Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Outliers are everywhere. Look at the big picture, not the person the journalist thought would get the most clicks.
Agree with this. I like the student loan forgiveness. And I speak as someone who was able to pay off my loans AND pay for my kids college. I am fortunate and I realize that
I'm all for some loan forgiveness. But kids and parents need to STOP taking out $$$ to attend schools they cannot afford. If you cannot afford more than $25K/year, then don't attend a school that costs $90k+/year and take loans. Find a state school that gives you merit/private that gives merit and have your kid work FT on all breaks and PT during the year where they can earn 10K per year easily.
But I don't see why I should be paying for someone who choose to got to a school that costs $65K per year, major in Art history, then only be able to get a job making $25K/year and complain they cannot pay their loans. No Shit Sherlock! Common sense would have told them that they would most likely only start at $25-30K, and therefore should not have loans totally anymore than $25K over 4 years.
There has to be some personal responsibility for people. College can be done without massive debt, you just have to choose wisely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s infuriating. I know some people personally who quit their good paying… but “boring”… jobs to pursue their passions and now live off welfare. At least they don’t live near me so I know my money isn’t going to them
Funny how people get infuriated at people with modest incomes scamming the system but shrug their shoulders at people scamming billions of dollars from taxpayer coffers.
The late billionaire Sheldon Adelson, for example, used a complicated trust mechanism called a “grantor retained annuity trust (GRAT)” to “pass on $7.9 billion to his children while avoiding $2.8 billion in gift and estate taxes.”
Don’t blame the billionaire for doing this perfectly legal technique, blame the tax code. And lots of wealthy billionaire Democrats do similar legal techniques to lower their taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Outliers are everywhere. Look at the big picture, not the person the journalist thought would get the most clicks.
Agree with this. I like the student loan forgiveness. And I speak as someone who was able to pay off my loans AND pay for my kids college. I am fortunate and I realize that
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He knew he had to get a better paying job to repay the loan, but he didn't want to give up his passion, which was music.
Now that his almost $250K loan has been paid by us taxpayers, he says he wants to go meditate in India with a guru.
Like what the actual f*.
my nephew has a mild SN and had a hard time finding a job after college; he majored in IT. He found a lowish paying job (like $45K) at a nonprofit and is still paying it off while he lives with his single mom because he can't afford to live on his own and pay off the debt. But, the government didn't pay his debt off. I think it's like $50K. Here's someone who's trying and working a job that has potential for growth, even as he has a hard time of it, and then there's this guy with his music passion, and now he can go meditate because we taxpayers basically gave him $250K.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/gen-xer-got-250-000-181801554.html
Yea, I feel bitter.
I mean, you have no idea whether this musician has special needs. He sounds off. He's 49 and says now he can "start" saving for retirement, but is also considering spending money on a trip. He's low income with no prospect of significant income growth and lives in NYC. Wouldn't you be panicked about not having any savings at 49 yo? I would be. He'll never retire and likely will end up in a bad spot. There's nothing to envy.
It is rankling that the man made a series of bad decisions throughout his entire life and keeps making more bad decisions, and it's being paid off by the US taxpayers. My taxes! So that he can travel to India every year!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe in loan forgiveness. But I was shocked at the way student loans are ran. Seems to me that interest shouldn’t start until you graduate. My Dh had 50k in loans that ballooned to 80k by the time he paid them off at 27. Ridiculous.
I don't believe in loan forgiveness either but why is it ridiculous? When you take a loan for your house does the interest on the mortgage start accruing 4 years later? No. If you want to borrow money there is a cost and it's called interest. The facts are anyone who takes out a loan for college is accepting the terms of the loan when they sign. No one holds a gun to their heads forcing them to take out the loan. And then there are HS graduates who forego college and enter the work force right after high school or take a loan to start a business. What a raw deal for those folks. This program is all about Biden and the Democrats buying votes for this upcoming election cycle because their horrendous policies are not enough to get people to vote for them.
The difference is that when you take out a mortgage in a house, you get the benefit right away-- you own the house and can live in it, rent it out, or sell it. Of course interest accrues immediately.
Education loans are very different different because you are not buying a tangible asset. You are buying a non-transferable credential that you only get the benefit of if you complete the program (which will require lots of labor). Education loans have no collateral,cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, and may result in long term debt for a benefit the borrower never actually receives (if they fail to complete the program). So there are a lot of reasons to treat education loans differently that a mortgage, car loan, credit card, HELOC, etc. They are very unique.
Nope sorry no. When you take out a student loan you get the benefit right away, it’s called attending college. Those tenured professors and bloated university staffs don’t work for free. What you make of your degree is on you.
Anonymous wrote:OMG -- I wish someone would create a chart that compares the "cost" of student loan forgiveness against the cost of tax breaks for the wealthy and corporations.
Why do Americans think it's totally unfair to forgive student loans but it's totally fine that most US corporations pay almost nothing in taxes?
When Republicans eliminate taxes for the super rich and for corporations, everyone shrugs.
When Democrats eliminate crippling student loan debt for a few thousand people, everyone goes nuts.
Explain it to me like I'm 5.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He knew he had to get a better paying job to repay the loan, but he didn't want to give up his passion, which was music.
Now that his almost $250K loan has been paid by us taxpayers, he says he wants to go meditate in India with a guru.
Like what the actual f*.
my nephew has a mild SN and had a hard time finding a job after college; he majored in IT. He found a lowish paying job (like $45K) at a nonprofit and is still paying it off while he lives with his single mom because he can't afford to live on his own and pay off the debt. But, the government didn't pay his debt off. I think it's like $50K. Here's someone who's trying and working a job that has potential for growth, even as he has a hard time of it, and then there's this guy with his music passion, and now he can go meditate because we taxpayers basically gave him $250K.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/gen-xer-got-250-000-181801554.html
Yea, I feel bitter.
I mean, you have no idea whether this musician has special needs. He sounds off. He's 49 and says now he can "start" saving for retirement, but is also considering spending money on a trip. He's low income with no prospect of significant income growth and lives in NYC. Wouldn't you be panicked about not having any savings at 49 yo? I would be. He'll never retire and likely will end up in a bad spot. There's nothing to envy.
Anonymous wrote:He knew he had to get a better paying job to repay the loan, but he didn't want to give up his passion, which was music.
Now that his almost $250K loan has been paid by us taxpayers, he says he wants to go meditate in India with a guru.
Like what the actual f*.
my nephew has a mild SN and had a hard time finding a job after college; he majored in IT. He found a lowish paying job (like $45K) at a nonprofit and is still paying it off while he lives with his single mom because he can't afford to live on his own and pay off the debt. But, the government didn't pay his debt off. I think it's like $50K. Here's someone who's trying and working a job that has potential for growth, even as he has a hard time of it, and then there's this guy with his music passion, and now he can go meditate because we taxpayers basically gave him $250K.
https://www.yahoo.com/finance/news/gen-xer-got-250-000-181801554.html
Yea, I feel bitter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s infuriating. I know some people personally who quit their good paying… but “boring”… jobs to pursue their passions and now live off welfare. At least they don’t live near me so I know my money isn’t going to them
Funny how people get infuriated at people with modest incomes scamming the system but shrug their shoulders at people scamming billions of dollars from taxpayer coffers.
The late billionaire Sheldon Adelson, for example, used a complicated trust mechanism called a “grantor retained annuity trust (GRAT)” to “pass on $7.9 billion to his children while avoiding $2.8 billion in gift and estate taxes.”
Don’t blame the billionaire for doing this perfectly legal technique, blame the tax code. And lots of wealthy billionaire Democrats do similar legal techniques to lower their taxes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s infuriating. I know some people personally who quit their good paying… but “boring”… jobs to pursue their passions and now live off welfare. At least they don’t live near me so I know my money isn’t going to them
Funny how people get infuriated at people with modest incomes scamming the system but shrug their shoulders at people scamming billions of dollars from taxpayer coffers.
The late billionaire Sheldon Adelson, for example, used a complicated trust mechanism called a “grantor retained annuity trust (GRAT)” to “pass on $7.9 billion to his children while avoiding $2.8 billion in gift and estate taxes.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe in loan forgiveness. But I was shocked at the way student loans are ran. Seems to me that interest shouldn’t start until you graduate. My Dh had 50k in loans that ballooned to 80k by the time he paid them off at 27. Ridiculous.
I don't believe in loan forgiveness either but why is it ridiculous? When you take a loan for your house does the interest on the mortgage start accruing 4 years later? No. If you want to borrow money there is a cost and it's called interest. The facts are anyone who takes out a loan for college is accepting the terms of the loan when they sign. No one holds a gun to their heads forcing them to take out the loan. And then there are HS graduates who forego college and enter the work force right after high school or take a loan to start a business. What a raw deal for those folks. This program is all about Biden and the Democrats buying votes for this upcoming election cycle because their horrendous policies are not enough to get people to vote for them.
The difference is that when you take out a mortgage in a house, you get the benefit right away-- you own the house and can live in it, rent it out, or sell it. Of course interest accrues immediately.
Education loans are very different different because you are not buying a tangible asset. You are buying a non-transferable credential that you only get the benefit of if you complete the program (which will require lots of labor). Education loans have no collateral,cannot be discharged in bankruptcy, and may result in long term debt for a benefit the borrower never actually receives (if they fail to complete the program). So there are a lot of reasons to treat education loans differently that a mortgage, car loan, credit card, HELOC, etc. They are very unique.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't kid yourselves, student loan forgiveness is nothing more than vote buying by the Democrats.
And corporate tax cuts and bailouts are vote buying by the Republicans. Pick your constituency.
Anonymous wrote:It’s infuriating. I know some people personally who quit their good paying… but “boring”… jobs to pursue their passions and now live off welfare. At least they don’t live near me so I know my money isn’t going to them