I think that some of the people graduating from school think that they are entitled to a job. They forget that the employer owns the job, not the other way around. I hire you to do something that I want done, you prove to me that you will be the best for me to make more money for my company, to advance the business. It is not my job to provide employment, it is my job to make money, that that money I expand my business, expand my work force. And if I am in the business of making switches for the electrical grid, I have NO NEED for someone with a degree in woman's studies.
Also these idiots need to realize that anytime they advocate taxing evil cooporations, they are taking money away from profits and job creation. but they do not see that.
I'm a recent college graduate myself, and I hear a lot of that from my former classmates - bemoaning the fact that there aren't jobs available for people with impractical liberal-arts degrees. It's bullsh*t - they're not getting jobs because they're either too lazy to do the legwork, or they don't know how to interview, or else that entitlement attitude must come out pretty strong during the interview process.
I live in Rhode Island, a state that's consistently in the top 5 for unemployment rates, and with nothing but a fresh degree in math and philosophy, and the work experience I got while putting myself through college, I landed myself a permenant position with the biggest company in the state - and I was only interviewing for a temporary position, mind you, but I was offered a permenant position right off the bat.
If those sniveling, whining, Obama-voting children would drop the entitlement attitude, realize that nobody owes them anything, and come to grips with the fact that a piece of paper doesn't mean they don't have to start from the bottom and work their way up, they'd be gainfully employed by now too.