US Mike Johnson Says Men Need to Stop 'Playing Video Games All Day' and Get to Work: 'They're Draining Resources' - lol. LMFAOYFNFFAFO even.


"Return the dignity of work to young men who need to be at work instead of playing video games all day."​

Morgan Music / Published Apr 11 2025, 1:28 PM EDT

House Speaker Mike Johnson defended cuts to Medicaid, insisting it would "return the dignity of work to young men who need to be at work instead of playing video games all day.”

House Speaker Mike Johnson defended Republican efforts to attach work requirements to Medicaid, suggesting that young American men are wasting their lives "playing video games all day" instead of working.

Johnson's remarks came as House Republicans pushed forward a budget framework that would help finance President Donald Trump's tax cuts, with plans to slash federal spending by trillions. GOP leaders are eyeing $880 billion in reductions to Medicaid, a move critics warn could gut health coverage for millions of low-income Americans.

Johnson attempted to sidestep claims of direct benefit cuts, instead blaming "able-bodied young men" for taking advantage of a program he said was meant for single mothers, the elderly, and people with disabilities.

"They're draining resources from people who actually do [need it]," Johnson said. "So if you clean that up... you save a lot of money and you return the dignity of work to young men who need to be at work instead of playing video games all day."

Despite Johnson's insistence that, "No one has talked about cutting one benefit in Medicaid," the work requirement would threaten health care access for millions, including Americans that are temporarily unemployed after being laid off.

A report from the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities found that as many as 36 million of the 72 million enrolled in Medicaid could be stripped of coverage under work requirements.

Trump has been promised a quick turn around on the bill, putting the pressure on Johnson and House Republicans to make significant cuts that can be rationalized to voters who stand to lose access to services, or—in Johnson's view—video game time.
 
If you actually read beyond the trite boomerisms, he’s talking about…potentially having there be work requirements for Medicaid. Truly harrowing stuff! America will never recover from Mango Mussolini’s reign of terror!
 
If you actually read beyond the trite boomerisms, he’s talking about…potentially having there be work requirements for Medicaid. Truly harrowing stuff! America will never recover from Mango Mussolini’s reign of terror!
Yeah but that’s only ok when it’s the blacks. He wants NEETs to work too!!
 
1. Simplify your resume.

2. Leave dates off any education. That info is a good way for companies to conduct ageism (at both ends), which may prematurely exclude you.
Fair enough, will this work?
2a. Almost no one will ask you about your educational background, not even HR, so don't put it too much effort into thay section of your resume.

3. Only include 10 years of relevant experience.
Okay, sure
4. Don't worry about resume gaps. Tell HR to fuck off if they want an explanation.
So, some jobs do want explanations for those but I usually just put "freelance work" or "end of life caretaking for family"
5. It's a numbers game, so keep your resume somewhat generic (eg - drop aby "Objective" statements).
Will this work? I do have a generic one but I'm told these don't fly any more.
6. Understand that 99% of your applications will be rejected or ignored.

7. When applying on a company website, pop in a few other apps for related jobs since you're already there.
Yeah, that makes sense. I've done this.
8. Most HCM systems (ie - Workday) don't need every field to be filled out, including education and employment history. That info is largely for the HCM provider, too, not the company.
Yeah, There's just a big ATS system so it's kinda a numbers game, right?
9. Learn advanced querying techniques for job boards (ie - boolean search terms and patterns).

10. Lock down answers for basic interview questions.

11. When interviewing, be comfortable with silence. Answer the question and wait.

12. If you land an interview, save the job description locally since jobs can disappear for no reason.

13. Probably more points i cannot recall right now.

I want to rehash the numbers game point. It is. I've had interviews that I thought went really well and led to nothing, but had others that I thought went okay and ended up getting hired. There's no rhyme or reason behind it, so maximize your chances of success by upping your numbers.
You're probably right. I'm just tired because I graduated into covid, went to grad school during covid (no opportunities available), and when I finished in '22, got fucked because every job wants experience+degrees+they also want to feel like you're the right fit and won't bounce. I get told I'm overqualified for Mcjobs, get turned away from entry level office work because of the shitload of competition, and etc.
 
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