan
 
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How to prepare for a nursing job interview


Preparing for a nursing job interview can feel overwhelming especially if it's your first role, you're newly qualified, or you're returning to the profession after time away. Nursing interviews are not just about qualifications. Employers are looking for compassionate, capable professionals who can handle responsibility, communicate effectively, and deliver high standards of patient care under... pressure. Whether you're applying for a role in a hospital, care home, or community setting, the key to success lies in preparation. The more prepared you are, the more confident and authentic you'll come across.

This guide will walk you through everything you need to know to feel ready, stand out from other candidates, and make a strong impression.

How to Prepare for a Nursing Job Interview

A successful interview doesn't start when you sit down in front of the interviewer it starts days (or even weeks) before.

Preparation is what separates nervous candidates from confident ones. It allows you to clearly communicate your skills, demonstrate your passion, and show that you are serious about the role.

Here's how to give yourself the best possible chance.

1. Research the Employer

One of the most common mistakes candidates make is not properly researching the organisation they're applying to.

Employers can quickly tell when someone hasn't taken the time to understand who they are and it can make you seem uninterested or unprepared.

On the other hand, even a small amount of research can instantly set you apart.

What to look for:

* The organisation's values and mission

* The type of care they provide (acute, residential, community, specialist care)

* Their patient or resident focus

* Any recent updates, news, or achievements

For example, are they focused on person-centred care? Do they prioritise innovation or community outreach?

Why it matters:

When you understand the employer, you can tailor your answers to align with their values. This shows that you're not just looking forany job you're interested inthis job.

Tip: Try to reference something specific during your interview, such as:

"I saw that your organisation focuses strongly on patient-centred care, which really aligns with how I approach my work..."

2. Know Your Experience & Skills

Nursing is a practical profession, so employers want real examples not just general statements.

It's not enough to say you're a "good communicator" or "work well in a team." You need toshow it through your experience.

Be ready to talk about:

* Clinical placements or previous roles

* Types of patients you've cared for

* Situations where you made a difference

* Challenges you've faced and how you handled them

Key skills to highlight:

* Communication

* Teamwork

* Time management

* Attention to detail

* Compassion and empathy

* Ability to work under pressure

Bring your experience to life:

Instead of saying:

"I work well under pressure"

Say:

"During a busy shift on placement, we were short-staffed and had multiple high-dependency patients. I prioritised tasks, communicated closely with my team, and ensured all patients received safe and timely care."

Tip: Always think in terms ofreal situations. This makes your answers more believable, memorable, and impactful.

3. Prepare for Common Questions

Nursing interviews typically include a mix of competency-based and behavioural questions.

These are designed to assess not just what you know, but how you act in real-life situations.

Common questions include:

* Why did you choose nursing?

* Why do you want to work here?

* How do you handle pressure or stress?

* Tell us about a time you dealt with a difficult patient

* Describe a situation where you worked as part of a team

* How do you prioritise your workload?

Use the STAR method:

The STAR method is one of the most effective ways to structure your answers:

* Situation - Set the scene

* Task - Explain your responsibility

* Action - Describe what you did

* Result - Share the outcome

Example:

Question: Tell me about a time you handled a difficult situation

Answer (STAR):

* Situation: A patient became distressed and refused treatment

* Task: I needed to ensure their safety while respecting their concerns

* Action: I remained calm, listened actively, and reassured them while explaining the importance of the treatment

* Result: The patient became more comfortable and agreed to proceed

Tip: Practice your answers out loud. This helps you sound more natural and confident during the interview.

4. Show Professionalism

First impressions matter especially in healthcare roles where professionalism is essential.

From the moment you arrive, you are being assessed on how you present yourself.

Key things to focus on:

* Dress smart and appropriate (clean, professional attire)

* Arrive 10-15 minutes early

* Be polite and respectful to everyone you meet

* Maintain good eye contact and body language

Bring:

* Copies of your CV

* Certifications or qualifications

* ID or documents if requested

Why it matters:

Professionalism shows that you take the role seriously and understand the standards expected in a healthcare environment.

Tip: Treat the entire experience from reception to interview as part of the assessment.

5. Ask the Right Questions

Many candidates forget that interviews are a two-way process.

Asking thoughtful questions not only helps you decide if the role is right for you it also shows initiative and genuine interest.

Good questions to ask:

* What does a typical shift look like?

* What training and support is provided?

* What does success look like in this role?

* Are there opportunities for progression or development?

Avoid:

* Asking only about salary or holidays (save this for later stages)

* Asking questions you could easily find online

Tip: Prepare 2-3 questions in advance so you don't get caught off guard.

Top Tips for Success

Sometimes, it's the small things that make the biggest difference.

* Keep these key tips in mind:

* Be honest and authentic

* Show compassion and patient focus

* Stay calm even if you feel nervous

* Speak clearly and confidently

* Listen carefully before answering

* Highlight your willingness to learn and improve

Remember, employers are not expecting perfection they are looking for potential, attitude, and professionalism.

Why Preparation Matters

In today's competitive job market, preparation can be the difference between getting the role and missing out.

Many candidates may have similar qualifications but not everyone prepares effectively.

When you prepare properly, you:

* Feel more confident walking into the interview

* Communicate your skills more clearly

* Reduce nerves and anxiety

* Make a stronger, more professional impression

Preparation also allows your personality to come through, which is just as important as your experience in a caring profession like nursing.

Are You Interview Ready?

Before your interview, run through this quick checklist:

Candidate Checklist:

✔ Research the employer and role

✔ Prepare real examples from your experience

✔ Practice common interview questions

✔ Plan your outfit

✔ Organise your documents

✔ Prepare questions to ask

✔ Know how you'll travel and arrive on time

Taking just a little extra time to prepare can make a big difference to your performance.

How Nursing & Caring Can Help

Finding the right nursing role can be challenging but you don't have to do it alone.

We support candidates across Northern Ireland in finding roles that match their skills, experience, and career goals.

We can help you:

🧑⚕️ Access nursing and healthcare opportunities

📄 Improve your CV and interview technique

🤝 Connect with trusted employers

🚀 Start your next role with confidence

Whether you're newly qualified or experienced, we're here to support you every step of the way.
 
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