all right, tonight, we re takinga i closer look at what s being called the great resignation. 4.3 million americans quit their jobs in august alone. that s actually a record. the biggest reason: burnout. and rather than complain about the boss, thousands have become one by starting their own companies. here s cbs mark strassmann. reporter: nick folmar had pandemic panic, furloughed by his janitorial company 13 months ago when no one else was hiring. if i m going to have something, i m going to have to create it. hi, i m nicholas. reporter: folmar gambled with his family s savings to start jet stream clean, his carpet cleaning business along the alabama-georgia border. how has it paid off? well, i ve doubled my money, and my salary. reporter: doubled? doubled. reporter: cod amca has become a nation of quitters, job quitters. millions of workers, like folmar, leaving the job market for good, often to become their
nadir soofi. i m joined by our reporter in phoenix and pete williams with me in washington. miguel, first to you. let s talk about their background, who these men were. how they became radicalized. were they inspired by al bag gaddy, isis or other al baghdadi isis or other acolytes in the u.s.? reporter: good afternoon. folks who live here say they appeared normal, the suspects in sunday s shooting appeared normal. they lived inside this apartment behind me together for several months if not years together. they also were trying to run a dry cleaning or carpet cleaning business from inside their home. they were seen at the local mosque several times over a span of about ten years. there was no indication that they had been radicalized and that neighbors and friends say they seemed to appear normal. folks that went to high school with mr. simpson said that he showed no signs of being radicalized until they lost
he was eventually convicted of lying to authorities in 2011 and simpson s family lived here in the phoenix area. they released a statement saying they sent their prayers to everyone affected by the shooting. they also emphasized that they had no knowledge, no knowledge of simpson s plan. they are heart broken and struggling to find out how this happened. the family of the other accused shooter expressed similar feelings. he was from texas and he moved to phoenix and most recently operated a carpet cleaning business here in the phoenix area. his mother who still lives in texas said soufi prayed 5 times a day. he had an 8-year-old son. he was clearly very religious and he was open about it. she, too, is wondering how her son could be convinced to do something like this. as you ve been mentioning they both lived here in that apartment in phoenix. the fbi raided that apartment yesterday. we know they took two vehicles from that apartment, but they have not revealed any details about what t
coffee spilled on her lap. anonymously rating companies on-line, have you ever done that? a poor decision could change the rules. diane macedo joins us with more on that. virginia appeals court ruled the site must reveal the identities of critical reviews of a carpet cleaning business. they argued the critiques were fraudulent because the users posting them under the description of the service they received didn t match up with the customer data base. they issued a subpoena for the names of 7 of the anonymous critics. they say yelp has to comply. he writes the opinion generally a yeltp review is protected because it s an opinion about a business they patronized. they can express themselves without the fear that anonymity will be pierced. it goes on to say the first amendment does not protect the