SCOTUS on Student Loan 9 - 0

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This is the absolute most divisive administration we have ever seen.

First, Biden blames Republicans for actions HE took that he had no Constitutional right to take.
Now, we have Cardona blabbing about how people got PPP loans and the student loan bail out was struck down.
They refuse to acknowledge that THEY are the ones that gave false hope to borrowers.

Well, the PPP loans happened because the GOVERNMENT closed down and prevented businesses from operating. This was NOT the choice of the businesses.
Student loans WAS the choice of the borrowers. They CHOSE to borrow the money.

Secondly. the PPP loans was an act passed by Congress. Student loan bail out was not.
If Biden wanted to do this right, he should have gone through Congress. He does not have the authority to allocate hundreds of billions of dollars. That is Congress' job.
For someone who has been in politics for 50 years, you would think he would know that.

He is worthless.


Absolutely no one prevented businesses from operating. The PPP was about making sure people had choices if needed. It is too bad the Trump Administration turned it into a feeding at the trough cash cow for their crownies. How about we use the same money but for people to invest in their education/themselves in a way that actually benefits the economy.


What planet do you live on???
Anonymous
The repayment changes were always the much bigger deal in this arrangement. I haven’t read the opinion, but does anyone know if that stays?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


So the loan product should be as available as possible for compete garbage “degrees” and there should be no value associated with administering those loans at all? Yeah, that won’t make “education” any more expensive.

Who is going to cover the cost of administering all these loan programs in the first place.

The whole thing is a complete waste of economic production. It’s asymptotic in its inefficiency. And it starts with people who would otherwise be economically productive going to four years of worthless “university” and getting high and playing Xbox


You’re moving the goalposts.

No one said “available as possible”, no one said garbage degrees. Can you even get federally backed education loans for many of these now defunct for profit worthless degree mills? I didn’t think so.

Someone is administering the loans today. We know what those costs look like. Like any other agency they have levers they can adjust to combat costs. I just don’t believe they should be raking it in. The CEO of Navient (fka Sallie Mae) made over $8million last year.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This afternoon's breaking news from president Biden is more B.S. The fact that it isn't immediate cancellation proves that this is just more theater. Again giving the "opposition" time to game plan and shoot down cancellation. They're all in cahoots. This will stretch into the midterms next year. We need to take back the House, THEN we'll do some cancellation! We promise!



HE DOESN"T HAVE THE AUTHORITY TO SIMPLY CANCEL. HE IS NOT AN AUTHORITARIAN.


Of course he doesn't. He is buying votes.

Well the hick states didn’t have standing, so apparently these types of details don’t matter.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


So the loan product should be as available as possible for compete garbage “degrees” and there should be no value associated with administering those loans at all? Yeah, that won’t make “education” any more expensive.

Who is going to cover the cost of administering all these loan programs in the first place.

The whole thing is a complete waste of economic production. It’s asymptotic in its inefficiency. And it starts with people who would otherwise be economically productive going to four years of worthless “university” and getting high and playing Xbox


You’re moving the goalposts.

No one said “available as possible”, no one said garbage degrees. Can you even get federally backed education loans for many of these now defunct for profit worthless degree mills? I didn’t think so.

Someone is administering the loans today. We know what those costs look like. Like any other agency they have levers they can adjust to combat costs. I just don’t believe they should be raking it in. The CEO of Navient (fka Sallie Mae) made over $8million last year.


80% of higher education in the US is total garbage. It’s not limited to for-profit mills. This includes many second rate state schools.

The kids attending these schools aren’t learning anything useful and we are losing four years of productivity from them. On top of that, we are creating money to make it happen and employing others “teaching” them. The whole thing is a massive crock of BS.

Start by closing all these schools by drying up the funding. Send the “professors” out to build roads. Maybe they might actually be useful then.

Have the kids attending these schools go and work. They already are computer literate. They and the country will be better for it.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


So the loan product should be as available as possible for compete garbage “degrees” and there should be no value associated with administering those loans at all? Yeah, that won’t make “education” any more expensive.

Who is going to cover the cost of administering all these loan programs in the first place.

The whole thing is a complete waste of economic production. It’s asymptotic in its inefficiency. And it starts with people who would otherwise be economically productive going to four years of worthless “university” and getting high and playing Xbox


You’re moving the goalposts.

No one said “available as possible”, no one said garbage degrees. Can you even get federally backed education loans for many of these now defunct for profit worthless degree mills? I didn’t think so.

Someone is administering the loans today. We know what those costs look like. Like any other agency they have levers they can adjust to combat costs. I just don’t believe they should be raking it in. The CEO of Navient (fka Sallie Mae) made over $8million last year.


80% of higher education in the US is total garbage. It’s not limited to for-profit mills. This includes many second rate state schools.

The kids attending these schools aren’t learning anything useful and we are losing four years of productivity from them. On top of that, we are creating money to make it happen and employing others “teaching” them. The whole thing is a massive crock of BS.

Start by closing all these schools by drying up the funding. Send the “professors” out to build roads. Maybe they might actually be useful then.

Have the kids attending these schools go and work. They already are computer literate. They and the country will be better for it.


Send the politicians and lobbyists and gov contractors out to build roads.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


So the loan product should be as available as possible for compete garbage “degrees” and there should be no value associated with administering those loans at all? Yeah, that won’t make “education” any more expensive.

Who is going to cover the cost of administering all these loan programs in the first place.

The whole thing is a complete waste of economic production. It’s asymptotic in its inefficiency. And it starts with people who would otherwise be economically productive going to four years of worthless “university” and getting high and playing Xbox


You’re moving the goalposts.

No one said “available as possible”, no one said garbage degrees. Can you even get federally backed education loans for many of these now defunct for profit worthless degree mills? I didn’t think so.

Someone is administering the loans today. We know what those costs look like. Like any other agency they have levers they can adjust to combat costs. I just don’t believe they should be raking it in. The CEO of Navient (fka Sallie Mae) made over $8million last year.


80% of higher education in the US is total garbage. It’s not limited to for-profit mills. This includes many second rate state schools.

The kids attending these schools aren’t learning anything useful and we are losing four years of productivity from them. On top of that, we are creating money to make it happen and employing others “teaching” them. The whole thing is a massive crock of BS.

Start by closing all these schools by drying up the funding. Send the “professors” out to build roads. Maybe they might actually be useful then.

Have the kids attending these schools go and work. They already are computer literate. They and the country will be better for it.


Send the politicians and lobbyists and gov contractors out to build roads.


They might get calluses.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


Hey my crap, there are interest on loans!!!!!


Omg, keep crying. Imagine getting to adulthood and thinking you deserve 0% interest loans for any debt you take out.

Jesus Christ, it is scary people like you are out there and can vote.
Anonymous
college is not for everyone. It is a waste of money for many. We should be encouraging trade schools - skill sets like plumbing and carpentry are in high demand.
The expectation that you can borrow money - for anything - and expect that it may be forgiven, for whatever reason, is not a good precedent to set.
Biden’s people put out loan forgiveness for votes, just as he did with stimulus checks in Georgia. It worked.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


Hey my crap, there are interest on loans!!!!!


Omg, keep crying. Imagine getting to adulthood and thinking you deserve 0% interest loans for any debt you take out.

Jesus Christ, it is scary people like you are out there and can vote.

Do you have an actual point to make?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


Hey my crap, there are interest on loans!!!!!


Omg, keep crying. Imagine getting to adulthood and thinking you deserve 0% interest loans for any debt you take out.

Jesus Christ, it is scary people like you are out there and can vote.


JFC, you have reading comprehension problems. No one ever said 0% interest loans.

It’s scary people who can’t understand and extract information from what they read, like you, can vote, but it sure explains a lot about the last decade.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


Hey my crap, there are interest on loans!!!!!


Omg, keep crying. Imagine getting to adulthood and thinking you deserve 0% interest loans for any debt you take out.

Jesus Christ, it is scary people like you are out there and can vote.


JFC, you have reading comprehension problems. No one ever said 0% interest loans.

It’s scary people who can’t understand and extract information from what they read, like you, can vote, but it sure explains a lot about the last decade.



Keep crying.

Pay your own damn bills with interest.

And don't whine about basic finance 101.

How does anyone get to adulthood and suck with this much with money and understanding obligations owed when one takes out debt?

So much whining about being an adult. Grow up.
Anonymous
Great!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:No standing in one case, standing in the other. The merits went as expected.


Our youth are having a bad week - Supreme Court is so out of touch with challenges faced by so many …
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Common damn sense. You take out debt, sign a contract agreeing to pay, therefore you pay when the bill comes due. Not sure why this common sense idea needed to go all the way to the SC. No one owes you for taking out debt due to your own free will. The govt can't block lenders from receiving payments in accordance with an agreed upon contract.

Pay your damn bills.


I took out 25k. I’ve repaid over 45k thanks to compounding interest. It’s not my job to prop up the DoE and their vendors.


Take your concerns up with Obama. That all started under his "genius" plan.


Interesting…. because I went to grad school when Bush was president so, I’m not sure what Obama started that impacts me here.


Did you take a private loan?


There was a small portion that was private and those were quickly paid off. The overwhelming majority of my loans were FFELP which if they were still intact would have been already removed from forgiveness last fall.

I’m just pointing out that this pay for what you owe bullsh*t argument ignored compounding annual interest that turned my loan into an 80% interest rate instead of 6.25% I signed on for.



It looks like you paid $200 a month for your $25k loan and are surprised by the total interest. Or perhaps you waited 4 years and then paid $300 a month for about 12 years.


You’re in the ballpark, the monthly payment balance difference is de minimus. I wasn’t surprised. I never said the amount was difficult. They are, and have been, paid and I wasn’t benefiting from any forgiveness.

My point was to the initial poster who said “you pay when the bill comes due”. I did pay my entire loan, plus another $20k. Again, loans backed by the federal government should not be a revenue generator. And so have many people that borrowed a whole lot more than me and have been paying for years and their balances today are higher than their original principal at graduation (or worse when they dropped out and received no corresponding pay increase from their degree).


Hey my crap, there are interest on loans!!!!!


Omg, keep crying. Imagine getting to adulthood and thinking you deserve 0% interest loans for any debt you take out.

Jesus Christ, it is scary people like you are out there and can vote.


JFC, you have reading comprehension problems. No one ever said 0% interest loans.

It’s scary people who can’t understand and extract information from what they read, like you, can vote, but it sure explains a lot about the last decade.



Keep crying.

Pay your own damn bills with interest.

And don't whine about basic finance 101.

How does anyone get to adulthood and suck with this much with money and understanding obligations owed when one takes out debt?

So much whining about being an adult. Grow up.


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