Anonymous wrote:Aren't Parent Plus loans capped at a lower limit beginning this summer?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awful. The Obama Admin tried to do something about Parent Plus but were blocked by HBCU grifters. Glad to see no HBCUs on these lists though.
https://cbc.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=448
Obama is responsible for the student loan crisis and the absurd view that everyone deserves to go to college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Awful. The Obama Admin tried to do something about Parent Plus but were blocked by HBCU grifters. Glad to see no HBCUs on these lists though.
https://cbc.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=448
So maybe it’s not the HBCU schools that are the “grifters”.
Americans routinely take on enormous debt for medical care and education— things that many countries provide at minimal or no cost — recognizing the importance of having educated, healthy citizens.
Anonymous wrote:Awful. The Obama Admin tried to do something about Parent Plus but were blocked by HBCU grifters. Glad to see no HBCUs on these lists though.
https://cbc.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=448
Anonymous wrote:Awful. The Obama Admin tried to do something about Parent Plus but were blocked by HBCU grifters. Glad to see no HBCUs on these lists though.
https://cbc.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=448
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The schools on the list largely make sense. The southern schools have all seen massive tuition increases to fund their football-themed, resort level amenities. Touring Clemson and Auburn last year felt more like Disneyland than a serious university. I was surprised (and disappointed) to read about this practice at Jesuit institutions. Seems antithetical to Catholic social teaching.
This was years ago, but I remember reading the Sunday NYT Style section, and the front article was about the crippling effects of student loan debt on graduates, and how some were postponing things like marriage and children because of it. Then two pages later there was an article on the new lazy river on the LSU campus. The juxtaposition was absurd. And telling.
Anonymous wrote:The schools on the list largely make sense. The southern schools have all seen massive tuition increases to fund their football-themed, resort level amenities. Touring Clemson and Auburn last year felt more like Disneyland than a serious university. I was surprised (and disappointed) to read about this practice at Jesuit institutions. Seems antithetical to Catholic social teaching.
Anonymous wrote:The list includes 23 selective private universities and 18 public flagship and research institutions, nearly half of which are in the South.
https://www.newamerica.org/education-policy/reports/parent-plus-subprime-loans-universities-debt/
Anonymous wrote:The educational industrial complex is alive and well in America. Nothing new. Many other schools use low income families as part of their social engineering posturing efforts.
How many of these kids actually graduate from these institutions of higher learning. Most would probably have been better off pursuing a trade instead of a dead end major even if they graduate.