Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $58,798
72%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 72%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: livingwithparents

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  • America has failed millennials so badly they’re turning to $1,000-per-month side hustles to make ends meet.

    06/13/2023 8:27:45 PM PDT · by anthropocene_x · 41 replies
    Yahoo finance ^ | Tue, June 13, 2023 | Chloe Berger
    As many as two in five adults in the U.S. have a side hustle, according to a recent Bankrate survey of 2,500-plus adults, backing up LendingTree data from earlier this year that found side gigs are up by 13% over the past two years and recent Deloitte data that found more millennials and Gen Zers are adding on part-time jobs. Younger workers are more likely to need an extra job: 53% of Gen Zers and half of millennials have one, Bankrate finds, compared to only 40% of Gen Xers and 24% of baby boomers. It's a reflection of the state...
  • White #BlackLivesMatter Boston Protesters Found Living with Parents in Luxury Mansions

    01/18/2015 3:21:33 PM PST · by servo1969 · 56 replies
    The Gateway Pundit ^ | 1-18-2015 | Kristinn Taylor
    Screen grab by TurtleBoySports.comBoston reporters went to the homes of several Boston area protesters who were arrested for blocking highways on Thursday. What they found were adult children playing revolutionary while living with their rich parents. A reporter for WBZ-TV, Ken MacLeod was run off a property while seeking to interview protesters. At another he was told he was harassing the protester he was seeking to interview by ringing her apartment call box. “WBZ-TV’s Ken MacLeod went to (Mark) Schwaller’s apartment in Jamaica Plain hoping for some perspective. He didn’t get that but he did get tossed by another man...
  • Economy Is Forcing Young Adults Back Home in Big Numbers, Survey Finds

    11/24/2009 5:18:38 AM PST · by reaganaut1 · 31 replies · 1,107+ views
    New York Times ^ | November 24, 2009 | Sam Roberts
    For more young adults, there is no place like home for the holidays, and for the rest of the year, too. Ten percent of adults younger than 35 told the Pew Research Center that they had moved back in with their parents because of the recession. They also blamed the economy for other lifestyle decisions. Twelve percent had gotten a roommate to share expenses. Fifteen percent said they had postponed getting married, and 14 percent said they had delayed having a baby. In the Pew study, 13 percent of parents with grown children said one of their adult sons or...