Anonymous wrote:
Hey you know what? I'm who you are responding to. I'm from the rust belt Midwest, from a family of immigrants, factory, and railroad workers. I am first gen, before that was a thing. So before you make some dumb a-- assumptions like that, maybe contemplate that may be the person you're responding to.
And, I am in the south living in a community of blue collar workers. They are pissed. And, they have every right to be.
They don't want to pay of the loans of people who went to college when they couldn't because they simply couldn't afford it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of these analogies make sense... Jesus with bread and fish, PPP loans, socialism, etc.
Student loan forgiveness is fine for people making below the median income, which is about $44,225 for individual Americans.
This $125k cap is crazy high... almost 3x the median income. It's disgusting.
Funny how $125 is "crazy high" now. This same board thinks $250K is barely getting by when the subject is tax increases.
Logical fallacy: red herring.
A red herring is not even a logical fallacy. So what you posted is word salad.
Incorrect--it is a type of logical fallacy (but also a literary device)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_herring
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of these analogies make sense... Jesus with bread and fish, PPP loans, socialism, etc.
Student loan forgiveness is fine for people making below the median income, which is about $44,225 for individual Americans.
This $125k cap is crazy high... almost 3x the median income. It's disgusting.
Funny how $125 is "crazy high" now. This same board thinks $250K is barely getting by when the subject is tax increases.
Logical fallacy: red herring.
A red herring is not even a logical fallacy. So what you posted is word salad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of these analogies make sense... Jesus with bread and fish, PPP loans, socialism, etc.
Student loan forgiveness is fine for people making below the median income, which is about $44,225 for individual Americans.
This $125k cap is crazy high... almost 3x the median income. It's disgusting.
Funny how $125 is "crazy high" now. This same board thinks $250K is barely getting by when the subject is tax increases.
Logical fallacy: red herring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:None of these analogies make sense... Jesus with bread and fish, PPP loans, socialism, etc.
Student loan forgiveness is fine for people making below the median income, which is about $44,225 for individual Americans.
This $125k cap is crazy high... almost 3x the median income. It's disgusting.
Funny how $125 is "crazy high" now. This same board thinks $250K is barely getting by when the subject is tax increases.
Anonymous wrote:None of these analogies make sense... Jesus with bread and fish, PPP loans, socialism, etc.
Student loan forgiveness is fine for people making below the median income, which is about $44,225 for individual Americans.
This $125k cap is crazy high... almost 3x the median income. It's disgusting.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I guess Congress won't act to protect it's power of the purse. What goes around comes around. Democrats will regret this.
Anonymous wrote:
The federal government doesn’t charge people money to go to college. Colleges charge money. Some people pay for the colleges with their own money and some people get money from the government to go to college.
Jesus didn’t charge people for the loaves and fishes. The marketplace fisherman and bakers charged them money. Some people had to buy their lunch and bring it to his sermon. Others didn’t have to spend anything because they were given the food for free. Anyway it’s a decent analogy