In her second semester at a predominantly white institution, Robyn Smith decided to transfer to a historically Black school. A tuition increase prompted Arthur Wells to switch from a four-year university to a two-year college. For Amara Jackson, the coronavirus pandemic was behind a late-summer decision to stay in Chicago for her freshman year, since classes were going to be online anyway. .
by Tyler Durden
Time is officially no longer on the side of millennials.
In almost every way measurable , millennials are up against the clock to build wealth - and are losing ground, according to a new Bloomberg report.
The report speculates that if a Covid recovery is even legitimately going to happen (which we take with a large grain of salt), that it may be the last chance for those around the age of 40 to build the wealth they will need for their later years.
But most millennials, instead of basking in an incredible recovery and acutely focusing on re-bulding (or building for their first time) their finances, feel like 40 year old Kellie Beach, a real-estate attorney. She rode out the pandemic like most Americans:
2020 was supposed to be an exciting year for women’s lacrosse players at Cass Technical High School in Detroit. Last spring, after a year of preparing and