Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
How is predatory? All these people ignored the interest rate they were borrowing at when they took out the loans?
Debt servitude, debt bondage. Media, school leaders, family, society, and economic pressure forces teens to essentially sign for a mortgage after they just got done half-a** reading Huckleberry Finn. The avg American 12th grader is years below grade level, that makes it predatory. The system makes low and middle class teens debt slaves, so UMC and rich peers can soar past them. It's a predatory con fueling unprecedented levels of inequality.
To be clear, I am largely speaking on undergraduate debt. I personally have little sympathy for 20-something, grown a**, college-credentialed adults who sign for $50k-$300k+ in graduate and professional school loans. The only courtesy I would give grad and prof school fed loans is removing the interest.
Anonymous wrote:
How is predatory? All these people ignored the interest rate they were borrowing at when they took out the loans?
Anonymous wrote:The overhaul happened back in 2009-2010 time frame (https://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/26/us/politics/26loans.html) under cough cough dems where they created this BS system and interest rates became federally mandated. The interest rate is the biggest issue!!!
Anonymous wrote:
How is predatory? All these people ignored the interest rate they were borrowing at when they took out the loans?
Anonymous wrote:looks like the plan is to give people "struggling" to pay what they "agreed" to pay 1 year to make a payment plan and get them out of default status.
this whole thing is hillarious, instead of fixing the problem of high tuition rates they just want to put a bandage over it. so what are they doing about all time high education costs? nothing. are they doing anything about the APR on these loans? nothing.
this whole thing is backwards. how can teacher salaries stay the same but there is a increase in tuition every single year? what is really driving the costs? plz wake up people, push to solve the problem.
Anonymous wrote:looks like the plan is to give people "struggling" to pay what they "agreed" to pay 1 year to make a payment plan and get them out of default status.
this whole thing is hillarious, instead of fixing the problem of high tuition rates they just want to put a bandage over it. so what are they doing about all time high education costs? nothing. are they doing anything about the APR on these loans? nothing.
this whole thing is backwards. how can teacher salaries stay the same but there is a increase in tuition every single year? what is really driving the costs? plz wake up people, push to solve the problem.