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In reply to the discussion: US students drowning in tuition debt [View all]Logical
(22,457 posts)7. Well, I guess I disagree. What aout my brother who worked two jobs to pay his loan back. Do....
you think he deserves some money back for paying it off?
I am not sure how you could do that without compensation for those who paid their student loans back.
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College is necessary to get a good job. Then, students borrow and drown in the costs.
Dash87
Oct 2012
#10
And WE do decide to borrow, and WE did so. Recognizing facts of life is not BLAMING anyone.
elleng
Oct 2012
#47
'they' = legislators who've been defunding education for 30 years; 'they' = corporate interests
HiPointDem
Oct 2012
#27
I remember when all the schools that belonged to the City University of New York were tuition-free.
rug
Oct 2012
#8
I agree with free/cheaper college. It seems odd that most classes stay the same between semesters...
Logical
Oct 2012
#9
So you're arguing against food stamps for families currently suffering financial hardship?
Orrex
Oct 2012
#60
No, because when you get food stamps you DO NOT promise to pay it back. Wow, nice try. And NO ONE...
Logical
Oct 2012
#61
LOL, OK. You are making no sense to me at all. So you win. I agree with whatever you said.
Logical
Oct 2012
#69
Higher education has to be redefined. The debt is the result of states withdrawing funding.
Buzz Clik
Oct 2012
#19
+1. when i went to school, most students didn't *need* to take out loans. a middle-class
HiPointDem
Oct 2012
#25
Well, I guess I disagree. What aout my brother who worked two jobs to pay his loan back. Do....
Logical
Oct 2012
#7
How is it different? My brother just paid his off. And it was a pain in his ass.
Logical
Oct 2012
#52
Bull shit answer. My brother signed a loan agreement. And honored it. Unless a load company LIED....
Logical
Oct 2012
#51
And your grasp is why liberals get a bad rep for thinking that the solution to any situation...
Logical
Oct 2012
#66
The interest is compounded. My debt is growing faster than I can pay it off.
smirkymonkey
Oct 2012
#14
k+r. People with college loans from banks are the ones who need some protection.
limpyhobbler
Oct 2012
#28
I think the cheapest way to curb tuition inflation is aggressive, comprehensive audit of ledgers.
Selatius
Oct 2012
#31
We don't have a student loan problem, we have a JOBS problem. There are simply not enough
Romulox
Oct 2012
#41
I'm realizing my kids will not have the incredible four-years-at-a-state university experience I had
Arugula Latte
Oct 2012
#45