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Welcome to the Era of Career Fog, Where Workers Feel Paralyzed

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Unhappy worker in an officeNew Africa / Shutterstock.com

For many workers, career dissatisfaction isn’t loud or dramatic. It shows up as uncertainty, hesitation, and a lingering sense of being off track without knowing how to course-correct. New national survey data from MyPerfectResume suggests this feeling has become widespread. More than half of U.S. workers say they lack clarity about their long-term career direction, and most have questioned…

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POWDER KEG EUROPE: Serbian President Vučić Says Explosives Were Found Near a Pipeline Carrying Gas From Russia to Serbia and Hungary

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Serbian president Aleksandar Vučić

Serbia in the eye of the storm.

While the eyes of the world are fixated on the developing crisis in the Middle East, Europe is still getting more dangerous by the day, with an energy crisis worsening the socio-political mess and the divisions over the war in Ukraine.

In this context, countries that lead independent foreign policies, like Serbia, are under relentless pressure.

Today, Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić came out publicly to disclose that explosives were found near a pipeline that carries gas from Russia to Serbia and Hungary.

Euronews reported:

“Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić announced on Sunday morning that army and police found explosives that had been placed near a pipeline that carries gas to Serbia and Hungary.

He said that ‘two large packages of explosives with detonators’ were found inside backpacks in northern Serbia’s Kanjiza, ‘a few hundred meters from the gas pipeline’.

The Balkan Stream pipeline is an extension of the TurkStream pipeline, and transfers Russian gas to both Serbia and Hungary.”

Vučić provided no details on who placed the explosives near the gas pipeline, or why – but the inference is clear: the Ukrainian regime of Volodymyr Zelensky is widely seen as working to disrupt the pipelines carrying cheap Russian oil and gas.

Vučić said there were ‘certain traces’ which he would not elaborate on.

“The latest news comes at a time when the integrity of gas pipeline infrastructure has been in the headlines. The Soviet-era Druzhba pipeline, a separate pipeline that carries Russian oil to Hungary and Slovakia, has been the cause of a dispute between Hungary and Ukraine.”

Read more:

EU Threatens European Leaders That Participate in Russia’s May 9th ‘Victory Day’ Celebration – Slovak PM Fico Says ‘No One Can Stop Him From Going’ – Serbia’s Vucic Is Pressured to Skip Event

The post POWDER KEG EUROPE: Serbian President Vučić Says Explosives Were Found Near a Pipeline Carrying Gas From Russia to Serbia and Hungary appeared first on The Gateway Pundit.

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7 Refunds You’re Probably Owed Right Now (and How to Claim Each One)

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Johnson / Money Talks News

Here’s a number that should make you both furious and curious: approximately 1 in 7 people in the U.S. have unclaimed cash or property waiting to be claimed, according to the National Association of Unclaimed Property Administrators (NAUPA). That’s not a typo: 1 in 7. And it gets worse. In fiscal year 2024, states returned over $4.49 billion to owners — meaning billions more are still sitting in…

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Half of U.S. Workers Now Use AI at Work — 5 Moves to Make Before You’re the One Replaced

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Johnson / Money Talks News

The artificial intelligence split is here — and it’s already showing up in paychecks. If you still think AI at work is tomorrow’s problem, you haven’t looked at the numbers. A new Gallup Workforce survey of over 23,000 U.S. employees, conducted in February 2026, found that roughly half of American workers now use AI on the job at least occasionally. About 13% use it every single day.

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