More U.S. Workers Fear Technology Making Their Jobs Obsolete Lydia Saad, Gallup Fear of becoming obsolete, or FOBO, remains uncommon among U.S. workers, but it has grown more in the past two years than at any time in Gallup's trend since 2017. Twenty-two percent now say they worry that technology will make their job obsolete, up seven percentage points from the prior reading in 2021. The recent rise in people’s concern about their job becoming obsolete is owing almost entirely to college-educated workers, among whom the percentage worried has jumped from 8% to 20%.
Voters Feel Better About the Economy, but Few Credit Biden, Polls Find Tarini Parti & David Harrison, Wall Street Journal Most Americans disapprove of president’s economic policy, posing a challenge to his re-election Americans back most U.S. steps for Ukraine as Republicans grow more split CBS News Big majorities of Americans continue to support economic sanctions on Russia and sending aid and supplies to Ukraine. A smaller majority also would keep sending weapons. Republicans have become more resistant to sending aid, which they favored back in February, and they have become more opposed to sending weapons, specifically. And most of them say the administration should generally be doing less to help Ukraine.
Age and elected office: Concerns about performance outweigh benefits of experience CBS News In the eyes of Americans, age brings experience and seniority in elected office, but that's outweighed by concerns that elected officials might be "out of touch" or unable to do the job past the age of 75.