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  • Will the FAFSA Disappear if the Department of Education Is Closed?
    www.cnet.com
    The application for student aid could be reassigned to another federal agency, experts say. What to do if you need help paying for college.
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  • JPMorgan Chase To Crack Down On Zelle Social Media Scams
    www.cnet.com
    JPMorgan Chase's new Zelle policy aims to block social media scams. Here's everything you should know.
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  • Hear what Horizon Zero Dawn actor Ashly Burch thinks about Sony AI taking her job
    www.theverge.com
    Ashly Burch, the award-winning voice and performance actor behind Horizon Zero Dawns Aloy one of the most prominent characters on PlayStation today has some news and some very strong thoughts about the leaked Sony experiment that saw her character voiced and performed by AI technology instead of her or any other human being.The AI-powered version of Aloy. Image: SonyThe video, originally shared with The Verge by a tipster and later pulled off YouTube by a copyright enforcement company that counts Sony PlayStation as a client, was of an internal prototype not necessarily something thats in production for actual games, and Burch says that Horizon developer Guerilla proactively confirmed to her that it is not actively in development. Nor did it use her voice or facial data, Guerilla claimed. But Burch says having seen the demo, she is worried, and not just about her own career. I feel worried about this art form, she says. You can watch her video immediately below, or scroll down for a full transcript. Here is a full transcript:Hi. Lets talk about AI Aloy. I saw the tech demo earlier this week. Guerilla reached out to me to let me know that the demo didnt reflect anything that was actively in development. They didnt use any of my performance for the demo, so none of my facial or voice data. And Guerilla owns Aloy as a character.So all that said, I feel worried. And not worried about Guerilla specifically or Horizon or my performance or my career specifically, even. I feel worried about this art form. Game performance as an art form.We are currently on strike. SAG-AFTRA is on strike against video games because of AI. Because this technology exists, because we know that game companies want to use it, were asking for protections.So currently what were fighting for is that you have to get our consent before you make an AI version of us in any form. You have to compensate us fairly and you have to tell us how youre using this AI double.And I feel worried not because the technology exists. Not even because game companies want to use it. Because of course they do. They always want to use technological advancements.I just imagine a video like this coming out that does have someones performance attached to it. That does have someones voice or face or movement. And the possibility that if we lose this fight, that person would have no recourse.They wouldnt have any protections. Any way to fight back. And that possibility it makes me so sad. It hurts my heart. It scares me.I love this industry and this art form so much and I want there to be a new generation of actors. I want there to be so many more incredible game performances.I want to be able to continue.Its unusual for performers who have such a close relationship with game companies to speak out like this, but were also in an unusual moment: as she points out, video game actors are on strike right now, specifically because of AI, and the very idea that a company like Sony is explicitly building and demonstrating ways to potentially replace actors like Burch is exactly what the striking workers fear.In addition to starring in Horizon Zero Dawn, Burch has had minor roles in other Sony games including The Last of Us Part II and Spider-Man, but is otherwise best known for playing Chloe Price in the Life Is Strange games, Tiny Tina in Borderlands, and from the live-action D&D roleplaying series Critical Role and Apple TV Pluss Mythic Quest, where she also serves as a writer.See More:
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  • Gundam Breaker 4 Receives "Free March Update", Here's What's Included
    www.nintendolife.com
    Subscribe to Nintendo Life on YouTube798kBandai Namco is still showing support for last year's release Gundam Breaker 4 and to get the new year underway it's released a "free March update".This allows you to acquire the 'GQuuuuuux' and 'Gundam EX' from the shop with in-game currency. In addition to these new mobile suits, there are also additional builder parts, paint patterns, diorama objects and photo poses as well as "new Master Skill settings" and various other game improvements.Here's the official description about these suits and what else you can expect:"The free March update for GUNDAM BREAKER 4 is bringing two of the newest and hottest Mobile Suits to players for free. Available now on all platforms, players will be able to Break, Build, and Battle with the Gundam EX featured on Gundam: Requiem for Vengeance and the GQuuuuuuX from Mobile Suit Gundam GQuuuuuuX. Players can obtain the new Mobile Suits from the shop with in-game currency. The update also includes new in-game content, such as new Builders Parts, new diorama objects, photo poses, and more. GUNDAM BREAKER 4 is currently available for Nintendo Switch, PlayStation4, PlayStation5, and PC via Steam. Find out more on the official website."This follows an update for Gundam Breaker 4 in October last year which added new story mission DLC as as well as a diorama pack DLC.You can check out our review of Gundam Breaker 4 here on Nintendo Life. We called it a return to form for the series, awarding it seven out of ten stars:"If you're into Gundam, wed suggest you pick this one up when you get the chance, especially if youre looking for a content-rich and relatively low-investment action game to add to your Switch library." Breaking freeHave you tried out this game on the Switch yet? Will you be checking out this new update? Let us know in the comments.[source bandainamcoent.com]Related GamesSee AlsoShare:01 Liam is a news writer and reviewer for Nintendo Life and Pure Xbox. He's been writing about games for more than 15 years and is a lifelong fan of Mario and Master Chief. Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...Related ArticlesPokmon Scarlet & Violet: Mystery Gift Codes ListAll the current Pokmon Scarlet and Violet Mystery Gift codesBest Cheap Nintendo Switch Games50 games under 20 bucksBest Nintendo Switch RPGsThe finest trad-style Switch RPGs available to humanitySplatoon 3 Version 9.3.0 Out Now, Here Are The Full Patch NotesThe first update of 2025Capcom Provides Update On Game Changes In 'Fighting Collection 2'Here's what you can expect
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  • Edgar Berlanga Scores Brutal KO Win In Fight He Never Wanted To Have
    www.forbes.com
    Edgar Berlanga (Photo by Rich Schultz/Getty Images)Getty ImagesEdgar Berlanga destroyed Jonathan Gonzalez-Ortiz on Saturday night in Orlando in a one-round onslaught. Berlanga didnt even want the fight and he made that clear. The 27-year-old made quick work of the opponent who was well out of his league.In case you missed it, heres Berlangas demolition of Gonzalez-Ortiz:It didnt take long to see that Gonzalez-Ortiz had no business in the ring with Berlanga. He was completely outclassed. Fights like this are tough to watch when one fighter has no chance from the opening bell.I spoke with Berlanga ahead of the fight, and he was seemingly miffed at his spot on the card as an undercard performer behind Austin Ammo Williams, and the level of opponent he was facing.Right now, I gotta go in there and sweep the floor with him [Gonzalez-Ortiz]. I just finished coming off a big, big fight, fighting a legend. Everybody knows what type of level hes on; Hes not on my level. We dont overlook nobody, but I just gotta go out there and handle my business.Sometimes a fighter will say their opponent isnt on their level and its bravado. When Berlanga said this to me in our interview, I knew he meant it.After his unanimous decision loss to Canelo Alvarez, Berlanga felt he deserved to be in with a big name, and to perform in a main event. He wanted to fight Caleb Plant or Jaime Munguia, but instead, he was in with Gonzalez-Ortiz.Its disrespectful," Berlanga said to IFL. "Its disrespectful to me. Its disrespectful to my fans. I go in that ring and I fight. I gave the people that was out of this world with Canelo Alvarez. We went out there and we went to war for 12 rounds. For me to go from that to this is like, people is just trippin. My stock grew so much after that fight that I should be fighting one of these big fights against [Jaime] Berlangas lack of interest may have shown leading up to the fight as he missed weight by 1.6 pounds. Clearly, the fight still took place and Berlanga didnt need the additional conditioning to get past Gonzalez-Ortiz.Ahead of the fight, Berlanga traded barbs with Matchroom promoter Eddie Hearn, and with Saturdays fight being the final one on the formers contract, it seems the relationship is in trouble and re-signing is far from a foregone conclusion.Berlanga was originally slated to headline a fight in Puerto Rico on March 8, 2025, but instead, Matchroom placed him in the co-main event slot for the March 15 card underneath Williams vs. Volny. Thats the move Berlanga considered disrespectful.It seems Berlanga badly wanted to fight in Puerto Rico in front of his people. He seemingly took the switch up personally.Hearn, on the other hand, has defended Matchrooms efforts with Berlangas career. Hearn pointed out that Berlanga earned $12 million across three fights with Matchroomincluding the high-profile fight with Canelo in September 2024. Hearn insisted Matchroom held up their end of the bargain and stayed true to the contract.In any case, Berlanga is seemingly a free agent and Im not sure who got the worst of this ordeal. One thing is for sure, everyone had a better night than Gonzalez-Ortiz.
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  • Loophole Lets Toxic Trojan Horse Chemicals Into Everyday Products
    www.forbes.com
    A new study suggests polymers can act as a Trojan horse for toxic chemicals.gettyPolymersvery large moleculesare thought to be too big and inert to migrate out of products or into people and therefore pose no health risks. As a result, polymers are used in a variety of everyday products from clothing to cosmetics and have largely avoided regulation worldwide. For example, Canada just initiated a process to regulate the entire class of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS) in productsexcept for PFAS polymers. Similarly, polymers are exempt from the Toxic Substances Control Act (TSCA) in the U.S. and REACH in the E.U.Thats why as more harmful small chemicals are banned or phased out, the chemical industry is moving to using large molecule polymers which get a free pass from the testing and regulation that are required for other chemicals.However a breakthrough peer-reviewed study published this month in Nature Sustainability questions the long-held belief that polymers are harmless, finding that they can break down into smaller more harmful chemicals. This study provides important new evidence that polymers need to be tested and regulated before they can be used in products.The Trojan Horse EffectOur study suggests polymers can act as a Trojan horse for toxic chemicals, explains Da Chen, senior author and scientist at Jinan University in China. Polymers, often marketed as non-toxic alternatives, are added to products as stable, large molecules. However, over time, they can break down, releasing harmful byproducts into the environment and potentially into our bodies.The research focused on two polymeric brominated flame retardants (polyBFRs), widely used in electronics as substitutes for banned flame retardants. Alarmingly, both polyBFRs were found to degrade into dozens of smaller molecules. Toxicity tests on zebrafish exposed to these breakdown products found abnormalities in the brain, heartbeat and locomotor activity, as well as a curved spine and decreased body length. Such effects have previously been linked to effects from exposure to TBBPA monomersthe smaller molecules that make up the polyBRs.The study didnt stop with lab tests. Researchers also searched for these polymer breakdown products near electronic waste recycling facilities and found them in soil, air, and dust. The highest concentrations were detected closest to the facilities, with the levels decreasing further away from these sites. This discovery highlights how the widespread use of polyBFRs in electronics can contribute to environmental pollution and increased exposure and potential for health harm to humans and wildlife.These chemicals appear to be used at high volumes, making the potential scope for harm considerable. The chemical producers and their trade groups have promoted polyBFRs as environmentally friendly and non-hazardous substitutes for banned monomeric flame retardants (e.g., hexabromocyclododecane and decabromodiphenyl ether) to meet flammability standards for electronics, building materials, vehicles, and more. Also noteworthy is that the real-world fire-safety benefits for many of these standards have not been demonstrated.Beyond Flame Retardants: Implications For Other Polymers Like PFASThe findings also have broader implications for other polymers used in consumer goods, such as PFAS polymers. Fluorinated polymers are found in everything from childrens uniforms to food packaging to cosmetics. Other studies have shown that PFAS polymers release smaller more toxic PFAS molecules over time. Despite industry claims that fluorinated polymers should be exempt from regulation, scientists maintain that they belong to the same hazardous class as other PFAS chemicals.Moreover, many types of polymers are formulated with additives like plasticizers and stabilizers to enhance their performance. These additives can leach out of products during use or disposal, exposing humans and the environment to chemicals with known toxic effects.Closing The LoopholePolymers are being added to products we touch, wear, sit on, or eat from with little oversight. For example, under TSCA in the U.S., manufacturers can self-certify that their polymers meet certain criteriasuch as high molecular weight or low solubilitythat supposedly render them harmless. This allows them to forgo comprehensive toxicity testing or lifecycle assessments.As a result, polymers and their harmful breakdown products are used in electronics, textiles, food packaging, plastics, and more. This widespread application increases the likelihood of environmental contamination and human exposure. Children are particularly vulnerable due to their developing body systems and higher exposure rates relative to body weight.Exempting polymers from toxics regulations is a policy rooted in outdated science. While the intent was to streamline oversight for low-risk substances, new evidence underscores the need for comprehensive evaluation of polymers throughout their lifecycle. Its time for policymakers to act decisively by closing these regulatory loopholes. The stakes are too high to continue treating polymers as inherently safe when so much evidence suggests to the contrary.
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  • From college to dating, no one in history has been rejected more than Gen Z
    www.businessinsider.com
    When Em graduated from the Pratt Institute in May 2020, two months into the pandemic, there were simply no jobs for a sculpture major, even in New York. "That absolutely set the tone for the rest of my attempt at a career," Em, now 26, says.So they took an intensive nine-month coding boot camp and started applying for tech jobs. After they got rejected from about 10 roles, the entire tech industry was besieged by mass layoffs in 2022, leaving Em even more dispirited. "It was just another pathway to shit," they recall thinking. Eventually, they found work as an office manager at a nonprofit for a while and quickly lost their coding skills. Last year, Em applied to more than 400 jobs across the communications, administrative, and service industries and was rejected by every one."I am miserable, and it is breaking my body down," Em tells me over the phone from California, where they've been living at a relative's house scraping by on $700 a month from contract work. They add, flatly, "I am not living a life that I feel is worth living at this moment."Em's experience with such unrelenting rejection may sound extreme, but their story speaks to a panic and despair pervasive among members of Gen Z. Lately, I find that the tone people over 30 most often use when talking about today's young adults is less a reflexively finger-wagging "kids these days" and more a genuine sympathy over (mixed with relief to have dodged) the particular set of historical circumstances they've faced as they've come of age: COVID-19, climate anxiety, the chaos of the Trump administrations, the internet's wholesale usurpation of IRL culture, AI's potential to upend entire industries. Gen Z has been called the most anxious generation, the most risk-averse generation, the most stressed generation, the most burned-out generation, and the loneliest generation. Last year, the World Happiness Report dubbed Zoomers the unhappiest generation.But there's another superlative one exacerbating all that stress, anxiety, loneliness, and burnout that's so far been overlooked. By several measures, Gen Z may be the most rejected generation in human history.Every cohort believes it has drawn the shortest straw; as Will Smith, a Gen Xer, famously groused, "Parents just don't understand!" But as Gen Zers strain to establish themselves, they face a uniquely fraught tension between unprecedented technology-enabled opportunity infinite possibilities a click, swipe, or DM away and an unprecedented scale of rejection. From education to careers to romance, never before have young adults had this much access to prospective yeses. And, in turn, never before have young adults been told no so frequently.What does the experience of this new scale of rejection do to a young person's psyche, and to Gen Z's collective state of mind? And how will it reverberate through the rest of society as Gen Z eventually takes the reins of power when the rejectees become the rejectors? In interviews with psychologists, therapists, guidance counselors, career coaches, and more than a dozen Gen Zers (most of whom, like Em, requesteddating scene, college admissions, and the job market came into focus. At stake is not young adults' egos or sense of entitlement but our expectation of agency in an increasingly mediated world.Through the 1960s, most Americans got married in their early 20s to partners they met through their social circles. Today, they spend nearly a decade longer dating; the median age for first marriage is 31.1 for men and 29.2 for women. During that additional eon, they're also equipped with an arsenal of apps that can summon and terminate new prospects on a daily, if not hourly, basis. If we tallied up the literal sum of all the unreciprocated swipes, DMs, follows, or texts that create today's ambient mode of romantic rejection, it wouldn't be a stretch to say that a typical Zoomer on the apps is getting rejected by, and rejecting, more prospective partners in a week than a typical married boomer has in their entire life.The paradox of online dating has been thoroughly documented: Despite having more access to potential partners than ever, young people have invented vocabularies to describe the endless purgatorial disappointments of "ghosting," "situationships," "breadcrumbing," and the hellscape of the apps themselves. Last year, Hinge surveyed 15,000 people about their dating views. Ninety percent of Gen Z respondents said they wanted to find love, and 44% said they had little or no dating experience."That was a surprising number for me," Logan Ury, Hinge's director of relationship science, tells me. Much of that gap is due to Gen Z's heightened risk aversion, Ury says, something she attributes to a social-media-augmented awareness of the world as a scary place and widespread "overparenting," or helicopter parenting. "Rejection is intimidating for everyone, but Gen Z daters seem to feel it more acutely," she adds. Fifty-six percent of Gen Z respondents said that fear of rejection held them back from pursuing a relationship, compared with 51% for millennial respondents.A typical Zoomer on the apps may be getting rejected by more prospective partners in a week than a typical boomer has in their entire adult life.So as young people relentlessly reject each other, many are too scared to risk truly putting themselves out there in the first place. "It is so easy to get involved with someone and then detach," Catherine, a recent Barnard grad, says. "I have friends who have been texting with people that they met on dating apps for weeks or months, and yet they have never met in person. I actually had a friend who had a date all set up, and she went to the restaurant, and by the time she got there, the guy unmatched her and blocked her on everything before they even had a date."Gen Z has normalized mutual risk aversion, says Jeff Guenther, a licensed therapist who counsels millions of lovelorn Gen Z TikTok users as @therapyjeff. "It's this funny situation where it's OK to not get back to people, he says. "Sometimes that's empowering, but then there's the negative effect of all these little mini rejections that eventually cut so deep that somebody might not decide to be vulnerable." No wonder that breakup coaches who talk in therapy-speak and dating influencers who claim they can definitively discern "green flags" versus "red flags" have proliferated, each of them promising to demystify the romantic ambiguity plaguing Gen Z. Jovana Mugosa for BI Guenther says today's young adults seem quicker to discard connections in favor of the seemingly unlimited reserves of suitors awaiting just a swipe away. "There's the resilience that comes from the frequent rejection that makes them great at moving on, but then they're less equipped for the real-world relational challenges that require compromise and patience," he says.But Natalie Buchwald, the founder and clinical director of Manhattan Mental Health Counseling, says she sees a distinction between healthy resilience and the blas, noncommittal attitude she sees many Gen Zers deploy to cope with rejection. "I'm finding there's more of a pervasive numbness that looks like resilience," she says. "But that's not resilience; that's disconnect."Meanwhile, more technology-augmented opportunity has also bred much more rejection in the college admissions industrial complex. Until 1960, more than half of all college applicants applied to just one school. In the 2023-24 admissions season, the average applicant applied to 6.65 Common App-affiliated schools alone, up 7% from the previous year. Just in the past two decades, the number of applications to the country's 67 most selective colleges has tripled to nearly 2 million a year. Gen Zers are knocking on more doors to their future than ever and, in turn, having more doors slammed in their faces. For some, this is shaping their core beliefs on motivation and merit.Dylan, a 22-year-old New York University student whose high school credentials included varsity rugby and a 4.7 weighted GPA, tells me that he applied to roughly 20 schools including most of the Ivies and Stanford a number he felt "insecure" about compared with his peers. "I know a lot of people who applied to 20 to 40," he says. In the end, he received only three or four acceptances, which was demoralizing. "I just remember feeling like it wasn't necessarily our qualifications that mattered, that it was just like, hopefully, the right person read it on the right day."Ella, a 20-year-old from Allentown, Pennsylvania, applied to 12 colleges and got rejected from 10. "I had so much hubris and unfounded confidence," she says. "I just thought, well, I'll only want to go to college if I can get into a 'prestigious school.' They ask, 'Why us?' obviously, and I couldn't tell them why besides it's Harvard." In a Substack post she published before her high school graduation, she described how at odds her tenfold rejection was with her belief in simply working hard to succeed. "I thought that I was going to be someone," she wrote. While she's now a junior at Bryn Mawr, Ella tells me she still hasn't gotten over the sting of going to a seemingly less elite school.Others have taken rejection to court. In February, an 18-year-old from Palo Alto, California, who applied to 18 schools and was rejected from 16, sued the University of California system and the University of Washington, alleging racial discrimination against "highly-qualified Asian-American candidates." "When the rejections rolled in one after another, I was dumbfounded. What started with surprise turned into frustration, and then finally it turned into anger," the student's father told the New York Post. Jovana Mugosa for BI As a millennial and former teenage overachiever, I also call up the best expert I personally knew: my high school counselor, Kim Klokkenga, who has helped wrangle the collegiate aspirations of the student body at Central Illinois' Dunlap High School for the past 30 years. In her view, the commercialization of college applications is as much responsible as a new generation of helicopter parenting, along with the technologically mediated literal ease of application."Back in the day, I would literally ask a student how many envelopes they wanted," Klokkenga says. "I didn't have people applying to 20-plus schools, like now. It might've been 10 or 12, and that was outlandish!" (In case you were wondering, I'd been one of her favorite nut jobs, with a total of nine applications in 2010.)When I ask if she thinks Gen Z students are handling rejection better or worse than previous generations, she says she can't say for sure. "I have fewer students come in devastated that they didn't get into their schools," Klokkenga says. Perhaps they were already steeling themselves against rejection another shade of disconnect. "I am hearing students say, 'Well, I wasn't expecting to get in; I just wanted to apply to see,'" Klokkenga adds. "I think they're just throwing them out there sometimes to see what'll stick."Is it any mystery why Gen Zers have startedghosting employers back?Barry Schwartz, a psychologist who famously observed the relationship between consumer choice and satisfaction in his 2004 book, "The Paradox of Choice," distinguishes two types of people: the "maximizers," who want the absolute best option, and the much-happier "satisficers," who go with the "good enough" option. Today's perceived infinite-choice standard seems to have given rise to legions of maximizers among Gen Z. Per Schwartz's central argument that overabundance of choice tends to lead to more disappointment, this does not seem to bode well for their general well-being.But what happens when one's choices are preemptively limited, perhaps relentlessly, via rejection? "It's possible there's a kind of resilience that people develop when you're applying to 50 schools and it doesn't hurt anymore to get rejected by 47," Schwartz tells me. But, much like Buchwald says of rejected romantics, he sees the "whatever" reaction among rejected applicants as a "very self-protective response.""If you minimize the significance beforehand, then the pain of failure will be less consequential," Schwartz says. "It kind of drives me crazy to see people doing this, especially if it's a reflection of their effort to protect themselves rather than just their cynicism about living in modern society."College is its own gauntlet, but the scale of rejection in the job-hunt is an order of magnitude more hellish. Via LinkedIn, Workday, and the ubiquity of other online job boards, many Zoomers apply to more jobs in a day than many lucky Boomers have in their lives. In February 2025, the average knowledge worker job opening received 244 applications, up from 93 in February 2019, according to data the hiring software provider Greenhouse shared with BI. That's 243 nos or ghosted applications for every yes. This scattershot reality is not specific to Gen Z, but it's the only reality that the incoming workforce has known.Among the Gen Zers I talked to, their "body counts" of submitted job applications were regularly in the hundreds. Christopher, a 24-year-old who graduated with a finance degree, says he'd applied to 400 jobs in finance and 200 in merchandising before finding a job that still wasn't what he really wanted. His computer science grad friends have been sending applications in the thousands, he says.Even though the logistics of applying are more or less streamlined, Gen Zers note the disconnect between the effort they're expected to make versus the consideration given in return. Colleges at least have to formally tell you no, while jobs, like a dating app match, tend to ghost at any point in the process. Is it really a mystery why some Gen Zers have started ghosting employers back? Jovana Mugosa for BI Since graduating from Barnard last year, Catherine has applied to 300 jobs and interviewed for 20 of them. The 23-year-old says her college counselor's advice to deeply invest in her job applications via networking, seeking referrals, getting personalized feedback on rsums has come to feel ridiculous, given the fact that you could sit through six rounds of interviews, a practice test, and more for a single role and then, after months of waiting, not even get a proper rejection email. For her, the resounding lesson is hard to ignore: It's better not to hope for too much or to try too hard."You have no idea if you're even doing it right," Catherine says of the impersonal process, which is often mediated by an unknowable (and highly fallible) screening algorithm. "You don't have any ability to get feedback. It feels like being in a hedge maze, and there's probably a path through, but you feel like you keep running into walls and you're like, 'Man, if I could just talk to the person who built this.'" She adds: "I worked so hard for four years, and I built this great network and support system, and now I'm just sending applications into the void."For Gen Zers, the disenfranchising reality of chasing entire flocks of wild geese has diminished their self-esteem. Lanya, a 22-year-old who graduated last year with a degree in media studies, tells me she thought she had done everything right as a first-gen college student who counted a Nasdaq internship among her achievements and feels incredibly guilty that she has yet to find a job. "Self-worth-wise, this is the lowest I've ever felt," she says. "This is my time to say thank you and pay them back by showing them what they sacrificed was worth it, but I can't help them the way I want to."Dylan, the finance grad, says the job hunt made him modify his expectations for the future. "I just remember applying to so many and feeling like: I don't care what I get. I just need to survive. I'm not scared of failing; I'm just scared of dying."For others, mass rejection can be liberating. Several Gen Zers tell me their collection of "we regret to inform you's" in their inboxes has inspired them to invest more deeply in passion projects, move abroad, or start their own businesses. For many Gen Zers, the influencer economy is the one job market that seems legible to them and it's always hiring.As Gen Z grows older, the rejection and risk they face could easily compound. If you're starting out with a high degree of risk aversion, any pedestrian experience of personal rejection might harden that stance which means we could end up seeing Gen Z calcify into incredibly risk-averse adults (and parents). Those who are resilient enough to weather the new standard scale of rejection those who continue to shoot their shots will eventually gain a firm foothold. But in college, careers, and romance, it's often less a matter of perseverance or merit than it is pure luck. For much of Gen Z, success is increasingly boiling down to a numbers game.You're not being rejected by actual people, but by technology. Maybe the anger should be directed at Apple and Google and Tinder and Facebook.Jeff GuentherIs the real problem simply the overabundance of options, which puts Gen Zers' expectations on a collision course with reality? No help, of course, is the 24/7 firehose of comparison and fantasy provided by social media which has shaped Gen Z's construct of reality pretty much straight from the womb. Schwartz, the psychologist, acknowledges that a zillion potential mates, schools, or careers that are seemingly so accessible are liable to make us all feel disappointment. "Some of us live in such a culture of abundance that even if you find some way to limit the options, you are thinking about what's out there," he says. Here, I think of a line from Tony Tulathimutte's aptly titled 2024 book, "Rejection," an interlocking series of horror-esque stories of young people who are puzzled by and rage at the world for their arbitrary exclusion: "His sadness, he knows, is a symptom of his entitlement, so he is not even entitled to his sadness."But Schwartz also believes that the experience of rejection is markedly different from that of disappointment. When you're underwhelmed by your Netflix selection, or when you order what turns out to be a disappointing entre, it's easy to have order envy for your table mates' more tantalizing plates. But while making that choice was a matter of your own agency, "a rejection is a comment on you," Schwartz says. "It's very hard to just say to yourself, 'Well, Stanford rejects 96% of its applicants. It's impossible to get in," he adds. "It's not a statement about me; it's a crapshoot.' You can say all that stuff, but my guess is you don't really believe it."This, for me, is the most tragic element of Gen Z's rejection arc. We can expect experiences with personal rejection to trigger material consequences and a formative reckoning with one's self-worth or belief systems taken as a collective, it's what shapes each generation so that they can turn around and bray at the next one about what they've survived.But for Gen Z, their fates are increasingly shaped by the uniquely depersonalized, and depersonalizing, forces of technology, primarily the algorithms that pervade modern dating, college admissions, and the hiring process. These algorithms set the rules of engagement for nearly every aspect of Gen Zers' lives, making once analog processes utterly streamlined yet mystifying. No wonder various corners of the culture have responded with cottage industries of layoff coaches, rsum consultants, professional matchmakers, emotional "courses" and boot camps, and countless influencers who espouse how to "hack" life's algos. For now, the onus is still placed on the individual Gen Zer to buck the system and learn the hacks; it remains to be seen whether Gen Z will collectively reject the very sorting mechanisms that are failing them."There's this technology, whether it's the algorithm or AI, that's sort of against you, and that's something to take into consideration," says Guenther, the TikTok-famous therapist. "You're not being rejected by actual people, but you're being filtered out or rejected by technology. And maybe the anger should be directed at Apple and Google and Tinder and Facebook or Meta."Yet this anger is curiously absent in all my conversations with Gen Zers. For one thing, they're savvy enough to understand that technology itself isn't worth blaming if you aren't addressing the human biases codified in the automation. Instead, the predominant mood was one of resignation, or perhaps acceptance. "It's a numbers game," one current college student says, or a "waiting game."When we speak again several months after our first conversation, Em has a promising update: After applying to more than 400 jobs, they've found a position at a perfume shop in Oregon. Amid the grueling job hunt, David Graeber's book "Bullshit Jobs" dramatically reframed their view of careerism. "He talks about how humans feel when they can't make an effect on anything it is not only psychologically traumatizing, but it creates physical problems," Em says, adding that the perfume shop was one of the best jobs they'd ever had. It's 35 hours a week with no benefits. But, Em says, "every single day in this job, I get the chance to make someone's day to actually see my impact on the world, even if on a small scale."Delia Cai is a writer living in New York. She runs the culture and media newsletter, Deez Links.
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  • Why these federal workers regret voting for Trump: 'This is not The Apprentice'
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    2025-03-16T08:05:01Z Read in app JGI/Jamie Grill/Getty; Trump Store; Ava Horton/BI This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now.Have an account? Some Trump-voting federal workers told BI they feel betrayed.They said they voted for Trump to lower prices; not for Elon Musk to lead mass firings.Some said they still support the administration's efforts to cut waste and have hope Trump will deliver.David Pasquino voted for President Donald Trump. Then, the new administration fired him.The former Veterans Affairs employee told Business Insider that while he still supports aspects of the Trump administration he finds many of the president's actions problematic.In particular, he supports the president's approach to border enforcement and his plans to increase the size of the military. He's not a fan of the Elon Musk-led firing of thousands of federal workers."They are literally taking a chainsaw to the government when they should be using a scalpel," Pasquino said. "This is not what I imagined when President Trump stated that he was going to change the government and make the government more efficient."BI spoke to 10 current and former federal workers, offering some anonymity to speak freely without retribution. Some who are still employed said they voted for Trump with the hopes that he would deliver on his campaign promises, but the constant threats to their careers and villainizing of their coworkers have led them to regret it."I feel betrayed. This is not what I wanted, to let everybody lose their job," a Veterans Affairs employee who voted for Trump twice told BI. "You're fired. You're fired. You're fired. This is not 'The Apprentice.'"Others said they continue to support Trump and his mission to cut government waste. The overwhelming message was that they did not cast a vote for Musk."I don't like Elon Musk," a VA employee said. "I don't want him meddling into my business. He's not the president. Trump is."Harrison Fields, the White House's principal deputy press secretary, told BI that Trump "returned to Washington with a mandate from the American people to bring about unprecedented change in our federal government to uproot waste, fraud, and abuse.""This isn't easy to do in a broken system entrenched in bureaucracy and bloat, but it's a task long overdue," Fields said. "The personal financial situation of every American is top of mind for the President, which is why he's working to cut regulations, reshore jobs, lower taxes, and make government more efficient."Elon Musk is 'not the president'Musk's role as the unofficial head of DOGE has confounded voters and lawmakers across the aisle who did not anticipate the influence he would have over the Trump administration. He has appeared in the Oval Office alongside Trump, speaking to reporters. His ideas posted on X have translated into official emails from the Office of Personnel Management, and he's even met with world leaders."We didn't vote for him. We voted for Trump," the VA employee said, adding, "That pisses me off right there."An employee at the National Weather Service told BI that they "actually admire" what Musk has accomplished at SpaceX and Tesla, but "private business is completely different than the government."While private companies focus on profit, the employee told BI, "The public sector does way more than worry about money and being efficient.""We have lives to save and functions to perform that don't necessarily make money but are extremely important nonetheless," this person said.Musk has continued to defend hisdial back Musk's role in the White House. Trump told reporters in the Oval Office last week that while he thinks Musk is doing "an amazing job," he wants his Cabinet member to take the lead on cutting government waste.'I voted for something totally different'Marcia, 67, is another Trump voter who was fired from her federal job, and she said she feels "extremely let down.""He was going to make prices lower. He was going to make gas cheaper. He was going to help the middle-class people in America," Marcia, who is seeking to reinstate her position, said.The National Weather Service employee said that they voted for Trump because they wanted the country to return to how things were in 2019. Instead, they said, "This is just the most toxic environment I've ever seen."The employee described feeling "hoodwinked" by the president. During the campaign, this person said that they trusted Trump when he said he had nothing to do with Project 2025, the conservative blueprint authored by the Heritage Foundation. Among other things, Project 2025 described breaking up the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, which houses the National Weather Service.Following the election, Trump nominated Russell Vought, a key architect of Project 2025, to lead the White House's Office of Management and Budget."I said, 'I'll believe Trump, he won't do everything in there,'" the National Weather Service worker said, "but then all of a sudden, everything is starting to come true."The VA worker said the administration is not using their vote to fulfill the promises that won them over."I voted for something totally different, for the economy and the border, the immigration control," the worker said, "I did not vote for him to go in and bully the federal government and start firing people for no reason."Marcia said she felt confident in her vote back in November because of Trump's promises to boost the economy and crack down on border policy. But if she knew then what she knows now, she would never have cast that vote."I've been a Republican all my life, and this is the first time that a Republican president misled me," Marcia said "If I knew I was going to lose my job because Trump became president, no, I would not vote for him."Some still support the cuts even if more are comingSome federal workers who voted for Trump don't feel the same sense of betrayal. One of those workers said that they "fully support DOGE auditing and finding fraud in the system.""If the agency doesn't need them, then why are they there?" the worker said. BI also previously spoke to Trump-supporting federal workers who said that while they didn't fully stand by Trump's approach to the federal workforce, they support his mission to reduce government waste."I think overall we're going to end up better off with him as a president," one of the workers said.Another worker who is broadly supportive of Trump and DOGE's mission said that job cuts, should they come to their agency, would "definitely be hard on my family." Going into the election, they knew that positions could be cut. Even so, they added, "I believe if we are going to continue funding essential services like Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, education, and infrastructure we have to cut spending in a massive way."More federal terminations are likely coming; the Office of Personnel Management asked all agencies to submit reorganization plans by March 13. It's leaving workers in limbo, wondering if they'll be next on the chopping block and for those who voted for the president, a particularly bitter taste in their mouths.The National Weather Service worker said the cuts aren't prompting the efficiency within agencies that DOGE intended."There is anxiety, there is shock, and also that feeling where they just don't trust us to do our jobs," they said. "DOGE wants us to be as effective as we can be, yet they're distracting us with all these threats."Have a tip? Contact these reporters via Signal at asheffey.97, neinbinder.70, aalt.19, or julianakaplan.33, or via email at asheffey@businessinsider.com, neinbinder@businessinsider.com, aaltchek@businessinsider.com, or jkaplan@businessinsider.com. Use a personal email address and a nonwork device; here's our guide to sharing information securely.
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