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RE: You can't, rationally, say its wrong unless YOU have

Posted on: August 12, 2025 at 10:52:36 CT
Ace UNC
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U.S. layoffs surged in July to their highest level since the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In July, there were 62,075 job cuts announced, according to a report by outplacement firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas. That's a 29 percent jump from June and 140 percent higher than the 25,885 announced in July 2024.

The July figure is well above the post-pandemic average for the month (23,584 between 2021 and 2024) and slightly higher than the past decade's July average of 60,398. It pushes the 2025 total to 806,383 layoffs—a 75 percent increase compared with the same period last year and already 6 percent higher than all of 2024. It's the highest January-to-July figure since 2020, when pandemic shutdowns drove layoffs above 1.8 million.

The surge in layoffs in 2025 is due to a mix of government downsizing, corporate restructuring and the growing effects of artificial intelligence. Public agencies, tech firms and retailers are leading the cuts.

"We are seeing the federal budget cuts implemented by DOGE impact nonprofits and health care in addition to the government. AI was cited for over 10,000 cuts last month, and tariff concerns have impacted nearly 6,000 jobs this year," said Andrew Challenger, a senior vice president and labor expert at Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

The majority of layoffs this year have been from the federal government—a total of 292,294 since the year started—as President Donald Trump's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) continues its mission to scale down the size of numerous agencies. There have also been knock-on effects for contractors and organizations reliant on public funding, which the report calls the "DOGE Downstream Impact."

Private sector cuts have been concentrated in industries under structural pressure. Technology and telecom firms are reducing head count as they shift investment toward AI and cloud infrastructure. Retailers have been hit by softer discretionary spending, higher costs and changing consumer habits, prompting store closures. Other sectors above historical layoff norms include finance, business services and transportation, where companies are scaling back capacity after pandemic-era expansions.

Economic conditions—including inflation, shifting demand and global uncertainty—have been cited in more than 170,000 job cuts so far this year. Business restructuring, store or plant closures, and bankruptcies have also played a major role.

https://www.newsweek.com/us-hits-highest-layoffs-since-covid-2111794
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MESSAGE THREAD

Am hearing - Ace UNC - 8/12 10:09:11
     Trump should be impeached - mu7176grad MU - 8/12 11:32:27
          That's the least of what should happen(nm) - Seagull MU - 8/12 12:06:13
     Less govt employees thank goodness (nm) - DollarSigns MU - 8/12 10:35:49
          Which leads to more contractors - DC Jayhawk KU - 8/12 10:50:44
               Goodbye unionized govt employees. Thank goodness(nm) - DollarSigns MU - 8/12 10:57:39
               Reagan and Clinton fooled people then, and Trump is still - Ace UNC - 8/12 10:56:02
                    The Golden Age is upon you injun(nm) - DollarSigns MU - 8/12 11:00:58
     Public agencies are leading the cuts - Spanky KU - 8/12 10:34:28
     You didn't hear it, but read it at a leftist X site, - MU Diaspora MU - 8/12 10:16:11
          You can't, rationally, say its wrong unless YOU have - GA Tiger MU - 8/12 10:30:23
               The burden of proof is not on me. nm - MU Diaspora MU - 8/12 11:00:58
               RE: You can't, rationally, say its wrong unless YOU have - Ace UNC - 8/12 10:52:36
                    ^^Didn't read the article^^ - Spanky KU - 8/12 10:59:24
               Here you go - Spanky KU - 8/12 10:34:56
                    Thanks for info. I was overly harsh with MUD. I only - GA Tiger MU - 8/12 10:50:49
                         Trump is far better than Biden or Harris - Spanky KU - 8/12 10:54:19
          Maybe he uses the Accessibility features to read the website - TigerMatt STL - 8/12 10:29:55




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