I'm an incrementalist, yes, but incrementalism requires an understanding that it increments. This is a good Step 1. Where's Step 2? Because if there isn't a Step 2, it doesn't end up being incremental. Being unsatisfied with the current step and demanding more is a key part of incrementalism, dude.
It's accurate, but the top 20% of the country pays 80% of the tax revenue. So really it's just "the mildly competent and up" pay for the loans.
I personally would prefer it if we went back to pre-sallie may days where only our gifted were able to get federal student loans to go to school, and only under extreme scrutiny of if it was statistically likely you'd be able to pay them back with a good job afterwards. Either prove you're good and worth the risk, or fund it yourself, y0.
I digress. Cool for a lot of idiots who haphazardly stumbled into college because they felt social pressure and just signed on with whoever would give them a loan under whatever terms without doing any ROI analysis.
It took me like 10 minutes when I was a braindead teenager to research what degrees would pay well versus what I was I was interested in versus things that really shouldn't be majors because they're not worth the investment. Also, it was a running joke with my friends and I that we'd only get accepted to liberal arts programs and be poor, so anyone that thought "oh, just going to college in any way shape or form makes you successful!" is definitely an idiot to me.
Not misanthropic unless you think that disliking any human is misanthropy. I like plenty of people. In general, I find the most capable parts of humanity absolutely stunning and fascinating.
Last edited by BeepBoo; 2022-08-25 at 03:23 PM.
People my age didn't really have the ability to look that stuff up. If you graduated before the year 2000, the internet wasn't what it is today. There are folks my age who graduated in the 90's that are still paying off loans, and not making enough money to get them cleared up.
Step out of your anecdotal experience, and start putting yourself in the shoes of those who may not have had the foresight or access to investigate degrees and their potential return on investment. Not even just due to the way of the times like those in my age group, but even folks today.
On a slightly different side of the topic. You know what is messed up about Art degrees? They do not require any sort of business management courses. Yeah, there are a lot of opportunities to work for a company as an artist, but a surprising amount of artists are independent business owners. This is a recipe for failed artists who don't have a business focused mindset. How to market their work, how to navigate social media for marketing, how to get it into shows, how to manage the finances, how to use the technology needed to market themselves, and more. Basically, you end up with people who can create fantastic work, with no idea how to profit from it, and how to make it a sustainable career.
RIP Genn Greymane, Permabanned on 8.22.18
Your name will carry on through generations, and will never be forgotten.
To be 100% clear, I'm being very tongue-in-cheek about it and talking down at people this applies to, but I'm not kidding when I say it's good for them and that this is fine. We've bailed out corporations and lots of other things I thought shouldn't be bailed out that I've previously raged about. If tax money is going to go somewhere, this isn't bad, and I think it's fine for people to take every advantage they can get. I do every year on taxes.
As a reminder about the people bitching about how Garland's DoJ is going after "political enemies" and being "weaponized", which is patently ludicrous on its face - https://www.washingtonpost.com/polit...nke-doj-trump/
Zinke should be getting charged for this, but he isn't. Because there are basically no consequences for lying to Congress under oath, as Wilbur Ross and others did, or to federal investigators as Ryan Zinke and many others have done multiple times.The Justice Department’s handling of a former Trump Cabinet secretary, Ryan Zinke, paints quite a different picture. Indeed, it suggests a real reluctance to pursue even what would seem to be a strong case for prosecution.
On Wednesday, a long-awaited report from the Interior Department’s inspector general found that Zinke lied and misled his way through an inquiry into potential misdeeds during his time as secretary of that department.
Crucially, this is the second time the IG has reached such a conclusion about Zinke, who is favored to win a congressional seat in Montana this fall. And also crucially, it’s the second time the Biden Justice Department has declined to prosecute the case.
I'm glad that Garland has basically built a firewall of neutrality around himself and all, but it doesn't matter to MAGA cultists and the amount of obvious high level wrongdoing by members of the Trump administration that the DoJ continues to turn a blind eye to is beyond frustrating.
This week; It's only thurdsay!
- Student debt cancelation for millions
- DACA Codification
- Research paywalls gone
That's a double digit cancellation of malarkey over the past week.
Harvard economists are predicting massive inflation of Copium.
Government Affiliated Snark
So, is the executive order going to be challenged in court? I think it’s kind of telling that I have yet to hear of a lawsuit filed yet.
I’ve been doing a little research and about the only people who would have grounds to file a lawsuit would be the processors who get paid for their government contracts by the amount of money they process and that a broad loan cancellation will cost them money.
I love this talking point.
Student loan forgiveness undermines one of our military’s greatest recruitment tools at a time of dangerously low enlistments.
Indiana's 3rd District Congress.
Yes, we need people who's rich parents can't afford college to become cannon fodder in our foreign wars to support corporations that make people rich, so they can pay for thier kids to go to college.
“There is a cult of ignorance in the United States…. [It is] nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’”
-Isaac Asimov
Maybe a system predicated on exploiting young people's desperation to put them through life-threatening violent service that has a high chance of giving them lifelong physical and/or mental complications because they have basically no other options to try and get ahead, maybe that system is just outright fucking evil and dehumanizing.
The White House actually having a spine.
Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene had $183,504 in PPP loans forgiven.
In response to:.Greene: For our government just to say ok your debt is completely forgiven.. it’s completely unfair
The White House has a thread calling out 4 Republican a-holes in the same way.
“There is a cult of ignorance in the United States…. [It is] nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that ‘my ignorance is just as good as your knowledge.’”
-Isaac Asimov
The Republican cunts need to be put in their place more often. It should be easy, given that pretty much everything they rail against is steeped in blatant hypocrisy.
Too bad it won't matter, though. The idiots who believe them in the first place will just rationalize it away.
"But but but!" The Hypothetical Online contrarian stammers, getting ready to type out their flawless forum argument, "PPP loans were -supposed- to be forgiven, they were for businesses!!"
Okay then why did these non-business owning dipshits even get their hands on these loans in the first place? Thousands of small businesses who could've used this money were denied loans and went under, because leeches like these assholes hoarded all the money.