FTR
I had student loans. I worked my ass off, scrimped & saved, and sometimes went hungry, but I paid them off.
According to the GOP, I'm supposed to resent seeing others have an easier time because their loans are forgiven .
That says a lot more about the GOP than about me.
Message to govt: forgive these damned loans. Fix this broken system. An educated/trained, thriving populace is in everyone's best interests.
@BrazenlyLiberal I have to disagree. A couple millennials in my family actually think they should live rent and mortgage free. They're incensed at having to pay for shelter! Giving them a pass on money nobody forced them to take seems like reinforcing some really dumb idioms they seem to hold. My neighbor's daughter is in her 20's now. Works p/t lives home. What's the endgame? She wouldn't be able to pay upkeep and taxes if they gave it to her.
Surely you're not saying a few young people you know are representative of student loan debt? From Forbes:
"...people carry their education debt well into middle-age and beyond. Borrowers ages 35 to 49 owe more than $620 billion in student loans. This cohort has the highest number of borrowers who owe more than $100,000 in loans.
Even retirees feel the pressure from student loans; there are 2.4 million borrowers aged 62 or older that owe $98 billion in student loans."
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@BrazenlyLiberal It's really quite simple, don't borrow what you can't pay back. Don't buy a car or home you can't afford. I would support giving these humans 0% loan but not free money.
No, it's not that simple. For one, getting the training/education that racks up that debt is very often the entry fee to the job market. A degree too often means the difference between getting an entry level job or not - even a degree in an unrelated field.
Perhaps the thing to consider is not the benefits of free money but rather those of free/affordable education.
@BrazenlyLiberal Who are you typing to? I made $10,500 gross pay with a professional license and degree in 1980. I didn't make real money till I went back for my bachelor's at a reasonably priced state university paid for by me paying loans.
I was in undergrad from 1985-1989. My dad was an engineer and my mom a school teacher. Their combined income was less than $50,000. Too much for financial aid. I worked full time at $4/hr and was able to afford my tuition and housing at a SUNY school w/o a student loan.
Three of my kids attend public college in Virginia. it is $33K per year in state! Undoable at even $15/hr!
Even trade schools are costly and many require loans.
It's an unsustainable model.
@BrazenlyLiberal @MidnightRider
@ChippySuave @BrazenlyLiberal It's not unsustainable though, it's who can pay! And isn't that the USA in a nutshell? We're just going back to my parent's youth where rich people go to school. Doesn't VA have a grant system you achieve X grade and tuition is free? I get what you're saying completely but look at NY since you brought it up. You think 11,500 property tax on a $350,000 dollar house is sustainable? How do you retire? Who's going to pay for free school? Because it won't be the rich.