Trump will rollback student loan forgiveness

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Good these deadbeats need to pay up. One of the worst things Biden has done.

Oh, you again. Have you kicked any puppies or scares any small children today?


Yes. Plus I ate the puppies.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Good these deadbeats need to pay up. One of the worst things Biden has done.


Indeed, with interest for the time not paid.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


“We” are willing to help. Try Teach for America or the GI Bill. Put some skin in the game if you are only qualified to be a teacher or public servant.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


Forgiving loans doesn't help anybody but the current people. It does nothing to curtail the rising price. It does nothing to open up non-college opportunities. In fact, it raises prices in the future because now people will assume the government will just bail them out.

Econ 101.
Anonymous
Both Democrats and Republicans need to stop playing politics with student loans. It's such a freaking mess.

Democrats should stop promising forgiveness and payment plans that will get shot down by courts, causing chaos. Trump should (but obviously won't) commit to following current law that entitles certain borrowers to forgiveness. Instead, he will do what he did the last time and just F up forgiveness for people who have been working towards it and following the rules on the books.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


Why would we want teachers and "public servants" to attend college? There's zero evidence it makes them more productive. It's a waste of time and money to send people to college who can't do basic calculus in high school, which includes the majority of teachers and public servants.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


Why would we want teachers and "public servants" to attend college? There's zero evidence it makes them more productive. It's a waste of time and money to send people to college who can't do basic calculus in high school, which includes the majority of teachers and public servants.


Such bizarre logic that is totally divorced from actual government workforce needs.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


Why would we want teachers and "public servants" to attend college? There's zero evidence it makes them more productive. It's a waste of time and money to send people to college who can't do basic calculus in high school, which includes the majority of teachers and public servants.

Um, almost no one needs to know calculus, unless you plan on going into engineering or maybe finance.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


“We” are willing to help. Try Teach for America or the GI Bill. Put some skin in the game if you are only qualified to be a teacher or public servant.

You are an a$$. “Only qualified to be a teacher or public servant?” And what prestigious thing do you do? Push paper?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


“We” are willing to help. Try Teach for America or the GI Bill. Put some skin in the game if you are only qualified to be a teacher or public servant.

You have probably never helped another person in your life. You would just have all of the poor and middle class who can’t pay the sticker price for college be cannon fodder in the military while your spoiled kids get it all. F em, right? Make them suffer and work themselves to the bone to get an education while you sit in your lofty perch preaching about hard work and sacrifice. Me, me, me.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


“We” are willing to help. Try Teach for America or the GI Bill. Put some skin in the game if you are only qualified to be a teacher or public servant.


Tell me you know nothing about Teach for America....
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why did I borrow $22,000 from 2000-2004 that still isn't "paid off" even though I've paid back more than $22,000.

If cars, which cost a similar amount, were sold the way student loans were, we'd have a heck of a lot better public transportation system around here because the majority wouldn't be able to afford a car.


If you didn't understand what you were borrowing, you are not college material. You should have gone into a trade for the uneducated.

Shut up. Since you are so hung up on what we “signed up for,” I should no longer be legally required to pay. I have paid the full balance of my loans probably twofold for over 25 years. But because of dysfunctional loan servicers, I am still being billed and it is business as usual. Biden tried to solve this problem for long term borrowers like me, but some MAGA jerks had it blocked. There are a lot of circumstances and situations at play and a lot of grey area. But some of you are too mean, simple, or stubborn to educate yourselves on this issue before spouting all of your selfish, stupid nonsense.


Haha. I enjoy seeing your frustration and knowing Trump will force you to start paying a large chunk of your salary again.

This is an example of the cruelty, selfishness, and moral bankruptcy of the people who voted for the felon. Go volunteer at a soup kitchen.


I understand how the PP spoke about it is wrong but the loan forgiveness from Biden was never a done deal. It was struck down by court and congress didn't do much about it so people who received forgiveness were skeptical to begin with. I also don't think some of them were fit into certain kind of rules for loan forgiveness and not fair for others who got private student loans or not getting forgiveness at all. Administration needs to go after universities that are top-heavy and keep on raising tuition for low ROI courses.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


“We” are willing to help. Try Teach for America or the GI Bill. Put some skin in the game if you are only qualified to be a teacher or public servant.

You are an a$$. “Only qualified to be a teacher or public servant?” And what prestigious thing do you do? Push paper?


Oh did the little GS-11 at HUD get her nose out of joint?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Seems like he's dead set on rolling this back and rolling it bak quickly: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/11/26/trump-rollback-biden-student-debt-relief-00189841
.

The only people in favor of student loan forgiveness are the people who have the loans. I would be in favor of 100% loan forgiveness to teachers and medical professionals with the proviso that they must teach for ten years and medical professionals must practice in rural areas desperately in need of medical help for ten years.


I agree with this! I have friends who are surgeons and they negotiate paying back of medical school loans in their contracts.

I paid my entire undergrad and graduate degrees on my own. Pay your own way! Get scholarships, do a degree where you come out actually making a decent salary.

My dad was a plumber, made a great salary and never went to college. Another relative of mine didn't attend college and worked for a tech company and is now a multi-millionaire. People need to learn to budget and live within their means. If you want something more, work for it, don't expect other taxpayers to fund your life or choices.



Good for you. You paid your loans.

I paid my $100k student loans off, but am entirely supportive of loan forgiveness. If we want teachers and public servants to attend college, we should be willing to help.


“We” are willing to help. Try Teach for America or the GI Bill. Put some skin in the game if you are only qualified to be a teacher or public servant.

You are an a$$. “Only qualified to be a teacher or public servant?” And what prestigious thing do you do? Push paper?


Oh did the little GS-11 at HUD get her nose out of joint?


Yup, probably the type that lists all of their student loan funded credentials in their signature line…. BA, MA, MPH, SHRM
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