Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for next year's commencement speaker. If it isn't Oprah or Obama, forget it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they understand what pay it forward means
Yes, they do @$$hole. Each graduate is pledging $100 (100 * 400 grads = 40,000) to pay for the text books of the incoming class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is he paying off all the credit card debt of the parents that didn't take out loans, but are going into debt helping their kids?
Is he paying back those that didn't get a new house, but saved up money for college instead?
This is just another person helping out people that chose not to help themselves. Go pay off the community college kids debt while they work and go to school.
Agree! Nice gesture, but once again the families and kids that didn’t prepare financially, but still chose a 4yr college with debt are the winners.![]()
Exactly
That's why I said it would be more fair to just give every student the same amount. Take the cost of paying off all the debt, divide it by the number of students, and give that to them
Debt isn't a perfect measure of poverty or need. There were lots of kids there with lower debt because they transferred in from a cheaper college or worked summer jobs or had their parents deplete their savings and go into debt for them.
You know what? Life isn't fair. Those who do the best are not just hard workers; they are the hard workers who had the opportunities at the right time. Robert Smith cannot help everyone, but he chose the graduating class of 2019 at Morehouse College as the ones that he was going to help this time. He is donating $40M and there are some 400 students that did get a helping hand from his gesture. He made a wonderful gesture and he should be applauded for that.
Nickpicking how and what he did just because it wasn't the way you would have done it is the type of attitude that would make some people just not bother trying to be generous in the future. So, rather than criticizing how he did it, why don't you go and donate $10M of money to help those other students and we can sit here and criticize you for how you chose to do it, who you chose to benefit and so on.
"Life isn't fair" is the dumbest rationale to explain why kids who choose debt and a 4 year college degree should be rewarded, over others who had to drop out and go PT to community college and get a job to pay for it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is he paying off all the credit card debt of the parents that didn't take out loans, but are going into debt helping their kids?
Is he paying back those that didn't get a new house, but saved up money for college instead?
This is just another person helping out people that chose not to help themselves. Go pay off the community college kids debt while they work and go to school.
Agree! Nice gesture, but once again the families and kids that didn’t prepare financially, but still chose a 4yr college with debt are the winners.![]()
Exactly
That's why I said it would be more fair to just give every student the same amount. Take the cost of paying off all the debt, divide it by the number of students, and give that to them
Debt isn't a perfect measure of poverty or need. There were lots of kids there with lower debt because they transferred in from a cheaper college or worked summer jobs or had their parents deplete their savings and go into debt for them.
Well then you are white person he doesn’t understand the concept of cultural appropriation. Nobody is implying anything about Robert Smith he belongs to an organization, a cause that Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett both belong to in regards to pledging to give away their wealth and increase the philanthropy of the superrich shut upAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for next year's commencement speaker. If it isn't Oprah or Obama, forget it.
Well, Robert Smith got the idea from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Warren Buffet. All of the above are trying to encourage other very wealthy people to donate to charitable causes and colleges seem to be getting quite a lot of benefit from the idea.
Those white people have so many bad ideas.
I'm white .... don't "culturally appropriate" the great deed of a black man by implying some white man gave him the idea. No one has done what this guy did directly. Oprah, another black person, gave over $13M to Morehouse some years ago for scholarships...not loan forgiveness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for next year's commencement speaker. If it isn't Oprah or Obama, forget it.
Well, Robert Smith got the idea from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Warren Buffet. All of the above are trying to encourage other very wealthy people to donate to charitable causes and colleges seem to be getting quite a lot of benefit from the idea.
Those white people have so many bad ideas.
I'm white .... don't "culturally appropriate" the great deed of a black man by implying some white man gave him the idea. No one has done what this guy did directly. Oprah, another black person, gave over $13M to Morehouse some years ago for scholarships...not loan forgiveness.
Smith, who has an estimated net worth of $5 billion, founded Vista Equity Partners in 2000, a private equity firm that invests in software, data, and technology-driven companies. The 56-year-old billionaire is the first African American to sign the Giving Pledge, a campaign founded by Bill and Melinda Gates and Warren Buffett to encourage wealthy individuals to dedicate the majority of their wealth to philanthropy, Forbes Opens a New Window. reported.
A COMMITMENT TO PHILANTHROPY
The Giving Pledge is a commitment by the world's wealthiest individuals and families to dedicate the majority of their wealth to giving back.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is he paying off all the credit card debt of the parents that didn't take out loans, but are going into debt helping their kids?
Is he paying back those that didn't get a new house, but saved up money for college instead?
This is just another person helping out people that chose not to help themselves. Go pay off the community college kids debt while they work and go to school.
Agree! Nice gesture, but once again the families and kids that didn’t prepare financially, but still chose a 4yr college with debt are the winners.![]()
Exactly
That's why I said it would be more fair to just give every student the same amount. Take the cost of paying off all the debt, divide it by the number of students, and give that to them
Debt isn't a perfect measure of poverty or need. There were lots of kids there with lower debt because they transferred in from a cheaper college or worked summer jobs or had their parents deplete their savings and go into debt for them.
Yet when actual debt free students from the 2019 class were interviewed, there were no sour grapes, they were as inspired by the generosity as the students receiving the most
Try interviewing the parents who worked their asses off so their students was going to the college debt-free. Asking the students is completely pointless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for next year's commencement speaker. If it isn't Oprah or Obama, forget it.
Well, Robert Smith got the idea from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Warren Buffet. All of the above are trying to encourage other very wealthy people to donate to charitable causes and colleges seem to be getting quite a lot of benefit from the idea.
Those white people have so many bad ideas.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for next year's commencement speaker. If it isn't Oprah or Obama, forget it.
Well, Robert Smith got the idea from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Warren Buffet. All of the above are trying to encourage other very wealthy people to donate to charitable causes and colleges seem to be getting quite a lot of benefit from the idea.
Anonymous wrote:I feel sorry for next year's commencement speaker. If it isn't Oprah or Obama, forget it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they understand what pay it forward means
Yes, they do @$$hole. Each graduate is pledging $100 (100 * 400 grads = 40,000) to pay for the text books of the incoming class.
That is not tuition, they are aiming low and not in the spirit of paying off future class mate tuition.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do they understand what pay it forward means
Yes, they do @$$hole. Each graduate is pledging $100 (100 * 400 grads = 40,000) to pay for the text books of the incoming class.
Anonymous wrote:These youngsters are lucky, right place, right time
Not everyone has the same luck
Stop hating