Aseahawkfan wrote:... harder standards for K1 through K12 so they charge American students money to teach them what they should have already learned in the public education system. I think the entire American education system needs to be rebuilt for the modern economy.
RiverDog wrote:Ironically, I was going to start a thread about this topic.
I have two main objections to this proposal. The first is economic. It's inflationary at a time when we should be restricting the supply of money to bring prices down. All it does is encourage people to spend more money, usually on things that they don't really need. We need to be tightening the supply of money, which is essentially what the Fed has been doing by raising interest rates. This highlights one of the big reasons why I will never be a reliable voter for the Dems. All they know how to do is spend.
The second objection I have is one of fairness. My daughter went to 5 years of college followed by 3 years of nursing school. Ever since the day she was born, we saved money for her education. In addition, she was very disciplined with her expenses, drove a 20 year old car, worked as a care giver during the summers, saved her money for college. Her grandma used to buy savings bonds for her on her birthday, Christmas, Valentine's Day, etc. After finally getting a full-time job after 8 years of schooling, she had a minimal amount of debt and has since paid it all off.
One of the reasons she chose to go to the college she did (EWU) was due to financial considerations. Had she known that the government was going to bail her out of her debt, she might have chosen to go to a more expensive school with a better reputation and that looked better on a resume.
So please explain how this is fair to her and to me?
This is an unnecessary bill meant to do nothing but stroke voters into supporting them. As many good jobs that are available in this economy, especially to those that have attended college, paying off a low interest student loan isn't that big of a deal. You're not talking about people living below the poverty line. What's the cutoff, $125K? That's outrageous!
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:The primary objection I see is "just because you paid yours back doesn't mean everyone else should struggle like you did." It's a the life's unfair argument. Well, if life is unfair, then so sorry you were treated unfairly by higher education and lenders. Cuts both ways.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:You say that, but I had very few electives in my civil engineering degree. The core education classes weren't 100% applicable to my major, I don't know if I'd dump English Composition, Calculus I-IV, Chemistry I-II, and Physics I-II. Those constituted my first two years. I then had to fill in with 2 humanities, 2 social sciences, and 1 arts class. The rest were engineering classes.
Granted, my experience doesn't cover everything. Unless you took A.P. courses in high school, there would need to be a method for students to demonstrate competency in the core education classes to drop them from their curriculum. I've seen too many people in my profession that don't know how to write properly or work through problems logically, so I'm wary of dropping core education classes with not strings attached. I found the off-major electives interesting, but, yes, unnecessary to my chosen occupation. I also saved them for my senior year, so they were cake by then.
I'm not wholesale against forgiveness; I'm against this implementation.
Aseahawkfan wrote:1. You should be able to write at a competent enough level after 12 years of education not to need additional English schooling other than that as part of your regular curriculum to learn your professional jargon. The fact that you as a tax payer have to invest the amount of money we do in K1 through K12 only to have students with 12 years of education graduate without competence in math, English, science, and many other subjects requiring them to spend additional money and time completing remedial studies post-K1 through K12 means we have a poorly run K1 through 12 program in America.
Aseahawkfan wrote:2. Ages for High School graduation worldwide vary greatly and many of the students from nations kicking our ass in STEM schooling graduate at age 16 or sooner with greater competence in mathematics and science: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School-leaving_age
Aseahawkfan wrote:3. I have several buddies who make way more money with trade school or no school that focused on learning the skills necessary for their job. One is a Network Engineer who doesn't have a degree in anything and spent a few quarters in Community College that makes 200k plus a year. Another went to drafting school for 2 years with a very focused education making 40 plus dollars an hour. I know tons of electricians, plumbers, network techs, and even coders who never attended much college who focused on learning employable skills making excellent money.
One of the biggest turnoffs from attending school for them? Being forced to retake English and things like history or some science course that isn't applicable to their profession and having to spend money and time on it.
I myself only bothered to finish a 2 year Community College transfer degree in preparation for business school. I went why am I doing this? Most of this is unnecessary, time consuming, and costly, and most of the skills I needed to succeed I learned in basic accounting classes. I learned everything else at a self-taught pace which was much faster and cheaper than attending classes and my success was determined by my ability to make money investing rather than meeting some criteria to do a repetitious job that utilized a small percentage of what I learned. Why do it? It's like when I went to High School, dropped out at 16 to work, then attended a self-paced High School completion program and finished the final two years in six months while working full time with better grades than when I had attended class.
School should not be a one-sized fits all program. If you're taking Civil Engineering as you did, you should likely require more schooling than a person taking an English degree to teach English. Yet both degrees take 4 years for an undergraduate, maybe 5 if it ends in a Masters degree. It should be focused, not time wasting with filler courses that discourage people from completing their degrees or cost them extra money in student loans or the tax payer extra money in student aid for useless classes that don't apply to the degree or affect employability.
To sum it up, 10,000 dollars forgiven given the amount of money students are forced to waste with unnecessary classes as well as having to take remedial courses because K1 through 12 does such a poor job of preparing students makes me shrug and say, "At least someone is getting back some of the wasted money from all the years of a bad K1 through 12 system and tons of wasted dollars on a badly run education system."
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I don't so much have an issue with the 10k as I do the implementation. To throw it out there as a blanket solution with a high income ceiling with no means testing and non-taxable is a bad call.
RiverDog wrote:Agreed, but I don't see what that has to do about the OP, ie loan forgiveness.
It depends on your goals and objectives. I, too, had to take nearly two years of core classes in order to graduate from a 4 year liberal arts college with a degree in business administration. However, I took A LOT of what I learned in some of those core classes, such as an English composition class that went beyond high school English classes, that essentially taught me how to write reports, with me to my job as a line supervisor while there were some business dept classes, like a full year of statistics, that were next to useless. Many employers want that 4 year degree for management positions as it indicates that they have a well rounded education and at least have an overall concept of a range of different subjects
RiverDog wrote:That's the other thing. To someone making $100k plus, $10k is peanuts. It's not enough money to make a difference in the type of housing they qualify for. All it's going to do is give some above average wage earners a little more spending money to be used in buying a new car or boat, something that they don't really need. It's a complete waste of taxpayer money.
RiverDog wrote:That's the other thing. To someone making $100k plus, $10k is peanuts. It's not enough money to make a difference in the type of housing they qualify for. All it's going to do is give some above average wage earners a little more spending money to be used in buying a new car or boat, something that they don't really need. It's a complete waste of taxpayer money.
Aseahawkfan wrote:It's going to help a lot of people who make a whole lot less than that. Though it is a drop in the bucket for the insane loans some of these folks took out. Some people have 50 thousand plus in loans easy, especially if the obtained some crap unsubsidized school or out of state tuition.
RiverDog wrote:So why is the $125k threshold set so high? I wouldn't mind so much if it was going to people that "make a whole lot less than that", but that's not what they're doing. Nearly 5 times the poverty level.
It's absurd. Flat ass freebie courtesy of the taxpayers. That's why you want to keep Democrats away from the purse strings. It's causing me to consider voting for a Trumpian candidate like DeSantis.
RiverDog wrote:So why is the $125k threshold set so high? I wouldn't mind so much if it was going to people that "make a whole lot less than that", but that's not what they're doing. Nearly 5 times the poverty level.
It's absurd. Flat ass freebie courtesy of the taxpayers. That's why you want to keep Democrats away from the purse strings. It's causing me to consider voting for a Trumpian candidate like DeSantis.
Aseahawkfan wrote:I don't know if you noticed, but tax payers have been giving freebies to everyone from poor people to rich people to middle class people for a hell of a lot of years. It ain't stopping any time soon. The b**** ass Republicans are just as culpable with their corporate welfare and wealthy tax breaks.
If you can't see the American people piloting the airplane known as America stopped a long time ago and we're now run by special interests who all get their breaks, then you're willfully ignoring what's been going on for quite a while now. Just hope you get tossed a few because it seems to be occurring round robin depending on who the government randomly feels like making happy while they're either giving breaks to the super wealthy or trying to make pissed off people forget they're pissed off.
Aseahawkfan wrote:What are you going to do anyway? Vote for Trump or his supporters to stop it? We'll see if you get any alternate options to vote for any time soon that want to govern responsibly and more importantly...sanely.
c_hawkbob wrote:Where was all this outrage when the banks were bailed out? or the Auto industry or Airlines? or the trillions in tax reductions for the already rich?
Y'all are programmed to believe any money going anywhere that doesn't directly benefit Wall Street is bad for the country.
c_hawkbob wrote:Not changing the subject at all, to my mind the subject is tax monies spent either helping working Americans or helping Wall Street to prop up a falsely measured economy. I didn't say what specifically you were for or against, I asked where all the outrage expressed in this thread is when the money goes to the already rich, but makes the economy look better by Wall Street standards.
c_hawkbob wrote:First, quit telling me that I have to remain on the subject as you define it. I've heard you many times explain to people that these types of conversations expand, take tangents and expand to encompass closely related subjects. It's the nature of any forum.
c_hawkbob wrote:Second, when you say "the economy" doesn't need an infusion of money your talking completely macro as if the economy were a single unit in and of itself, and I don't accept your definition of "the economy" anyway. Not until you start taking into account things like percentages of people living and working below the poverty line and kids with food insecurities. The economy is a whole lot more than just inflation, recession, the markets and interest rates.
c_hawkbob wrote:Where was all this outrage when the banks were bailed out? or the Auto industry or Airlines? or the trillions in tax reductions for the already rich?
Y'all are programmed to believe any money going anywhere that doesn't directly benefit Wall Street is bad for the country.
NorthHawk wrote:I think Bob's right.
It's about taxpayer money and how it's spent or accumulated.
The trillion dollar tax cut by Trump went mostly to billionaires - something like $750 Billion while the remaining 350 Million people shared $250 Billion.
Where was the outrage then? The total tax cuts to business and high income earners was close to 2 Trillion dollars.
And now you're complaining that it's not fair that some money goes to people that might just need the help?
For years we've heard that the best way for people to get ahead was to get a University degree so the masses did that and went into debt doing so.
At the same time taxes were cut and subsidies to colleges were cut so it cost more to attend. The end result is a lot of debt accumulation by students as they graduated.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:The inflation aspect is real. A poster on Reddit stated this hurts no one. Well, $230 billion is a dent and will contribute to inflation. I'd say inflation hurts everybody. I wouldn't be surprised if this didn't offset any economic advantage gained by freeing up some borrowers. Many won't be out of debt.
While I agree with you, the fairness angle doesn't get as far as it should. It blows my mind how being 18 gives someone a pass to make an very bad financial decision. Like you and your daughter, I sought to minimize the financial impact of college and grad school. I still couldn't avoid debt, but was able to pay it off in a little over a year, so I relate to the fairness angle tremendously. The primary objection I see is "just because you paid yours back doesn't mean everyone else should struggle like you did." It's a the life's unfair argument. Well, if life is unfair, then so sorry you were treated unfairly by higher education and lenders. Cuts both ways.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I don't think anyone is not outraged by that. It's a poor argument; one can be outraged by both.
And it will go to people who need help; it will also go to people who can handle paying their debt. It's the same blanket approach taken with the Covid stimulus payments. Biden has had two years to put something together that would be more palatable. It is entirely possible had a more measured approach been taken (e.g. means testing), he wouldn't be resorting to a blanket approach forced through by executive order.
And higher education is a monster of this country's creation for the reason you mentioned. Cost soared because demand soared and loans were readily available. People didn't do the math on what they were majoring in versus what it would pay versus what it would cost to get it. They also couldn't seem to do the simple math on what it would take to pay off projected debt in a reasonable time frame (like $25k at $500/mo. would take 50 months to pay off and that's without interest). This is the same kind of blind decision making that got us in trouble with the housing market collapse. People were not paying attention to the decisions they were making.
RiverDog wrote:There aren't many freebies of the type you're talking about on the scale of this proposal, nor are they being targeted to people making over the median income. We seem to have created a generation of people that think there's no consequences to the government taking garbage sacks of money, throwing it up in the air, and making it rain.
I'm surprised that you are not as upset with this proposal as you appear to be. I always had you pegged as someone that does realize there's consequences to unrestrained government spending.
I won't be voting for Trump under any circumstances. What I said was that I'm a little more open to Trump's brown nosers like DeSantis than I was a month ago.
RiverDog wrote:OK, let's talk about micro economics. You mentioned people living and working below the poverty line, which is about $27K a year. How does giving a $10k student loan forgiveness help those folks? I don't have a reference handy, but I'd be willing to bet that nearly all those that have taken out student loans are making way more than $27K.
And as far as food insecurities goes, one of the sectors hit hardest by inflation is groceries, and therefore, the poor and elderly who devote a larger percentage of their income to that necessity. It is essential that we get prices under control, and infusing money into the economy is going to do the exact opposite.
c_hawkbob wrote:Where was all this outrage when the banks were bailed out? or the Auto industry or Airlines? or the trillions in tax reductions for the already rich?
Y'all are programmed to believe any money going anywhere that doesn't directly benefit Wall Street is bad for the country.
c_hawkbob wrote:Where was all this outrage when the banks were bailed out? or the Auto industry or Airlines? or the trillions in tax reductions for the already rich?
Y'all are programmed to believe any money going anywhere that doesn't directly benefit Wall Street is bad for the country.
Hawktawk wrote:This right here ^^^^^^^^or how about trillions from the federal reserve to protect the high risk high reward stock market ? It actually began as a plan to stabilize repo rates for stock buybacks as the massive tax cut for corporations had been used for that purpose and wiped out the funds and caused rates to fluctuate wildly . Of course during the pandemic it was a further fleecing of the taxpayer to protect this high risk high reward program while ol Ht with no skin in the game sat and watched . I do not want to hear one god damn word about student loans from anyone who supported any of this other welfare fir the rich .
curmudgeon wrote:Why should the “higher educated” class also be burdened with mortgages, car, boat, RV, etc. payments? Let the middle pay. C’mon Joe, do it!……
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