This just in..
From Ron Armstrong at Stand Up Michigan
Great news today! We know this will end up in court, but a HUGE first step!
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Secure MI Vote Applauds Board of State Canvassers For Denying Ballot Access to Promote the Vote
Flawed Proposal Violated Constitution in Attempt to Amend
Lansing, MI – Today the Board of State Canvassers deadlocked 2-2 while considering the constitutional amendment put forward by the leftist group Promote the Vote. In order to be approved for the ballot, a proposal must receive a majority vote, including at least one vote from a member from both political parties. Now the proposal will not appear on the state ballot this fall absent intervention from Michigan courts. Secure MI Vote released the following statement after the Board’s actions:
“Michigan’s Constitution has strict rules that must be followed before a proposed amendment can be put before the voters, and Promote the Vote violated those rules,” said Secure MI Vote Spokesman Jamie Roe. “This proposal would render meaningless Article 2, Section 2 of the Michigan Constitution and voters who were asked to sign the petition were not told this fact. Worse yet, the elimination of this provision would allow convicted and incarcerated felons to vote in our elections. Rapists, armed robbers, drug dealers, and home invaders would now be able to vote while still in prison. Murderers would be able to vote, while their victims remain silenced. If voters had been made aware of that fact it is highly unlikely they would have signed the petition.”
“If this terrible proposal were adopted it would not only let murderers vote from prison, it would also make certain that no voter in our state would ever have to show a government issued photo identification before voting and give special interests a constitutional right to fund aspects of government run election administration that benefits their interests. Simply put, this terrible proposal does not belong in our state constitution, and the canvassers got it right in denying it a place on the ballot,” Roe concluded.
I know we’ve been here before..
But we’re hearing reports that a deal could be announced as early as this afternoon..
Here’s the scoop https://x.com/mrjustinbarclay/status/2057551279757332682?s=46&t=wRUm6BNvraSxZtoI6bfA7g
The AI Economy is Rewriting the American Dream — Blue-Collar Workers Are Poised to Win
In the postwar era, the path to the middle class seemed straightforward: earn a four-year college degree, land an entry-level office job, and climb the corporate ladder. But as artificial intelligence accelerates across corporate America, that bargain is fracturing. A new CNBC report highlights a striking shift: hiring slowdowns for young college graduates in AI-exposed fields, while demand surges for skilled tradespeople to build the physical backbone of the AI boom.0
The College Grad Crunch
AI is proving especially disruptive at the entry level. Tools that act like “an infinite supply of 21-year-old interns” are absorbing tasks once assigned to new hires in marketing, legal, accounting, HR, IT, and software development. Research from Stanford’s Digital Economy Lab shows early-career workers in high-AI-exposure roles saw 16% slower employment growth. Census Bureau data points to a 12-15% decline in hiring for young workers in finance, insurance, and professional services since ChatGPT’s launch.
Unemployment for recent grads (ages 22-27) has ticked up, and major firms are rethinking large recruiting classes. JPMorgan’s chief analytics officer noted a potential “rightsizing” and a future where new employees manage AI systems rather than perform the foundational work themselves.
AT&T CEO John Stankey captured the mood: society has overemphasized college degrees while shortages grow in critical hands-on roles.
Blue-Collar Boom: Building the AI Infrastructure
Meanwhile, the AI revolution is creating massive demand for workers who “get their hands dirty.” Data centers, fiber networks, chip factories, and related infrastructure represent what Nvidia’s Jensen Huang calls “the largest infrastructure buildout in human history.”
In places like Dayton, Ohio suburbs, AT&T is actively recruiting and training skilled trades workers rather than relying on fresh college grads.
What This Means for the Future
The AI economy isn’t eliminating work—it’s reordering it. College degrees still offer strong lifetime returns for many, but the entry-level white-collar gateway is narrowing. Skilled trades, often overlooked in recent decades, are seeing renewed respect, better pay, and abundant opportunities.2
This shift challenges long-held assumptions about the American Dream. As Stankey noted, we’ve undervalued trades like HVAC, electrical, and technical work even as education costs soared. The winners in the AI era may be those willing to embrace hands-on careers that power the digital future.
For young people navigating this landscape, the message is clear: diversify your skill set. Technical certifications, apprenticeships, and trade training could prove as valuable—or more—than a traditional diploma in the years ahead. The AI boom is here, and it’s building bridges to a new kind of opportunity.