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NobodyHere 05-27-2022 10:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thesloppy (Post 3368414)
It also seems worth mentioning that the whole reason we're considering forgiving student loans is because a significant amount of people aren't paying them. That particular revenue is not coming in, whether you forgive it or not, yet still gets counted as lost by critics.


The reason the Democrats want to forgive loans is that they are trying to buy some votes.

BYU 14 05-27-2022 10:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368431)
The reason the Democrats want to forgive loans is that they are trying to buy some votes.


Let's be honest, the votes of independents control the elections and I don't know that this moves the needle with that group.

Example myself, there are multiple things I want addressed before this, but the fact that so many in the GOP still embrace Trump and his BS pushes me towards Dems, not anything they are actually doing right now.

Edward64 05-27-2022 11:51 PM

I consider myself independent and tbh this probably makes it a little less likely I would vote Dem assuming Reps come up with a candidate I can live it.

Go ahead and give refunds to those that saved up to send kids thru college without any loans. I’ll take that 2 x $10,000 tax credit now please. I promise to buy things with it that I deferred while saving 4-8 years ago

I’m really okay with some forgiveness but make the beneficiaries do volunteer work on weekends or something. Not a freebie handout

larrymcg421 05-28-2022 06:31 AM

We're in the Obama 2nd term era of the Biden presidency, where he's looking for what he can do by executive order.

I see people in here saying stuff like "but apparently no plan to..." or suggesting he's not focusing on more important things. All those other college cost cutting ideas have no chance to get 60 votes, nor does anything else people deem important.

PilotMan 05-28-2022 10:50 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368431)
The reason the Democrats want to forgive loans is that they are trying to buy some votes.


You mean the way the dumbass did with his trillion dollar a year tax cut that filled the pockets of the rich? Sort of funny how you can get angry with a lot of people getting a little help, but not that mad about a few very rich people getting tons of help. It ALL drives the economy and there's a fair bit of evidence that the lack of middle class cash fluidity is causing substantial economic damage.

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 11:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PilotMan (Post 3368448)
You mean the way the dumbass did with his trillion dollar a year tax cut that filled the pockets of the rich? Sort of funny how you can get angry with a lot of people getting a little help, but not that mad about a few very rich people getting tons of help. It ALL drives the economy and there's a fair bit of evidence that the lack of middle class cash fluidity is causing substantial economic damage.


That's quite a few words you put in my mouth.

ETA:

To clarify when did I ever support Trump's tax cut for the rich (other than SALT caps, and I think SALT should be eliminated entirely as it favors the rich).

JPhillips 05-28-2022 11:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368431)
The reason the Democrats want to forgive loans is that they are trying to buy some votes.


Basically everything is buying votes and that's the way things should work.

Tax cuts? Buying votes.

Farm subsidies? Buying votes.

H1B visas? Buying votes.

Etc. Etc. Etc.

There's nothing wrong with voting for the people that provide the things that make your life better.

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 11:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3368452)
Basically everything is buying votes and that's the way things should work.

Tax cuts? Buying votes.

Farm subsidies? Buying votes.

H1B visas? Buying votes.

Etc. Etc. Etc.

There's nothing wrong with voting for the people that provide the things that make your life better.


I guess that's true, the politician that robs Peter to pay Paul will always have Paul's support.

PilotMan 05-28-2022 11:35 AM

I guess I don't understand your complaints then. Dems don't deserve your votes because they are trying to come up with a solution to a problem. Is it the most pressing problem? Most certainly not, there are tons of things that need addressed, but that doesn't mean you ignore everything either. Is it the absolute best way to resolve said problem? Certainly not, but the best way is probably not possible given the current state of government. I don't know what that is, only that any sort of actual resolution seems near impossible. Is it popular? Hard to say, because the people opposed are the same ones who never went to college and resent the ones that did. But the ones that did aren't exactly on board either because they've tried their hardest to make good choices so they didn't get in these sorts of binds either. Is the status quo hurting the economy? 100% no question it is.

Ben E Lou 05-28-2022 11:40 AM

I haven't read this thread in months, so apologies if I missed this, but this is a factor that I haven't seen discussed about student loan forgiveness: is it for everyone???

I'm asking because I personally know literally dozens of folks who paid for law or medical school (including a significant portion of living expenses for 3 or 4 years) with student loans and of course were easily able to pay those off over time. Is there any sort of income cap on forgiveness proposals??? I'm not interested in our tax dollars going to make sure Francis Higginbotham IV is able to afford his first vacation home at age 30 instead of age 36.

Ben E Lou 05-28-2022 11:41 AM

Dola: Heck, my wife got a student loan for grad school. Her income more than tripled within less than a decade after completion. The folks who just happened to finish, say, an MBA last year and have 100K in debt, do they just hit the lottery?

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 11:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3368457)
I haven't read this thread in months, so apologies if I missed this, but this is a factor that I haven't seen discussed about student loan forgiveness: is it for everyone???

I'm asking because I personally know literally dozens of folks who paid for law or medical school (including a significant portion of living expenses for 3 or 4 years) with student loans and of course were easily able to pay those off over time. Is there any sort of income cap on forgiveness proposals??? I'm not interested in our tax dollars going to make sure Francis Higginbotham IV is able to afford his first vacation home at age 30 instead of age 36.


From what I've read the income cap is 150k for individuals and 300k for married couples.

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 11:49 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by PilotMan (Post 3368456)
I guess I don't understand your complaints then. Dems don't deserve your votes because they are trying to come up with a solution to a problem. Is it the most pressing problem? Most certainly not, there are tons of things that need addressed, but that doesn't mean you ignore everything either. Is it the absolute best way to resolve said problem? Certainly not, but the best way is probably not possible given the current state of government. I don't know what that is, only that any sort of actual resolution seems near impossible. Is it popular? Hard to say, because the people opposed are the same ones who never went to college and resent the ones that did. But the ones that did aren't exactly on board either because they've tried their hardest to make good choices so they didn't get in these sorts of binds either. Is the status quo hurting the economy? 100% no question it is.


My main concern regarding is the national debt which stands at 30 trillion dollars and counting. I find it immoral and unwise to hand out money to wealthier Americans and hand the nation's youth the bill.

PilotMan 05-28-2022 11:54 AM

There are a multitude of arguments that go against that and a number of different methods of determining what is good debt and bad. Do you see it all as bad debt? What sort of policy is the best, in your opinion, for remedying the debt? Because it sort of sounds like nearly all money spent is bad.

Ben E Lou 05-28-2022 11:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368459)
From what I've read the income cap is 150k for individuals and 300k for married couples.

So a couple of doctors meet in medical school, get married, are making 120K each in their first year, and we're gonna pay their >$400K in loans for them? Have they really thought this through?
Just found this by Googling a bit. Nearly half of student loan debt is for some form of grad school, so this just isn't my personal orbit of friends and acquaintances that we're talking about..

Average Graduate Student Loan Debt [2022]: for Master's & PhD


Some key numbers...
  • The average undergraduate student loan debt balance is $36,635.
  • The average debt among master’s degree holders is $71,287.
  • The average debt among PhD holders is $159,625.
  • 14.3% of the average graduate student debt is from the borrower’s undergraduate study.
  • The average graduate student debt is 141.8% higher than the average debt balance among all student borrowers.
From another page on the same web site...
Student Loan Debt by Educational Attainment
  • Graduate students borrow 37% of federal student loan dollars.
  • 60% of undergraduate certificate recipients owe an average of $16,940 each in federal loans.
  • 42% of associate’s degree recipients owe an average of $21,890 each in federal loans.
  • 63% of bachelor’s degree holders owe an average of $31,790 in federal loans.
  • 54% of master’s degree holders owe an average of $70,070 in federal loans.
  • 45% of doctoral degree recipients owe an average of $118,360.
  • 71% of professional degree holders owe an average of $199,540.

Austin90 05-28-2022 12:00 PM

It's not often that you get to see an interesting political discussion in forums like these, it's usually disallowed. Very intriguing!

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 12:02 PM

When the deficit is over one trillion dollars then I tend to see any additional spending as bad, as there is insufficient political will to increase revenue to offset the spending.

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 12:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ben E Lou (Post 3368462)
So a couple of doctors meet in medical school, get married, are making 120K each in their first year, and we're gonna pay their >$400K in loans for them? Have they really thought this through?
Just found this by Googling a bit. Nearly half of student loan debt is for some form of grad school, so this just isn't my personal orbit of friends and acquaintances that we're talking about..


I think Biden is just forgiving $10k at the moment. I wouldn't be surprised if he forgives more in the future.

PilotMan 05-28-2022 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368464)
When the deficit is over one trillion dollars then I tend to see any additional spending as bad, as there is insufficient political will to increase revenue to offset the spending.


Amazon would have never made it with this business model.

Ben E Lou 05-28-2022 12:48 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368465)
I think Biden is just forgiving $10k at the moment. I wouldn't be surprised if he forgives more in the future.

Ahhh...ok. That's the piece I've been missing. It does seem clear from the data on that site I found that the higher the dollar amounts you forgive, the higher the percentage of it that end up going to help people who aren't remotely in need of help..

cuervo72 05-28-2022 02:55 PM

A lot of those undergraduates (including one of our own) don't end up getting a degree. Some quick searches indicate as many as 40% who start wind up dropping out.

(In our case, they weren't sure about continuing and dropped out in part not to accrue more debt -- for both them and us.)

We will be paying off our son's degree for a while, and it will essentially be like having another mortgage. Should be fun. If the 10k applies to us as well, I will welcome it. (We are still paying off my wife's Master's. Her salary did not triple from having it.)

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 05:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Austin90 (Post 3368463)
It's not often that you get to see an interesting political discussion in forums like these, it's usually disallowed. Very intriguing!


Well jump on in!!!

HerRealName 05-28-2022 05:56 PM

We paid for most of our two recent graduate kids' college education but they both had some student loans to ensure they had some skin in the game (a bigger concern for one vs the other). They both did really well, graduated, and are mostly independent. The $10K would wipe out nearly all of their student loans and they'll be able to start their adult life without the additional expense. It took my wife and I 12 years to pay off her student loans.

The only caveat to this nice story is that my wife and I probably would have paid off their student loans anyway so this is probably more of a relief for us than them.

GrantDawg 05-28-2022 06:35 PM

I paid off my student loan, and my wife's student loan. My daughter paid off hers. I think a 10k forgiveness based on income is a fantastic idea. It will make a real difference to many people. I also think the interest should be reduced to next to zero on loans, and they should be allowed to be discharged on bankruptcy.

Sent from my SM-G996U using Tapatalk

NobodyHere 05-28-2022 06:41 PM

There's another part of the issue of student loan debt that I feel doesn't get talked about enough.

How about the future borrowers? It feels like we're trying to clean out the water when the pipe is still bursting.

I feel like any piece of legislation addressing students loans should address future students loans.

I'm drunk right now so don't give me shit about my prose.

Edward64 05-28-2022 07:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere (Post 3368483)
There's another part of the issue of student loan debt that I feel doesn't get talked about enough.

How about the future borrowers? It feels like we're trying to clean out the water when the pipe is still bursting.

I feel like any piece of legislation addressing students loans should address future students loans.

I'm drunk right now so don't give me shit about my prose.


Don't worry, there'll be another freebie in 10-15 years.

But good point. This is obviously targeted for here and now, and for a select group. Need to fix public college costs.

I did some work at a couple public universities. Yes, increased fees are to pay for quality teachers, but it's also to pay for amenities supposedly needed to compete better. Some truth to amenities but think they (public universities) have over done it.

Frak the list price of $40k and then grants/loans will be given to reduce the average price to $20k. Just make majority of public universities affordable upfront without all the paperwork BS which you don't know has been approved until it's too late to get into another school anyway.

Brian Swartz 05-29-2022 07:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips
There's nothing wrong with voting for the people that provide the things that make your life better.


Hard disagree. It a basic responsibility of citizenship to have the interests of society in mind, not just your own. Someone who is going to make my life better at the expense of others is not going to find it easier to get my vote if I have my head screwed on straight.

Quote:

Originally Posted by NobodyHere
I find it immoral and unwise to hand out money to wealthier Americans and hand the nation's youth the bill.


Absolutely so.

flere-imsaho 05-29-2022 11:07 AM

I'm going to assume you guys were all against Trump's tax cuts, right? And all the corporate tax loopholes which allow a huge number of companies to not pay any taxes in many years. And the corporate tax rate dropping to 20% anyway.

Right? I know I've been off the board for a few years, but I would imagine if you all felt so strongly about "handouts" you were all up in arms in the Trump Presidency thread, right?

I'm just asking questions.

Brian Swartz 05-29-2022 01:46 PM

I'm not 'up in arms' but my opinion on Trump is well known. I don't think he was qualified for a position as elevated as dog-catcher, I didn't vote for him at either opportunity, I was opposed to most of what he did, etc. Was I against the tax cuts while at the same time continuing to spend money like it grows on trees? Yes, yes I was.

Devil's always in the details but I'm against almost all of the 'corporate tax loopholes' I know about. I don't think raising corporate taxes tends to be particularly effective since what you want to target and what actually ends up resulting are often different things - but that's a separate issue.

BYU 14 05-29-2022 02:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by GrantDawg (Post 3368482)
I paid off my student loan, and my wife's student loan. My daughter paid off hers. I think a 10k forgiveness based on income is a fantastic idea. It will make a real difference to many people. I also think the interest should be reduced to next to zero on loans, and they should be allowed to be discharged on bankruptcy.

Sent from my SM-G996U using Tapatalk


100% on interest, student loans should not be a profit generating mechanism, or at least not to the degree they are now. If a single Mom works full time, goes to school, gets a degree to make her kids lives better, then has to defer the loan payments while she builds earning potential in her career, she should not see the balance of her loan damn near double at some point down the road.

In terms of forgiving a portion of loans, I also agree it should be solely based on income, not just a freebie for everyone.

Atocep 05-29-2022 05:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BYU 14 (Post 3368534)
100% on interest, student loans should not be a profit generating mechanism, or at least not to the degree they are now. If a single Mom works full time, goes to school, gets a degree to make her kids lives better, then has to defer the loan payments while she builds earning potential in her career, she should not see the balance of her loan damn near double at some point down the road.

In terms of forgiving a portion of loans, I also agree it should be solely based on income, not just a freebie for everyone.


Agreed entirely

We profit as a society when we educate our citizens. I'd be curious if creating a new loan type that instead of paying interest you perform community service from an approved list of options each year (I know something similar was suggested earlier) is something that's doable. Those within the financial resources can continue to use loans and skip the community service aspect by paying more while those that need the help can help their community not get overwhelmed by interest payments.

For loan forgiveness it should be as targeted as possible but at the same time I'd prefer them err on the side of being generous than not helping enough.

We also need more safety nets for people that are just so far behind on payments that it's becoming entirely unrealistic for them to pay off their loans.

RainMaker 05-29-2022 06:56 PM

I wish people had been this upset when the Fed pumped in like $10 trillion and now we have massive inflation all so the banks wouldn't have a down quarter.

Maybe the administration needs new terms. Don't call it loan forgiveness. Call it quantitative easing or something and the people complaining will ignore it.

Atocep 05-29-2022 07:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 3368546)
I wish people had been this upset when the Fed pumped in like $10 trillion and now we have massive inflation all so the banks wouldn't have a down quarter.

Maybe the administration needs new terms. Don't call it loan forgiveness. Call it quantitative easing or something and the people complaining will ignore it.


We wouldn't benefit at all from loan forgiveness, but I'm all for it. It's weird to me that some people are against it simply because they paid their loan off. Are cancer survivors going to be pissed off if we ever find a cure for it?

Edward64 05-29-2022 07:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Atocep (Post 3368548)
We wouldn't benefit at all from loan forgiveness, but I'm all for it. It's weird to me that some people are against it simply because they paid their loan off. Are cancer survivors going to be pissed off if we ever find a cure for it?


I think cancer survivors that paid off their deductible and expenses that their insurance did not cover would be pissed off if current cancer patients get their deductible and expenses paid.

But Biden is proposing $10k so not equivalent because cancer survivors prob paid much more than that. There is the financial impact the older ones that paid off their medical expenses had to endure. They were not able to buy something for themselves, their kids, they did without "something" etc. because they used that money to pay off their cancer treatment.

Edward64 05-29-2022 07:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Atocep (Post 3368541)
... paying interest you perform community service from an approved list of options each year (I know something similar was suggested earlier) is something that's doable.


That was me. As Mandy would say "this is the way".

JPhillips 05-29-2022 07:47 PM

The Libertarian party got taken over by racists. One of the first things they did was strike this from the party platform.

Quote:

“we condemn bigotry as irrational and repugnant”

NobodyHere 05-29-2022 08:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 3368554)
The Libertarian party got taken over by racists. One of the first things they did was strike this from the party platform.


Where did you see this at? The phrase is still on their website

Platform | Libertarian Party

JPhillips 05-29-2022 08:31 PM

They just passed the change this afternoon. I'm sure it hasn't made the website yet.

bronconick 05-29-2022 08:42 PM

They got taken over by something called the "Mises Caucus" who thinks that Hitler wasn't that bad

cuervo72 05-29-2022 09:01 PM

Yeah, I had a Libertarian on my FB list who I had to mute. He was always going on about how the Confederacy was great and all. (He grew up where I did outside Philly but claimed a relative. Whatever.)

NobodyHere 05-29-2022 09:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bronconick (Post 3368559)
They got taken over by something called the "Mises Caucus" who thinks that Hitler wasn't that bad


Yeah that's a shame. From what little I've read about the group it sounds like they are bunch of Trumpians. Democrats should hope that they take votes from Republicans in upcoming elections.

I usually voted for Libertarians in the past but it sounds like I'll just be sitting home if this caucus is as bad as they seem.

Ksyrup 05-30-2022 09:31 AM

Rand Paul already made me turn away from Libertarian with his BS antics the past few years. Then in 2020 we had a couple of local Libertarian candidates who were single issue, 2A candidates. It all comes off as a subset of the Trump sect of the GOP. It's like the Tea Party doesn't know which group to belong to.

flere-imsaho 05-30-2022 09:50 AM

This exchange reminds me of an exchange we had about the Libertarian's last real shot back in 2016: POTUS 2016 General Election Discussion Thread - Page 49 - Front Office Football Central


I've never really followed the Libertarian party too much, but if it's now another Trumpist party, I wonder if it moved to where its constituents are, or if it was always heading in that direction anyway.


As a case for following its constituents, I wrote the following about Maine in 2016 where I noted that a state that had long been pretty happy to support politicians that were fiscally conservative but socially moderate had now been split between a highly progessive south and raging populist north: POTUS 2016 General Election Discussion Thread - Page 38 - Front Office Football Central


But on the other hand even going back as far as Ron Paul, the party's been headed by folks willing to push some pretty conservative social views which I had always thought would have been out of bounds for true Libertarians (e.g. "fiscal conservative, social 'stay out of people's personal choices'").

Coffee Warlord 05-30-2022 10:32 AM

Ron Paul, Rand Paul, and the Libertarian Party has the issue of, "take a some good ideas, grab them, and sprint off as far away from actual sanity as possible".

Of course, to be fair, that's pretty much both major parties these days, too. Way too much all or nothing in both parties.

BYU 14 05-30-2022 10:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ksyrup (Post 3368574)
Rand Paul already made me turn away from Libertarian with his BS antics the past few years. Then in 2020 we had a couple of local Libertarian candidates who were single issue, 2A candidates. It all comes off as a subset of the Trump sect of the GOP. It's like the Tea Party doesn't know which group to belong to.


Every time I have taken one of those surveys for political leaning, I always fall as a left leaning libertarian, small government, personal freedom, social equality. But, just like the GOP, there seems to be more extremes emerging in the that par5ty, and like the Dems, the left leaning faction of the wing is terrible at phrasing and planning. I would love a good libertarian candidate, that was not a Tea Party refugee, but then again, I would love a good candidate period regardless of party.

Flasch186 05-30-2022 11:12 AM

I almost started a new thread but also didn’t want to fracture the participants too much. Assuming trump wins the next election what are some of the first things he does? Pardons like Oprah giving away books… pull out of NATO? What else?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Qwikshot 05-30-2022 11:41 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Flasch186 (Post 3368581)
I almost started a new thread but also didn’t want to fracture the participants too much. Assuming trump wins the next election what are some of the first things he does? Pardons like Oprah giving away books… pull out of NATO? What else?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk


He'll suspend all elections stating they're fraudulent and stay in power until death.

stevew 05-30-2022 11:52 AM

I think he’ll expand the supreme court by 4 and put a bunch of 32 year olds on it.

Brian Swartz 05-30-2022 04:50 PM

I honestly don't think it matters much. If Trump is elected again, it won't matter who else is or isn't elected, what he does or doesn't do. It'll all be rearranging seating for the End of the Republic at that point.

NobodyHere 05-30-2022 05:42 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ksyrup (Post 3368574)
Rand Paul already made me turn away from Libertarian with his BS antics the past few years. Then in 2020 we had a couple of local Libertarian candidates who were single issue, 2A candidates. It all comes off as a subset of the Trump sect of the GOP. It's like the Tea Party doesn't know which group to belong to.


I don't think Rand Paul was ever a big 'L' Libertarian. He was just a Republican who invoked libertarian ideals when it suited him.


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