Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are headed back to debtors prison when they deduct it from your pay and people end up on the street.
And so your solution is for the taxpayers to pick up the tab for other people's degrees? Sorry, no.
Anonymous wrote:Physicians will be totally screwed. They take years before they are making the kind of money that can service the loans required to complete training.
Anonymous wrote:We really need a system that distinguishes between in-state public education and everything else. It is in society's interest to have an affordable public college system that doesn't burden 21 year olds with loans. That's what we need to build and subsidize - affordable public colleges for qualified students. And everything else - private universities, LACs - should sink or swim with market demand. There isn't ever going to be public support for forgiving the loans of someone who chose to go a gazillion dollars in debt to attend NYU or Colby. And retroactively forgiving those loans does nothing to make college more affordable for this generation of students. Focus on public education, and let market forces sort out how private universities go about attracting students. I strongly suspect the cost of private colleges will go down significantly if we make it difficult for teenagers to go into debt to attend, especially when they have very good and affordable in-state alternatives.
Anonymous wrote:I’m fine with this and also making student loans harder to get in the first place. Easy loans to unqualified buyers is what helped raise tuition so high to begin with.
Anonymous wrote:Can they start with the ones making TickTock videos laughing about how they never plan to pay a penny back?
Anonymous wrote:Education Department’s will resume “involuntary collections” of federal student loans that are in default.
https://www.cnbc.com/2025/04/22/what-student-loan-borrowers-need-to-know-about-involuntary-collections.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are headed back to debtors prison when they deduct it from your pay and people end up on the street.
Income based repayment plans are universally available and have been common for years in the student loan world. If a young professional makes 40k annually and therefore the $1,500 monthly installment payment on their 200k student loan balance isn't affordable, all they have to do is contact the loan servicer and document the need for a modified income based minimum payment.
Canceling debt is never a wise long term solution. Ii
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you take out a loan you need to repay it. It’s that simple.
No more Starbucks. Forget about upgrading your iPhone. Door Dash isn’t a necessity. Vacations are for people that actually save money and aren’t deep in debt. It’s time for a second or third job. You can no longer afford all of your streaming services. Discretionary things like drinks with friends aren’t in the budget. Life is hard when you fail to manage your finances.
Ok Dave Ramsey… 🙄
Anonymous wrote:Physicians will be totally screwed. They take years before they are making the kind of money that can service the loans required to complete training.
Anonymous wrote:If you take out a loan you need to repay it. It’s that simple.
No more Starbucks. Forget about upgrading your iPhone. Door Dash isn’t a necessity. Vacations are for people that actually save money and aren’t deep in debt. It’s time for a second or third job. You can no longer afford all of your streaming services. Discretionary things like drinks with friends aren’t in the budget. Life is hard when you fail to manage your finances.