I did go and my employer paid for it, knowing it was valuable. Tax payers shouldnt be footing the bill. Our gov only gets its money from taxpayers. Therefore every dollar it spends comes from us one way or another. You chose to take out a loan for college, why shouldnt you have to pay it back.
I should benefit from the same tax benefits that home owners get (tax write offs and homestead exemptions), business owners gets (Full forgiveness of PPP loans in the millions), retirees, ungraduated students, defrauded students, injured people, people out of work, and the list is nearly as long as my leg, but in tiny tiny tiny font.
the amount that is going to be spent on this is absolutely tiny and a part of the plan is to put all sorts of new regulations in place on how schools are funded and future loans are dealt with, which is a much bigger deal than the forgiveness. the loan forgiveness is a footnote compared to how much things are going to change due to the new rules.
Theres alot more to all that in your 1st paragraph, but i totally agree with your last. If theres that much student loan debt there is definitely an underlying problem, and it needs to be examined.
My thought is if the gov subsidizes it ( whatever it may be), the price of said product or service gets raised. That in itself is an issue.
In the wallet
You must not have gone to college….
I did go and my employer paid for it, knowing it was valuable. Tax payers shouldnt be footing the bill. Our gov only gets its money from taxpayers. Therefore every dollar it spends comes from us one way or another. You chose to take out a loan for college, why shouldnt you have to pay it back.
I should benefit from the same tax benefits that home owners get (tax write offs and homestead exemptions), business owners gets (Full forgiveness of PPP loans in the millions), retirees, ungraduated students, defrauded students, injured people, people out of work, and the list is nearly as long as my leg, but in tiny tiny tiny font.
the amount that is going to be spent on this is absolutely tiny and a part of the plan is to put all sorts of new regulations in place on how schools are funded and future loans are dealt with, which is a much bigger deal than the forgiveness. the loan forgiveness is a footnote compared to how much things are going to change due to the new rules.
Theres alot more to all that in your 1st paragraph, but i totally agree with your last. If theres that much student loan debt there is definitely an underlying problem, and it needs to be examined.
My thought is if the gov subsidizes it ( whatever it may be), the price of said product or service gets raised. That in itself is an issue.