acbytesla
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2012
- Messages
- 39,534
The moderates.
But I don't think they make it up out of whole cloth, they are just susceptible to conservative lies about both-sides-are-bad.
I'm a moderate. Am I crazy?
The moderates.
But I don't think they make it up out of whole cloth, they are just susceptible to conservative lies about both-sides-are-bad.
Rich people play the system to squeeze every dollar they can out of the system so they too take out student loans. I'm not in favor of total loan forgiveness either. Yes, there are other areas that could be cut. So what? There are also numerous areas of need as well.
If you can borrow money for less than you can earn on investments, you're foolish to turn it down. And federal student loans carry below-market interest rates and payments are deferred while you're in school. Low rates and no payments for as long as four years? That's a big incentive to borrow as much as you can.
I'm a moderate. Am I crazy?
Wait a minute. In s society with as many and varied needs as ours, in the middle of a pandemic, when did 50K for college loans become some kind of progressive benchmark? A higher minimum wage, better health care, more money for the unemployed, voting rights protections, immigration reform, tax reform and more are much more important and will have much more social impact. Proposals to make college more affordable, including free community college and cheap or free undergrad, are also on the list.
But 50K for college loans is a just a giveaway. For starters, if people borrowed big bucks to attend private schools when they could have easily have paid for state schools, that's a choice of a luxury good, not a necessity. When people borrow big bucks to go to law school or get MBAs, they are buying tickets to prosperous, prestigious careers. Why should they be subsidized by taxpayers who maybe didn't even go to college? Some kids worked their way through school to avoid loans. Why don't they get 50K? Some prosperous families took out low-cost, low-interest college loans so they could keep their savings and investments and get better returns. Why should they get another benefit?
And then you have the broader issue that the easy availability of college loans has allowed college costs to rise much faster than inflation for decades. To some degree they have freed colleges from ordinary market forces.
There's an argument to be made for loan forgiveness in exchange for, say, public service work or tying repayments to income. But just wiping out college loans is one of Sen. Warren's worst pandering ideas. There's no reason for anybody else to swallow it.
And here's an argument that a 10K break would help the poorest students, and 50K would only help the wealthiest.
https://www.npr.org/2021/02/18/9683...giveness-hinges-on-2-numbers-10-000-vs-50-000
None of those programs need be affected by this one. This is just the long version of the same faux austerity dodge that fallaciously assumes that any costs of this program is at the expense of other needed programs. Just not the case.Wait a minute. In s society with as many and varied needs as ours, in the middle of a pandemic, when did 50K for college loans become some kind of progressive benchmark? A higher minimum wage, better health care, more money for the unemployed, voting rights protections, immigration reform, tax reform and more are much more important and will have much more social impact. Proposals to make college more affordable, including free community college and cheap or free undergrad, are also on the list.
...and there is the appeal to envy. It is a giveaway? Sure. Will some people with money who maybe do not need it get a small windfall? Sure. Will this benefit some people more than others? Yup.But 50K for college loans is a just a giveaway.For starters, if people borrowed big bucks to attend private schools when they could have easily have paid for state schools, that's a choice of a luxury good, not a necessity. When people borrow big bucks to go to law school or get MBAs, they are buying tickets to prosperous, prestigious careers. Why should they be subsidized by taxpayers who maybe didn't even go to college? Some kids worked their way through school to avoid loans. Why don't they get 50K? Some prosperous families took out low-cost, low-interest college loans so they could keep their savings and investments and get better returns. Why should they get another benefit?
Yes, there needs to be dramatic reforms in how college is paid for. Right now we are having 18 year old kids taking on six figure loans that they cannot discharge even in bankruptcy because they are told that education is so important and going to a good school is essential. Which is the sort of predatory lending that would justify writing off all student debt, really.And then you have the broader issue that the easy availability of college loans has allowed college costs to rise much faster than inflation for decades. To some degree they have freed colleges from ordinary market forces.
There's an argument to be made for loan forgiveness in exchange for, say, public service work or tying repayments to income. But just wiping out college loans is one of Sen. Warren's worst pandering ideas. There's no reason for anybody else to swallow it.
And here's an argument that a 10K break would help the poorest students, and 50K would only help the wealthiest.
https://www.npr.org/2021/02/18/9683...giveness-hinges-on-2-numbers-10-000-vs-50-000
Ummm... "Faux austerity dodge"?None of those programs need be affected by this one. This is just the long version of the same faux austerity dodge that fallaciously assumes that any costs of this program is at the expense of other needed programs. Just not the case.
But that's the issue, isn't it... whether people "really need" relief of $50k.None of this matters. Just another part of the faux austerity dodge where we don't put money in the pockets of people who need itand/or will spend it in ways that stimulate growth because some people who don't might get a benefit. Which is sick, really.
Except the United States did have trouble giving tax breaks to the wealthy... because it ended up adding billions of dollars to the debt.We don't seem to have trouble giving tax breaks and other goodies to the well off in the name of economic stimulus, but want to draw a line when those benefits are available across the board?
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None of this matters. J
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The obsession with fairness is misplaced.
Grenell, who once served the Bush administration as U.N. Ambassador John Bolton’s spokesman, was forced to delete hundreds of sexist, rude comments from his Twitter feed in 2012, during his brief tenure as foreign affairs spokesman for Mitt Romney’s presidential campaign.
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In addition to mocking the physical appearance of female political figures, Grenell has frequently used his Twitter account to harass journalists, relentlessly accusing them of partisanship for any reporting that challenges the far-right ideas he promotes.
https://theintercept.com/2018/05/09...bassador-germany-immediately-offends-germans/
Ummm... "Faux austerity dodge"?
The U.S. is trillions of dollars in debt. Needed infrastructure has gone unattended. Covid-19 is still wrecking havoc on the economy (and may require more economic stimulus). '
It is if you are realistic about your ability to pay it back.If you can borrow money for less than you can earn on investments, you're foolish to turn it down. And federal student loans carry below-market interest rates and payments are deferred while you're in school. Low rates and no payments for as long as four years? That's a big incentive to borrow as much as you can.
Most people get nothing from most programs. They don't see much farm subsidy money and on top of it being their tax money that makes their food more expensive.But in this particular case, wiping out $50K in existing college loans does nothing to help people without any loans, who are likely to be worse off financially, and whose taxes will be paying for the giveaway.
If none of that matters, why not just send $50K to everybody? Or everybody under 25? Or 30? Or 40? Or everybody who earned less than $100K last year? Tying a giveaway specifically to college loans owed seems especially unfair.
This assumes that Biden isn't one of the ghouls.
A well mannered more competent less racist ghoul who for political reasons has to play lip service to progressive ideas, but he's still going to side with business interests and wring his hands about assistance maybe falling into the hands of people who aren't desperate for it as an excuse to avoid progressive goals.
Lets see: 50K student loan forgiveness? He objects because it might help people who went to Yale and because early childhood ed is more important. Which is standard nonsense when any sort of real assistance comes up. Suggest it will help rich people (as if they have loans in the first place) and that the money will come from the mouths of children even when assuming the federal budget is an overall static number there are way other areas that could be cut.
So, yeah, it was critical to get Trump out of office, but this guy has always sucked and will always suck. When they run into trouble in the midterms they will blame progressives as usual.
Manchin a No on Neera Tanden, because of her "overtly partisan statements."
He mentions mean tweets directed at Mitch McConnell and Bernie Sanders.
Manchin voted Yes for Gorsuch, Kavanaugh, Grenell, and Bill Barr.
Grenell had to delete hundreds of rude tweets.
https://twitter.com/alanhe/status/1362871991133499393?s=19
OK, then let's judge Biden by how he's doing or even trying to do or acting like he ever even intends to try to do on those other benchmarks instead.when did 50K for college loans become some kind of progressive benchmark? A higher minimum wage, better health care, more money for the unemployed, voting rights protections, immigration reform, tax reform and more are much more important and will have much more social impact.
...and about what kind of Democrat is most likely to win in general elections against Republicans.The moderates.
But I don't think they make it up out of whole cloth, they are just susceptible to conservative lies about both-sides-are-bad.
We are currently nowhere near that point on the line. As soon we start to get anywhere near it, then it will be time to start paying attention to this argument.believe it or not, money is not an infinite resource. Somewhere along the line, some tough decisions have to be made.
OK, then let's judge Biden by how he's doing or even trying to do or acting like he ever even intends to try to do on those other benchmarks instead.
...Same result.
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The $1T it would take for forgive up to 50K would effectively be an ongoing stimulus program targeting young adults who drive an awful lot of our spending.
The denial of Tanden is right for the wrong reasons. Her belligerent Twitter account isn't really anything I care about, but her neoliberal politics are pure poison.
It's pretty funny watching her grovel to Sanders though, given her history.