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Americans already reacting to Biden's reported student loan handout plan: 'Highly suspicious'


LumRaiderFan

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21 hours ago, Big girl said:

The way interest is accrued is criminal . Someone I know know borrowed 20 000. Ten years later she owes 18,000

 

 

 

If you don't want the debt, don't borrow the money.  It's not my fault that other people get loans.  And it's not my responsibility to pay for these loans either!  BigGirl -- the way the world works is I pay for mine and you pay for yours.  Might want to pass that on to your friend!

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50 minutes ago, Unwoke said:

Biden has no legislative authority to forgive student loans. This is all to help democrats in the mid terms because this regime has sucked badly in doing what’s good for this country. They’re are Just trying to pick up more low information voters. 

Trump stopped student loan payments and lowered the interest to 0% - Where was your outrage then? 

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23 minutes ago, Reagan said:

If you don't want the debt, don't borrow the money.  It's not my fault that other people get loans.  And it's not my responsibility to pay for these loans either!  BigGirl -- the way the world works is I pay for mine and you pay for yours.  Might want to pass that on to your friend!

Big girl is a Democrat.  Democrats always want mine to pay for theirs.  They don’t more free stuff, to them, coming their way.

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43 minutes ago, Reagan said:

What's interesting is that you scour the anti-consevative/Republican websites to find stuff like this (is it actually true?), but fail to have an opinion on the following:  1)  Who's going to pay for this "loan forgiveness?"  2)  It's clearly ILLEGAL what JoeBama has done.  So, no, you are not unbiased.  You have an leftist agenda!  

You don't know my political affiliation - You assume you know because I give you examples of what Trump and other Republican's have done and are doing and you say nothing, as soon as a Democrat has done or did you come here and blast them.  It looks a lot like BLIND LOYALITY.   

IMO - A lot of you on here do not hold the party you affiliate with (Rep & Dem) accountable for the waste and the things they have done wrong, but you're very quick to jump on the opposite party for similar things.  That's hypocritical.  

 

 

 

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4 hours ago, LumRaiderFan said:

Absolutely, I don't agree with the plan either but I would grab any opportunity to get MY money back from the government. 

bingo.  while it played no part in our decision to adopt, by adopting "at-risk" kids we've gotten tons of financial help/incentives from the government, I do understand the financial incentivization to encourage the adoption of kids who are difficult to place. While the help seems excessive at times, I'm certainly not giving any of it back, as I feel as though I've put plenty in over the years.   

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39 minutes ago, Bobcat1 said:

Trump stopped student loan payments and lowered the interest to 0% - Where was your outrage then? 

Again you must be referring to when State Governors shut businesses down due to the plandemic, an taking away peoples ability to make a living. 
 

What’s there to be outraged about? You take away someone’s ability to make a living an expect them to pull money out of there rear to pay bills. He paused it with no accrued interest. That’s was the right thing to do in that situation imo. 
 

He didn’t eliminate the debt he paused it. There were many mortgage companies, car lenders, and other businesses that gave extensions on paying them to help people out.

 

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When I graduated high school I had been accepted to UT, Tech, and a couple of other smaller schools.  My grades and SAT scores were good enough to get into just about anywhere I wanted, but not quite good enough to get the insane amounts of scholarships needed to avoid taking out massive student loans.  I chose to live at home for a year, going to Lamar.  I worked and saved money, and the scholarships I had received covered my tuition at the much cheaper school.  After a year I transferred to East Texas Baptist University to join the soccer team (and to follow a gf).  Tuition + room and board was about 6.5K a semester when I started (still very affordable compared to other schools).  My parents helped as much as they could, I worked 30 hours a week, and I still had a few small scholarships that helped out.  My junior year tuition went up to $8K.  Before my senior year my fiancee and I realized that if we moved up our wedding a year we'd qualify for grants that we wouldn't have to pay back, so we went for it.  My tuition dropped to $1200 my last two semesters, hers to $1800.  I didn't borrow a penny.  Would going to UT have been awesome?  Yes it would have.  But you know what was more awesome? Starting my grownup life with zero debt. 

I did not work my butt off and make smart financial decisions so that I could one day help dumb college graduates pay for the "full college experience".  Please explain to me why there are people out there taking out $100K in loans to not only get meaningless degrees (I've known about 10 kids graduate with psychology degrees in the last 5 years, but none of them are using their degrees), but also MEANINGFUL degrees in professions that don't pay well.  For example, if someone is dumb enough to go spend 200K on a teaching degree to enter a field that, while worthwhile and important, does not pay well at all, why the heck should they receive loan forgiveness for making dumb decisions?  If you live close enough to commute to Lamar, even with today's inflated prices you can get a 4-year degree for $14,000.  If you instead decide you want to incur massive student loans to pay for a $140,000 degree from Texas, I'd say it's up to you to find a job when you get out that will pay enough for you to take care of your own incurred expenses.

If the government wants to fix this problem, the answer is not forfeiting hundreds of billions of dollars in student loans in increments that will only be a drop in the bucket for many anyway.  I've seen significant research that shows after these loan payoffs it will only take 4 years for the amount of student loan debt to make it back to where it is currently.  What's the point?  The answer is regulation of college tuition and room and board costs.  An in-state student pays $25K a semester for room and board + tuition at UT. It's 30K a semester to go to baylor.  A&M is $26K a semester in-state.  All of these schools are over $50K for a non-Texas resident per semester.  These schools have anywhere from 30,000-50,000 students.  We're talking profits in the billions.  The primary purpose of colleges should not be money making.  That is the real issue.  But even still, I don't feel any different about someone who chooses to pay too much for a degree than I do for someone who ends up upside down on a vehicle note because they make 50K a year but "need" an 80K truck.  Make responsible decisions, and don't expect the country to help you out when you don't.

 

 

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13 minutes ago, bullets13 said:

When I graduated high school I had been accepted to UT, Tech, and a couple of other smaller schools.  My grades and SAT scores were good enough to get into just about anywhere I wanted, but not quite good enough to get the insane amounts of scholarships needed to avoid taking out massive student loans.  I chose to live at home for a year, going to Lamar.  I worked and saved money, and the scholarships I had received covered my tuition at the much cheaper school.  After a year I transferred to East Texas Baptist University to join the soccer team (and to follow a gf).  Tuition + room and board was about 6.5K a semester when I started (still very affordable compared to other schools).  My parents helped as much as they could, I worked 30 hours a week, and I still had a few small scholarships that helped out.  My junior year tuition went up to $8K.  Before my senior year my fiancee and I realized that if we moved up our wedding a year we'd qualify for grants that we wouldn't have to pay back, so we went for it.  My tuition dropped to $1200 my last two semesters, hers to $1800.  I didn't borrow a penny.  Would going to UT have been awesome?  Yes it would have.  But you know what was more awesome? Starting my grownup life with zero debt. 

I did not work my butt off and make smart financial decisions so that I could one day help dumb college graduates pay for the "full college experience".  Please explain to me why there are people out there taking out $100K in loans to not only get meaningless degrees (I've known about 10 kids graduate with psychology degrees in the last 5 years, but none of them are using their degrees), but also MEANINGFUL degrees in professions that don't pay well.  For example, if someone is dumb enough to go spend 200K on a teaching degree to enter a field that, while worthwhile and important, does not pay well at all, why the heck should they receive loan forgiveness for making dumb decisions?  If you live close enough to commute to Lamar, even with today's inflated prices you can get a 4-year degree for $14,000.  If you instead decide you want to incur massive student loans to pay for a $140,000 degree from Texas, I'd say it's up to you to find a job when you get out that will pay enough for you to take care of your own incurred expenses.

If the government wants to fix this problem, the answer is not forfeiting hundreds of billions of dollars in student loans in increments that will only be a drop in the bucket for many anyway.  I've seen significant research that shows after these loan payoffs it will only take 4 years for the amount of student loan debt to make it back to where it is currently.  What's the point?  The answer is regulation of college tuition and room and board costs.  An in-state student pays $25K a semester for room and board + tuition at UT. It's 30K a semester to go to baylor.  A&M is $26K a semester in-state.  All of these schools are over $50K for a non-Texas resident per semester.  These schools have anywhere from 30,000-50,000 students.  We're talking profits in the billions.  The primary purpose of colleges should not be money making.  That is the real issue.  But even still, I don't feel any different about someone who chooses to pay too much for a degree than I do for someone who ends up upside down on a vehicle note because they make 50K a year but need an 80K truck.  Make responsible decisions, and don't expect the country to help you out when you don't.

 

 

I know we rarely agree on anything Bullets13 but I admire your sound financial decisions in getting your college degree. We’ll Done! You should be proud of yourself.

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1 hour ago, bullets13 said:

bingo.  while it played no part in our decision to adopt, by adopting "at-risk" kids we've gotten tons of financial help/incentives from the government, I do understand the financial incentivization to encourage the adoption of kids who are difficult to place. While the help seems excessive at times, I'm certainly not giving any of it back, as I feel as though I've put plenty in over the years.   

Very admirable. I couldn’t manage it. My kids are grown and the granddaughter is more than I can handle. 

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9 minutes ago, CardinalBacker said:

I mean, we all knew this was coming whenever the federal government took over college lending in 2010 under Obama.  

The whole situation is stupid.  The working man is literally paying for kids to go to school and be indoctrinated by leftist professors. I don't see how this ends well.  

You are right:  Socialism is ALWAYS good for those that are on the receiving end!  But never good for those on the giving end!

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1 hour ago, bullets13 said:

When I graduated high school I had been accepted to UT, Tech, and a couple of other smaller schools.  My grades and SAT scores were good enough to get into just about anywhere I wanted, but not quite good enough to get the insane amounts of scholarships needed to avoid taking out massive student loans.  I chose to live at home for a year, going to Lamar.  I worked and saved money, and the scholarships I had received covered my tuition at the much cheaper school.  After a year I transferred to East Texas Baptist University to join the soccer team (and to follow a gf).  Tuition + room and board was about 6.5K a semester when I started (still very affordable compared to other schools).  My parents helped as much as they could, I worked 30 hours a week, and I still had a few small scholarships that helped out.  My junior year tuition went up to $8K.  Before my senior year my fiancee and I realized that if we moved up our wedding a year we'd qualify for grants that we wouldn't have to pay back, so we went for it.  My tuition dropped to $1200 my last two semesters, hers to $1800.  I didn't borrow a penny.  Would going to UT have been awesome?  Yes it would have.  But you know what was more awesome? Starting my grownup life with zero debt. 

I did not work my butt off and make smart financial decisions so that I could one day help dumb college graduates pay for the "full college experience".  Please explain to me why there are people out there taking out $100K in loans to not only get meaningless degrees (I've known about 10 kids graduate with psychology degrees in the last 5 years, but none of them are using their degrees), but also MEANINGFUL degrees in professions that don't pay well.  For example, if someone is dumb enough to go spend 200K on a teaching degree to enter a field that, while worthwhile and important, does not pay well at all, why the heck should they receive loan forgiveness for making dumb decisions?  If you live close enough to commute to Lamar, even with today's inflated prices you can get a 4-year degree for $14,000.  If you instead decide you want to incur massive student loans to pay for a $140,000 degree from Texas, I'd say it's up to you to find a job when you get out that will pay enough for you to take care of your own incurred expenses.

If the government wants to fix this problem, the answer is not forfeiting hundreds of billions of dollars in student loans in increments that will only be a drop in the bucket for many anyway.  I've seen significant research that shows after these loan payoffs it will only take 4 years for the amount of student loan debt to make it back to where it is currently.  What's the point?  The answer is regulation of college tuition and room and board costs.  An in-state student pays $25K a semester for room and board + tuition at UT. It's 30K a semester to go to baylor.  A&M is $26K a semester in-state.  All of these schools are over $50K for a non-Texas resident per semester.  These schools have anywhere from 30,000-50,000 students.  We're talking profits in the billions.  The primary purpose of colleges should not be money making.  That is the real issue.  But even still, I don't feel any different about someone who chooses to pay too much for a degree than I do for someone who ends up upside down on a vehicle note because they make 50K a year but "need" an 80K truck.  Make responsible decisions, and don't expect the country to help you out when you don't.

 

 

B I N G O 

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On 8/25/2022 at 10:17 AM, LumRaiderFan said:

The thread is about forgiving student debt, I’m against it.

Anyone here in favor of it?

Do your best not to bring up Trump, I know it’s hard but try.

This is hilarious on all accounts! Everytime a topic on conald comes up YOU'RE quick to point out Hillary, biden or any D! ROTFL LMMFAO 

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