GOP Blocks Senate Debate On Dem Student Loan Bill 834
TheGift73 writes with this quote from an AP report:
"Senate Republicans blocked a Democratic bill Tuesday to preserve low interest rates for millions of college students' loans, as the two parties engaged in election-year choreography aimed at showing each is the better protector of families in today's rugged economy. The 52-45 vote to begin debating the legislation fell eight votes short of the 60 needed to proceed and stalled work on an effort both parties expect will ultimately produce a compromise, probably soon. For now, each side is happy to use the stalemate to snipe at the other with campaign-ready talking points while they are gridlocked over how to cover the $6 billion cost."
Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Both parties are against the small guy
True, but sad considering that both parties rely mainly on small guys to vote them in to power.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't think it is true that both parties do not value the small guy, rather the small guy doesn't have a lobby and if he did, what would it lobby for? The crazy-quilt of American politics looks that way because Americans look that way.
I have a suggestion. Since the U.S. should value education for its citizens to compete in the world, and since the Republicans believe in free enterprise, and since the Democrats dislike the oil companies for whatever reasons, let's take the $6 Billion the federal government gives in tax breaks/subsidies to the oil companies and use it to cover the student loan rates. What Republican could be against a government directed industrial policy, what Democrat could be against screwing the oil companies out of a few bucks? Everyone wins.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
I have a suggestion. Since the U.S. should value education for its citizens to compete in the world, and since the Republicans believe in free enterprise, and since the Democrats dislike the oil companies for whatever reasons, let's take the $6 Billion the federal government gives in tax breaks/subsidies to the oil companies and use it to cover the student loan rates. What Republican could be against a government directed industrial policy, what Democrat could be against screwing the oil companies out of a few bucks? Everyone wins.
While I can't speak for Democrats as a whole, as someone who is decidedly liberal (but not necessarily a Democrat, the party is just barely left-of-center, as you can plainly see when you compare our 'left' with the 'left' in Europe), I have no problem with oil companies. What I have a problem with is skirting regulations to save a buck when they're making more money then they ever have in history, skimping on safety protection for the people manning their rigs, and most of all, the way they've somehow managed to not only convince the congressmen they've bribed but a significant portion of the American people that they still deserve those 10 figure subsidies.
The people you'll see champing at the bit for 'free markets' are often the same people that defend the government transferring billions of dollars in taxpayer funds to megacorporations because the megacorps don't want to fund their own risk, but they damn sure demand they get to pocket the whole fucking reward come tax time. It's completely ridiculous and really makes me wonder who the fuck could possibly think that is appropriate, especially people that don't have a direct vested interest (i.e., stockholders). Their opinions I can understand, but the other 99.99999% of the population, no fucking idea...
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Oil companies are profitable enough without also leeching billions of subsidies they don't really need.
Now apparently profit isn't enough of a motive, they need to be bribed to hire people too? WTF?
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
When society is bent on harming your industry by any means, then why hire people
lets sort this in the right order:
"when industry is bent on harming OUR society by any means, then why subsidize/support them?"
big oil is clearly a "me, Me, ME! gimme gimme gimme!!" green fest. nothing matters to them but profits and the right to keep doing what they are doing, unless supplies do finally run out OR we've ruined our environment so bad its unlivable here.
of couse, those that make decisions wont' be alive for the fallout (so to speak). they are fat (literally) dumb and happy to keep on keepin' on.
there should be zero respect for any industry that works that way.
of course, this is the US, backwards-land as it is, these days ;(
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Second, there's already a ready group to cover student loan rates, former students with debt. No need to fund student loans when that's already covered.
Sure, that might work if tuition costs were not increasing so quickly. Tuition fees have gone up by a factor of 10 [posterous.com] over the past 30 years! Your government needs to step in and put legal caps on tuition fees as they have in the UK; only then can you hope to make it self-sustaining.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
The oil industry is a very mature industry at this point. It does not need tax breaks. This is more of the "but they're the jorb creators! We can't take their money or they won't pay for jorbs!" crap that has been shot down over and over.
If tax payers need not subsidize student loan debt, why should they subsidize an industry that has a ready group to cover their operating costs, the people that drive cars. No need to fund via subsidy an industry with billions of customers.
A mature industry reaping billions in profit each year should not be subsidized. If you're worried about the matter of "fairness" in tax policy, which really is an elementary school notion, how fair is it we continue to let billionaire businesses while slashing spending on education? You know an educated populace is probably worth more on the whole than oil industry, since we won't be able to actually rely on oil forever. Better to have spent money on educating people than throwing it at an industry with an expiration date.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Your logic is retarded. This was a provision that would remove tax loopholes on the wealthy to pay for the funding of the federal Stafford loans program (who was, incidentally, a Republican). These are tax loopholes that even the Republicans opposed! How does this make the Democrats "hate the small guy"?
I don't know if Slashdot loves repeating the "both parties are the same, both parties are stupid" mantra, but really, at least make a coherent argument when doing so. You're just like Mitt Romney, trying to rewrite history [yahoo.com].
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Insightful)
How does this make the Democrats "hate the small guy"?
How about the fact that, like the Republicans, the Democrats believe that four year degrees are a fancy form a job training? You know, they are encouraging "the small guy" to take on a substantial debt to receive a four year degree so that they can get a "good job." Meanwhile, the education itself provides them with the same job skills and overall education quality as a less expensive two year degree.
University education in America has been declining in quality, and the Democrats are just as guilty as the Republicans for that. The difference is that the Democrats want to sound like they are making it easy to get "an education" -- by piling up student loan debt, thus ensuring that you will need a high paying job afterward to repay that debt. At the end of the day, is it any surprise that most students are rushing to take the "easy A" courses so that they can just get a bachelor's degree and find that $80k/yr job?
If you want to improve access to education, you need to remove the loan debt aspect of high education, and essentially make college education free for those who pass the admission process. Of course, that would be terribly socialist, and would be bad news for those banks that profit from the student loan debt, so I doubt any politician will really push for it.
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Isn't this completely off-topic? Anyway ... Our society currently values a college education. How many companies are going to hire you if you only have a high school diploma? Other than those that may require a portfolio (e.g., art, music, programming, web design, etc.), there are few. You can't even apply for medical or graduate school without a bachelor's or equivalent.
No one said that the Democrats are pushing for students to go to four-year colleges. They want to allow students to receive the financial
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Relevant to this...
Once upon a time, when you wanted a job with a company, they would give you an aptitude test, to determine whether you knew enough to do the job, or were bright enough to learn to do the job well.
Then, along came someone who argued that those aptitude tests were discriminatoy.
So, it became illegal to use aptitude tests for hiring purposes.
At that point, the
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
It should be noted that the Republicans feel exactly the same way.
It should also be noted that when the Republican House passed a measure last week to extend that interest rate, the President immmediately threatened a veto.
When all is said and done, the argument isn't about the student loan interest rate (everyone in Congress agrees it should be maintained as is), but about how to fund the loan program when it requires borrowing money at market rates and lending it out at below market rates.
The Dems picked this particular funding method not because they preferred it, but because they were pretty sure the Reps would oppose it. Just as the Reps in the House picked their funding method because they were pretty sure the Dems would oppose it.
Thus, both sides can say truthfully, that they TRIED to do this, but were stymied by [EVIL OTHER PARTY]...
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
I read an interesting piece on Us politics a few days ago from a Belgian reporter living in the US. (I'm from Belgium btw) It goes something like this:
Both parties are actively trying to get the other side to block their proposals, they do this so that their supporters get aroused and angry at that other party. When your supporters are pissed off and angry at the other guy, they will vote for you, even when your a dumbfuck that screws up a lot. They're to busy being angry at the other guy to notice.
There was some more to do with it but that's what it came down to.
When I read 'political' debate on slashdot, that's exactly what I'm seeing.
This political behavior to actively try and get blocked by the other party obviously works best in a two-party system. So your hope for real change comes with a third party, not with the republocrats/demicans.
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This and the millionaires tax are something the republicans are going to torpedo, but in the process, they make republicans look like they hate the small guy.
No, the Republicans are making themselves look like they hate the small guy. They seem to be the party of the 1% and only the 1%.
It doesn't matter to me, though, I'm voting either Green or Libertarian; I can't bring myself to vote for a candidate that wants to put otherwise law abiding pot smokers in prison. Someone you love smokes dope, what kind of f
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Presidential election years are all about wedge issues, and putting your opponents into a jam. Obama loses the election if he loses the youth vote, so he's gonna pander in that direction, and position the right between the choice of "they don't want you to get the health care you need" and "they're trying to prevent you from being educated and raising your own stature in the most American of ways".
He loses the election without women, so he make sure that the right wingers end up on the wrong side of every
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
My grad loans are at 8.5%. These interest rate cuts don't help me one bit. But I have to pay for them with my taxes, in addition to paying off my own loans.
So, just to keep score:
I have to pay to subsidize benefits for younger people that I didn't get.
AND
I have to pay to subsidize social security and medicare, neither of which I will ever see, because they are both projected to go broke before I ever collect a cent, and fixing them is a political third rail.
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Wah? that is the part of civilized society. your taxes go to pay for things to other people. If you really want to go back to serfdom, there are a lot of countries out there that let you do that.
It really grinds me the number of supposedly educated people that bitch about public funded education. How did you idiots get your education? did you go to private schools? I'm betting not.
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I got a publicly funded education K-12 and federally subsidized loans. I am perfectly aware at how much the taxpayers overpaid for my education, with tens of thousands of dollars per student going towards massive administrative bloat, unused curriculum, dangerous sports programs, unions, unnecessary bussing, meaningless standardized tests, baby sitting, frequent politically-driven realignment of schools and departments, and numerous other wastes. The district my children live in spends over $17,000 per year
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
My mother is a superintendent of a town with 5,000 people. While she's not quite to six figures yet, she's not too far off. But what people don't realize is the amount of responsibility which falls on a superintendent's shoulders. They don't see the nonsense they have to deal with, so many of them are not around to realize that when something happens at the school at 2 o'clock on a Sunday morning, the superintendent is responsible for getting up and driving to the school to take care of it. People don't realize how school funding works, how many conferences they have to go to, how many laws they are responsible for knowing in order to not break, etc. People don't know how much it costs to get to the position, how much time and energy has to be put into it, how administration works year round and is on call 24/7, even on their vacation. People don't realize how much money so many of these administrators donate from their own pocketbooks, to help various projects around the school. I know my mom, for example, has donated over a thousand dollars in one year, just for various clubs and programs around the school. She's donated user of her personal belongings for the betterment of the school. People don't realize these things, which is understandable because most people are not around administrators in a personal setting, but that doesn't make their comments any less silly when I read them.
School administrators don't show up at 7:30 and leave at 3:30. They don't work just five days a week. They never get a chance to "be away from it all". I'm not denying there are many many public schools and public school administrators who are not good at what they do. Just like in any profession, you're going to have incompetents. It's just a fact of life. But what also is a fact of life is there are many more administrators who are hard working individuals, who do the job they do because they love kids and are willing to go through the stress, the hassle, the "never seeing family", etc. that it takes to be a school administrator.
Most schools are accountable for their spending. Most schools have to work very hard to make sure their spending is responsible, and meets the numerous guidelines which are tied to nearly every cent that comes into the school. I would suggest you spend some more time with a responsible and hard working superintendent, and see just how much they really do. Then tell me they don't deserve what they make, and that they are not accountable for what they do.
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Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Insightful)
If you really want to go back to serfdom,
- you really shouldn't bring up serfdom. A serf paid his master only 25% of his earnings.
Today, a huge number of people would have to see their taxes slashed IN HALF to be elevated to the levels of serfs, which is a sad state of affairs in USA, since it fought the King over just 3% taxes.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Funny)
...USA, since it fought the King over just 3% taxes.
Ok, it's slightly more than 3% nowadays, and it's a queen at the moment, but I guess you could rejoin...
Re:NOT an improvement (Score:4, Informative)
Unregulated free markets absolutely require an oppressed underclass and an immobilized middle class in order to generate the desired outcome of maximum profitability for the people at the top. Any other configuration is suboptimal for those aims.
Nonsense. This is precisely what I called making shit up. If one looks at real markets that are as close to unregulated as they get, such as the stock markets, one doesn't see any of these features.
I did no such thing. Just because it does not fit your ideology does not mean it automatically qualifies as "making shit up".
Profit, which is what players in the market seek, comes when a commodity is sold below or above its cost. Profit is maximized only when people are exploited. If everything on the market sold strictly at cost then there would be no exploitation but also no profit.
And in order for there to be people to exploit (to maxmize profit) there needs to be distinct divisions of economic class. A free market that is optimized for profit is also optimized for exploitation of the under classes.
I don't know why you conflate markets with other social problems, but markets aren't responsible for class structures nor oppression of others. That's the domain of human beings who've been doing it longer than the idea of free markets have been around.
You are almost right on that matter. Of course, you likely either won't read this far in my reply or you will misinterpret what I just said. I already said that the market itself can't hurt people, but you conveniently overlooked it because you would rather focus on furthering your misinterpretation of my demonstration that your ayn rand / ron paul fantasy world would require oppression and exploitation.
,br> A market itself is just as agnostic towards the condition as a gun is agnostic towards a murder. Both can be used as instruments of destruction but neither is responsible on their own for the destruction. However much as a gun makes murder easier, a completely unregulated market accelerates exploitation of lower economic classes because that is what must exist to maximize profit.
If a completely unregulated free market truly presented equal opportunity for all, then profit would approach zero. As profit moves further from zero, so does exploitation, oppression, and destruction of opportunity.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Interesting)
How much greater is your income because you received those loans and could go to a much better school? How much more skilled and productive are your work colleagues because they took similar loans to attend a better school? And let's not pretend that either social security or medicare will "go broke". There are going to be drastic cuts in benefits, but they've _always_ been "broke". They're not designed to hold a reserve fund, they're designed to churn their taxes pretty directly into the benefits allocated at the moment.
This doesn't automatically make these loans or programs loans a good investment or justified, but it seems important to provide the basic counter so people are reminded what the real issues are when someone makes a confused, self-serving claim like this. After all, the anonymous poster probably isn't on fire right now: why is he paying taxes for a fire department he's unlikely to need?
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Insightful)
Loans aren't the difference between going to a "better school" and non-"better school", for most people they're a requirement to go to a university at all. A "better school" for most simply means picking the one that has at least some focus on whatever major they want, not going for Ivy League prestige or whatever. Going to the local state school without a specific degree in mind and coasting through to get a degree "just because" requires the same level of overbearing debt burden as somebody on an educational mission who's making a conscious decision about which non-prestige university to attend.
In simple monetary terms, the studies mapping the tradeoff between getting a degree and simply entering the workforce after grade school is showing that it's taking longer and longer for the investment to eventually break even, and for some majors it never does. So, no, many people are not gaining income because they decided to get up to their eyeballs in debt to go to school, and the number who do are falling.
The problem is not "waah, I'm entitled, it's too expensive!", it's a very lucid matter of "I want better education, I paid/owe a ton, and what qualifies for 'education' here simply does not cut it."
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Interesting)
I feel the same way but after my father died of a heart attack after working an 11 hour day in a boiler factory I figure it's money well spent since those things are taking care of her since he's gone. It's not as good as what he used to get for health insurance but it's better then nothing for a woman who's had 18 major operations in her life.
I can't use my insurance on her like her and Dad used theirs on me when I was little so that's all there is. If that stuff lasts till she passes on I'll be satisfied even if there isn't anything left for me.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
I have to pay to subsidize benefits for younger people that I didn't get.
If you provide free or subsidized education, then more young people will be educated. Better educated people generally go on to be more productive members of society, and over their lives will pay more taxes, thus funding education for the next generation. That is how the system works.
Alternatively, you could charge young people vast sums of money for their education. This will deter many from seeking a higher education level. You will therefore end up with a larger proportion of young people having lower education levels, which tend to lead to menial jobs, more unemployment, and a reliance on benefits.
There are plenty of countries that are willing to fund the education of their young people. In today's knowledge based global economy, it seems like a good investment. If education becomes prohibitively expensive in the U.S., then it is the U.S. economy that will suffer in the long term, and people will wonder why it is that better educated young people in places like Finland can still find jobs, when young Americans can't.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Interesting)
Alternatively, you could charge young people vast sums of money for their education
Why are the sums of money "vast"? College tuition and fee rates have gone up much faster than the rate of inflation. Why do you think that is? Other things have increased at this rate as well. Health care, for example has also increased at this rate. What do these things have in common? Well, one this is that someone else is paying for them. See, with health care, insurance companies and government will pay a set minimum for procedures. When there is a minimum that payers will pay, what do you think the minimum price will be? The laws of supply and demand no longer applies.
The same can be said of higher education. When students can apply for grants and easy-to-get loans, they can afford more than they can truly afford. When a provider may charge more for a service and still maintain an adequate customer base, they will. Universities may charge more because students can artificially afford to pay more. Before easy loans and grants, students were able to work a summer waiting tables or manning a booth at a mall, save that money and use it to pay for the next year of school. This is no longer the case. Now students must either get student loans or have very wealthy parents.
When I went to school in the early 90's, my tuition at a state funded college was about $500 a semester. Books cost me another $200 or so. Other little piss-ant fees like parking and such would run me another $100. Of course, I didn't stay in a dorm or get a meal plan as it was cheaper to live at Mom's. I was able to work summers and part time during the school year and paid for the whole thing in cash.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Interesting)
Thus why you should vote Constitutional Party -> Libertarian -> Independent -> Republican -> Abstain in that order for every politician.
I completely agree, but unfortunately, a vote for anything other than the major party you are closest to is a vote for the one you are not. The only way for a third party to stand a chance beyond the little onesies and twosies here and there is to change the system. The easiest and least disruptive way to do this is to only declare a winner at the state level in any federal election if one candidate receives more than 50% of the vote. If no one receives 50%, the top two vote earners go into a runoff. This would allow voters to vote for a third party without fear that a vote for and independent would ensure that your last choice wins.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Insightful)
a vote for anything other than the major party you are closest to is a vote for the one you are not.
Only because fools like you have been led to believe that by the corporate owned media when the corporates own both Republicans and Democrats. A vote for a Greenie or a Libbie is a vote against the status quo, a vote against the corporates (well, maybe not a vote for the libbies...)
Someone you love smokes pot. A vote for a Republican or Democrat is a vote to imprison your loved ones. It's also a vote to raise the debt and deficit -- the Republicans talk a good balanced budget, but their history shows them to be the party of borrow and spend. Look at the last administration, came into power with a balanced budget and booming economy, and squandered both on war and tax breaks for the rich in the foolish notion that those tax breaks would somehow make the economy better, leaving office with the worst economy since the Depression and the biggest Federal debt in history (which is still growing).
You expect the party that trashed the economy to fix it? You expect the party that put us so far into debt to balance the budget? If so, you're foolish indeed.
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No, I expect "factions" in my party to steer her in the correct direction. In this case, it's the TEA Party. This is the wing of the Republican Party that is vilified as "racist, radical, women-hating" because they want less government spending and more local control over local lives. The spend happy Republicans you refer to are becoming extinct due to the TEA Party.
In the next election, I can vote Libertarian or Republican. If I vote Libertarian, I'm making a statement, but I'm not helping anyone get e
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
For other people. Their own medicare, social security, and farm subsidies should stay, of course.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Informative)
I'll take the $250 billion deficit and continue working within the party to reduce that number over the $1500 billion with no chance of having any effect whatsoever. So tell me, who is the fool?
Ummm, the deficit is largely the result of an economic collapse preceded by said control of legislature and executive branch.
That's like blaming the firefighters for all of your property destruction when the arson is the one who lit the fire. "Water damage in my house has increased 500% since the firefighters showed up!"
You can attempt to solve a deep recession through stimulus and tax cuts. BOTH cause deficits and BOTH cost money.
The GOP lit the deficit fire and now they're blaming the people who are saddled with fixing it.
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-DTVAKoOCx_A/TmeDk3PCsqI/AAAAAAAAEI8/Jn-l5tyOcI0/s1600/Fiscal%2BMess%2Bwith%2BBush%2BTax%2BCuts.JPG [blogspot.com]
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Your student loan is subsidized by the government. Your apartment loan has collateral.
The interest rate doesn't determine whether it is foolish to study, the total cost does. If paying tuition means a $5,000 loan at 8% it is more likely to be worth studying than if is means a $200,000 loan at 1%.
And 8% isn't a high interest rate, other than relative to recent obscenely low rates. When I started university the 30 year fixed rate mortgage rate was 9%, for example.
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Wow, yet again I'm glad I don't live in America. In Australia, we have loans, but they're by no means as draconian. We even had free tertiary education for a long time. The fees we pay are a tiny fraction of what students in the US have to pay, but our our education system is still world class. I think it's better to allow more equal access to education (without the need of scholarships) as you end up with more of a student meritocracy rather than only those whose parents could afford it.
On top of that, we
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Don't buy into all the recent hype....it isn't that bad at all over here.
If you
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:4, Insightful)
" just be supported by 'the system'.
which is a tiny, tiny, percentage of people who get aid.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Republicans have been opposed to this since before Obama took office.
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Nancy Pelosi: January 2007 - January 2011
Harry Reid: January 2007 - present
Both are Democrats
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Of the two I prefer the dem bill.
From the House passed Republican bill:
From the Democrat bill:
What I see here are those who have already reaped the benefits of an education, and who can certainly afford a minimal increase in their taxes assist those trying to better themselves.
Every GOP sponsored bill has been slash and burn to 'spare' the wealthy from shouldering a burden in this recession, when they are the ones most able to afford it. While poor families are trying to figure out how to eat for the week, the rich would have to decide whether to buy the Rolls, or the Mercedes. It's a fair comparison. The wealth gap between the poor and rich has never been more pronounced. The rich do not need coddling. They need to pay their dues. I'm moderately well off and pay far more than any typical millionaire in taxes, but I understand the need. Without a health lower and middle class, the economy sucks. Jobs are not created in a vacuum. You need customers and those customers are supplied by the low and middle class, not the rich.. You also need an educated workforce to compete in a global industry. If only those able to afford an education could actually get one, we will plummet even further in the global market as there are simply not enough 'rich' folk to make the workforce competitive on a global scale let alone a national scale.
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Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
I see you, an Anonymous Coward, have bought into the Republican/Conservative lie - that rich people provide jobs - hook line and sinker.
Unless you are literally the pool boy for some multimillionaire, you job *most likely* comes from MIDDLE CLASS consumer demand to make stuff that you want to buy.
Rich people DO NOT go around investing their money into small businesses to help the common folk. That's total BS. Rich people are more likely to park their money out of the country or in hedge funds. Similarly, corporations DO NOT invest money into jobs for the hell of it. They ONLY respond to consumer demand.
Right now, corporation profits are the highest ever in recorded history. Job growth... still slow, because of lack of demand. Supply side economics is again shown to be a failure, with actual real evidence from reality, not the imagination of some free market theorizing zealot.
Your false d dichotomy about the economy also glosses over that rich people and corporations ARE the leeches.
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
That is an unfair argument (and shows GOP bias on your part). The current bill was only being voted on to start the debate, and the Republicans opposed it because "the Democratic plan to pay for the bill by forcing high-earning stockholders in some privately owned corporations and professional practices to pay additional Social Security and Medicare payroll taxes."
So the GOP blocked the bill because high-earners will get increased taxes, whereas the Dems blocked the first bill you cited because the GOP wanted to pay for it by cutting Health Care to middle-income families. Frankly, the GOP choice is no choice at all.
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So the GOP blocked the bill because high-earners will get increased taxes, whereas the Dems blocked the first bill you cited because the GOP wanted to pay for it by cutting Health Care to middle-income families. Frankly, the GOP choice is no choice at all.
Ok, so where's the problem? The GOP choice has the people who are benefiting from the policy, paying for the policy. That sounds like the right choice to me.
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I keep forgetting that every wealthy person in this country was raised by wolves and was just lucky enough to be blessed by Jesus at birth with a good business acumen and the contacts necessary to become wealthy in the first place.
Every single fucking millionaire born in this country has had their upbringing subsidized by the state just the same as anyone else in this country. This meme that keeps going around on the right that they did it all on their own, completely divorced from the 'socialist' crap the
Re:Obama knows how to play politics if anything. (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah yes, the "you took money so we own you" argument.
As opposed to the "Well, now that I'm rich, I don't want to pay taxes!! No No No NO NO NO NO!!!!" argument?
These same people have the gall to bitch and cry about the "entitled". Give me a fucking break. Who told them they were entitled to a tax-free existence?
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That's fine, and believe me, I already do (which is why I'm typing this on a 5 year old computer, haven't bought media in almost as long, bike to work, and buy local whenever I can) but I want my government to stop giving them money, too. I don't mind paying taxes when they go into the community and are actually used to help people that need help, but I'll be damned if I'm going to be supportive of giving huge subsidies to industries that are already insanely profitable.
But, please, don't let me get in the
Re: (Score:3)
ROTFL. Of course, this is a lie [govtrack.us]. The Republicans are not that crazy.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Once again (Score:4, Insightful)
And preventing education is an investment in the future of the republican party. A combination of poverty and ignorance is the best environment for their ideology to grow and spread in.
Dems vs Reps (Score:4, Insightful)
Many moons ago, someone posted something like this here on Slashdot:
Dems - want a European type of capitalist/socialist type of economy with plenty of entitlement programs with the taxation to go with it.
Reps - want to turn the US into a Third World Shithole where you have 99% poor slobs with a 1% super wealthy fat cats with all the power.
It's pretty obvious who's winning contrary to what the Talk Radio and Fox News people say.
Does it have to be one or the other? I don't know. But if it does, I'll take the European model any day because I just don't have the connections to become a 1%'er.
And if one is naive enough to believe that all they need to do is work hard and they'll be a 1%'er; well, good luck with that.
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
Please. This won't help education one bit. All it does is prevent a cut in administrative spending, which has skyrocketed in the past 20 years. Tuition has been going through the roof. Where has the money gone? It hasn't gone to professors. However, the number of new administrators has skyrocketed. The salaries of administrators have skyrocketed.
Now, they just tell kids "don't worry about the rising tuition. See, interest rates are low."
It's a scam. It's a bubble. The sooner we burst it, the better.
Re: (Score:3)
The question isn't where the money is going. The question is where it's coming from. The states are having major financial problems and rather than increase revenue through taxation they've elected to cut expenses by defunding universities. The costs aren't decreasing so the universities need to bring in the money from another source.
Now, the salaries of administrators/executives has gotten out of control across all sectors, but not enough to account for the drastic increases in tuition that have occurred i
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
What appears to be happening is that costs are inflating in accordance to the availability of and expectation of student loans, because hey, the kids'll have it so might as well take it. The quality of education is not increasing with all this additional tuition money being leached into the schools.
The system needs an overhaul and costs need to be reined in. Arguing about loan interest rates on this burgeoning, inflated debt is just shuffling deck chairs on the Titanic.
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
You are 100% correct. Cost of education is going up, now loan interest is going up. And the quality of the education? dropping through the floor. MY wife is finishing up a degree and she is utterly appalled at the kindergarten level of education she feels she is getting in her accounting classes and business classes. She recently told me, "I now understand why you assume that anyone with a business degree is a moron... it's because we are taught to be that way in college."
She was told that to balance the books you only need to be within $2000.00US looking for any discrepency below that is a waste of time. Someone can embezzle a significant amount of money under those rules and not get caught. As a career accountant she is appalled at the idea of "eh close enough" these supposed experts and educators are drilling into their students heads.
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
But then the issue becomes, how can the gov't best encourage higher education? Without loans a lot of students couldn't go at all.
Blaming the gov't for being the entire cause of this isn't fair - colleges share some responsibility by being greedy and raising tuition as much as they can get away with. That's what happens when the corporation profit mentality invades everything. Rather than figuring out what's best overall for the country, or what's best for their customers, the system is turning to eat itsel
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The interest rate does not have much to do with whether people "get education." The interest, and paying back the loan, does not even kick-in until you stop attending college. (Heck, maybe you want to *raise* interest rates on government loans and use the money to pay for more loans/educational investments!)
Now there is something to be said for not saddling people with overly-burdensome debt that is going to impair their future livelihoods. But it's kind of a different issue, and, frankly, has a lot mor
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
helping people get education is not so much "spending" as investing into the future.
I am sorry but you wrong on this point as are both parties at least in the context of the way they are going about it right now. The problem with going to college for most students is not obtaining credit, nor is it the interest rate on the credit even if rates were go up to a whopping 4.5% OMG. The problem is COST.
The cost of college has risen in great excess compared to the general rate of inflation. The cause is to much credit to available and to cheap due to government loan grantee and or direct lending programs. This is exactly the same issue which resulted in the housing bubble. It is a bubble the cost is objectively to high today, outside STEM fields, many, many students will never recoup the time value adjusted cost of getting that education, in better salary or career opportunities. The only way tuition will ever go down is if students stop enrolling because they can't pay.
If you want to fix the problem, you STOP offering loan grantees today. You have Sallie Mai start cutting the number of loans and the amounts it offers each year over a 5-7 year period so students can adjust and find other lenders. You eliminate the special bankruptcy protections student loans enjoy so families who borrow to much have a remedy. This will mean students will have to find cosigners or otherwise collateralize the debt. This will make them cost conscience again. It will no longer be a race between schools to see who can offer the fanciest athletic facility and the best food in the dining hall but who can offer the strongest academic credential at the lowest price, as it should be.
Re:Once again (Score:5, Insightful)
but helping people get education is not so much "spending" as investing into the future
In which case you should be supporting the end of subsidized student loans. There's two things to remember about current student loans in the US. Because the interest rate is subsidized and the loan guaranteed, there is no difference for loan rates between someone who is likely to be able to repay their loan and someone who isn't. That means such loans help college students get debt not get an education, which they might get as a result or they might not. The loan isn't doing anything to make that more likely since it is near completely blind to such things as the ability to repay.
Second, such loans increase demand for educational products and produce a hefty amount of tuition inflation. In other words, people who actually go to college for an education have to pay more, probably a lot more, because the US's subsidized loans encourage a lot of people who otherwise would be gainfully employed, to flail around in college for a while and collect debt not education. It makes the investment in education more expensive and hence, is harming the US's ability to "invest in the future" in this particular area.
I see this as a typical "the cure is worse than the disease" situation which will continue for a while since most of the participants can't be bothered to understand the structural problems in the approach.
Not only this, we know investment in education and knowledge is one place where the gubmint has legitimate role, as the market tends to fail to allocate enough for education.
We know no such thing. To the contrary, the US demonstrates a remarkable diversity of colleges due precisely to the market for education over the past 150 years. Why do people say things about the "market" when they don't have any clue what they're speaking of?
Nor is there a "legitimate role" for this particular level of government. It's not just that the approach actively harms us (which in itself should be a no-go for government involvement), but there's no mandate for such activity. One has to resort to the extraordinarily vague "general welfare" excuse, which can rationalize anything, including stuff that is against rather than for the general welfare as subsidized student loans are.
In summary, subsidized loans have driven up the cost of education by increasing demand and have encouraged people to make poor and expensive education choices. Doubling down on the mess isn't going to make it better. Instead, you'll see more expensive education, more people with debt they can't repay, and greatly increased consumption of public funds. It's a mystery to me how one can view this as an "investment".
Re: (Score:3)
In which case you should be supporting the end of subsidized student loans.
I see this is a common meme. Since you seem to be more coherent than some of the other trolls, I'll just cut and paste my questions here. Unfortunately for you, every question needs an answer before I start to even consider the possibility that my assumptions are wrong.
* there is no perfect free market. Education especially. What makes you think that there are other lenders available?
* supply is not inelastic, especially in Education. What makes you think that it is?
* what is important is marginal cost. You
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Except this isn't an "investment in education". This is political payola.
The effort to subsidize student loans (and student loans altogether) are nothing but a naked effort to pay off 2 (really 3) voter blocks that vote HEAVILY democratic:
- teachers (and this one's long-term value has proven to be a wise investment)
- the young
- college grads (surveys in the US show that the undereducated and overeducated both tend to vote left - those that don't know anything, and those that think they know everything).
The
Where are the parents? (Score:5, Funny)
Why don't these students just ask their parents for money?
--M.R.
Re:Where are the parents? (Score:4, Insightful)
Good idea. People with poor parents shouldn't be getting an education anyway, the worthless peasants. Anybody who isn't rich should be grateful for a job mopping floors, not going around trying to improve their life.
Re: (Score:3)
Why don't these students just ask their parents for money?
--M.R.
Because their parents are still struggling to pay for their own tuition.
Student loans led to the education bubble (Score:5, Insightful)
If either side really wanted to offer better protection for families, they'd kill student loans altogether. This would make education prohibitively expensive at going rates, and immediately pop the education cost bubble.
You can get better education, free or nearly free, in most of Europe, and yet the US youth just sits there, saddling itself with gazillions in student loan debt -- all of which it cannot default on, because it belongs to uncle Sam himself. Shudder...
Re:Student loans led to the education bubble (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
How do you think K-12 gets funded? ::Looks at property tax bill:: ::Looks around and notices a distinct lack of progeny::
I pay for for my neighbor's kids. That's how it works. Because it's *better for our country and society* that they get an education.
Re: (Score:3)
If you were forced to pay for your neighbor's kid's education at gunpoint, would you still think it was free?
Give it up... even kids in China get a free education now. [bbc.co.uk] The choice is simple, either you want a nation of educated people, or you don't. In the knowledge led economy we now live in, people without an education have far less value. Multiply that by millions of people, and an adult working lifetime of 50+ years, and the investment will pay off.
And I have seen a lot of Europeans with "free" degrees employed in America or in American-owned companies because they can actually make good salaries.
So, those free degrees enabled people to become productive and wealthy individuals, who pay higher tax and help fund education for the next generation? Sounds great.
Re:Student loans led to the education bubble (Score:5, Insightful)
Didn't we just cover this a couple of days ago? Colleges don't face a risk of default; the loans are provided by banks and are underwritten by the federal government. Because 90% of the risk is mitigated by the gov, the colleges can raise tuition and the banks don't balk. A small % of students get in over their heads and default but that is baked into the interest rate, which used to be variable until congress messed with it in 2005. Like housing, the scheme breaks down when normal graduates can't pay the bills... Because there's no jobs.
Re: (Score:3)
You can get better education, free or nearly free, in most of Europe, and yet the US youth just sits there, saddling itself with gazillions in student loan debt -- all of which it cannot default on, because it belongs to uncle Sam himself. Shudder...
One can argue which universities in the world are the best, which metric to use etc, but higher education is not free in Europe. It is payed for with tax euros, or as in my case, tax kronor, as I got my education in Sweden. What you fail to understand is that students in Europe, in Sweden at least, take students loan too. There may not be tuition fees but students have to pay rent, eat, pay for books etc too you know. So while the total student loan amount in Sweden is generally smaller than in the U.S., st
Doesn't anyone care about the country? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
Yes, let's blame Republicans. After all, it was the Republicans fault last year when President Obama invited them to the White House and called them UnAmerican on national TV.
Yes, that happened. Yes, I puke a little every time someone blames Republicans for the lack of bipartisanship.
Obama is the most caustic President we have had, perhaps ever.
FFS, you haven't read the OP.
Sure, the democrats are bad. That's why the majority of people don't vote for them.
Sure, the republcans are bad. That's why the majority of people don't vote for them.
Get some compromise, your "team" isn't going to get it's own way all the time in politics. Deal with it, and take one bill at a time. Vote on it's merits, don't use it as a tool to attack the other minority party.
This sort of politics is pathetic. Politics is not a football game.
Re: (Score:3)
This isn't about getting "my own way." This is about keeping the country from turning into fucking greece.
There is a big difference between the US and greece.
The US has a lot of debt but it's denominated in US dollars which the US congress has the power to control the "printing" of. The greek governement has a lot of debt and it is denominated in euros which they do not have the power to control the printing of.
Re: (Score:3)
What? No. There's a Republican plan (that involves cutting spending elsewhere to pay for the lower interest rates) that Democrats are blocking debate on. But God forbid Slashdot cover that.
Yeah, it's just that that "elsewhere" is funding for healthcare for poor women.
Nice of you to just gloss over the funding source though, trying to make this look equal.
It just causes tuition inflation. (Score:3, Interesting)
Why did the price of housing go up and up? Sub prime loans. you can blame wall street for making it worse but the prices were ticking up for years before wall street got involved. The prices started going up with the cheap government loans.
What we can see from the universities that they're responding in the same way. The more you increase the loans the more the tuition goes up. The only way to bring tuition prices down is to reduce the amount of money that can be spent on education.
It's not like the universities are not going to fill seats. They have class rooms and teachers that cost them money regardless of how many students they have... so if you reduce what can be spent on education rather then causing kids not to get educations it will probably cause prices to come down.
Furthermore, the US is giving national tuition rates to foreign students. That's US tax dollars paying for someone's education that isn't even a citizen and isn't likely to stay. So what exactly is the point?
I don't know... I have a lot of problems with the current way we finance tuition. They're the only loans you can't escape by declaring bankruptcy and that strikes me as wrong. There is no legal obligation that you shouldn't be able to escape by declaring bankruptcy. Everything from child support to a student loan. And I know what people are saying, lowlifes will just ditch their obligations. Yes they will. Which is why you don't loan lowlifes money in the first place. As to single mothers getting screwed out of alimony... well, it's a reason to make your separations demands reasonable. If the alimony is so high that it becomes in his interest to declare bankruptcy then you're asking for too much. Pointblank.
Just a little house cleaning and a lot of these problems will go away.
Re:It just causes tuition inflation. (Score:4, Informative)
The only way to bring tuition prices down is to reduce the amount of money that can be spent on education. It's not like the universities are not going to fill seats. They have class rooms and teachers that cost them money regardless of how many students they have...
That's a nice idea, but the UK (except Scotland) has recently conducted this experiment for real, and what actually happens when you cut government funding is that tuition fees rise, fewer young people go to university, youth unemployment rises, and the universities end up laying off qualified staff and replacing them with students:
UK university applications down as fees rise [bbc.co.uk] - "With fees rising to up to £9,000 per year, the impact has been biggest for England's universities - down by 9.9%. In Scotland, where Scottish students do not pay fees, there was a fall of 1.5%."
UK university applications in 'steepest fall for 30 years' [guardian.co.uk] - "The proportion of UK students applying to start degrees in the autumn will drop by 10% this year, a university leader has predicted – the steepest fall for 30 years."
Youth unemployment soars, and it's not just a phase [guardian.co.uk] - "But it's not just the shocking tally of more than a million unemployed 18 to 24-year-olds that should worry us... there has been a very sharp rise in the number of young people who have been claiming unemployment benefit for more than a year. There were just 6,000 in 2008, but that has increased by more than eight times to just short of 50,000."
The University of Cambridge has offered all academic and non-academic staff the chance to take voluntary redundancy [varsity.co.uk] (can you imagine - one of the world's top universities - offering *all* employees cash to volutarily leave employment?)
Thousands to lose jobs as universities prepare to cope with cuts : Post-graduates to replace professors [guardian.co.uk]
No difference. (Score:4, Interesting)
This will not make any difference to those, who are getting the student loans, not at all.
In fact with the latest developments that the student loans are forgiven in 15 to 20 years and that the monthly payments cannot exceed 10% of so called 'discretionary spending', which starts at the yearly amount exceeding 2 minimum 'poverty levels' ($16,000 per person or abou 35K for a family of 4), it means that a person making 50K a year will have to pay maximum of 10% of (50K-32K) per year, or $150/month for 15 to 20 years. If the person makes 100K/year, this goes up to maximum of $567/month.
If the person gets a loan of 100K, just to pay the principal for a person earning 50K /year, it would take 666 month or 55 YEARS, and that's only principal, at that point the interest rates absolutely does not matter, because he'll stop paying after 15-20 years, so he'd pay less than half of just principle out in that time, the interest rate does not matter.
This is political nonsense, not reality, what is happening in gov't, the reality would include realisation that gov't shouldn't be in business providing any loans to anybody in the first place, so that with the decreased fake demand, the number of students would drop off and prices would go down dramatically.
Why is it a good thing for the number of students to drop off? Because how many students take these loans, adding to the national debt, while not working, adding to the national deficit, requiring this money to be printed or borrowed (and the real interest rates WILL go up eventually, and there is already over $1T of unpaid student debt out there). The huge numbers of students are only going to the colleges to get worthless sociology and literature degrees, or go into law, etc.
They shouldn't be paid to do that in the first place, who in their right mind would give a loan to a USA student going to major in sociology? WOULD YOU?
If you wouldn't personally, why would you want the entire system to do that?
Besides, rather than creating this false demand and forcing debt on the people, creating all this debt and worsening deficit, it would better for those very students to enter the workforce much sooner and without debt they'd be better off anyway.
Of-course the political elite on the left want to create this 'popular issue', which really only makes the situation for the students worse, and simultaneously this artificially decreases the work participation rate and thus artificially decreases the unemployment rate, so these student loans are handed out for political propaganda. OTOH the colleges and universities etc., are getting a sweet deal - huge numbers of gov't backed students, who don't actually CARE about the cost of education, as long as they get whatever loans is given to them, and those who can do basic math realise that it's in their best interest to go to the most expensive school.
In fact schools need to start including things in their curriculum that are as expensive as possible - how about trips all over the world as part of 'classes'? How about buying every student a house and an expensive car and all the furniture, electronics and clothing they want? Why not? If the system is on the hook for it and the students are capped at how much they will have to pay back anyway, it only makes sense, right?
Nobody sees this for what it is.
Re:Loan forgiveness (Score:4, Interesting)
Well, if you can get a loan of any size that is capped either in absolute years of payment or only as a percentage of your earnings or both (as is the case here), then it makes absolute sense to get the biggest loan possible and to use it for all sorts of purposes that have nothing to do with education.
Why not buy yourself a house? You are already graduating with a mortgage anyway. Why not buy yourself a business? Then you can make the monthly payments without any problems at all.
Basically any sort of price control or wage control or interest rate control (which is price control on money) or any other artificial limitation only sets a level, above or below which weird things can then happen that were not anticipated (or were, but people didn't care).
Minimum wage, as an example, creates a bottom, below which people can't find work and below which it isn't possible to create jobs. At the same time it sets a bottom to the prices of goods and services that rely on the jobs at those levels.
With maximum interest rates, it absolutely makes sense to get loans that are huge and that can be used to make a spread, as the banks are doing right now - 'borrowing' from the Fed at 0% and 'lending' to the Treasury at 2-4%, so this makes a nice spread - easy money, but below the surface these banks are insolvent the moment real interest rates go above 2-4% and the Treasury is bankrupt as well, and the Fed obviously too (which can't in practice be bankrupt, but they can cause inflation and hyperinflation in worst case scenario).
Basically all wage and price controls create artificial consequences where there will be abuse, naturally, which is only to be expected, but somehow "nobody could see it coming", which is political nonsense of-course.
Re:Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
the loan forgiveness only applies to federal student loans.
- and this story only applies to the Senate and federally backed loans.
Second, the bank-supplied loans in particular are notorious for being cruel to those who took out the money.
- that's a nonsense statement, it has nothing to do with how banks operate. They operate within the limits created by the system, and the system allows them to give out loans with free money the banks get from the Fed and the system 'insures' these loans. There should be no surprise that banks use this to the maximum logical conclusion, it's not free market that operates here.
Interest rates are free to change at a moment's notice and some people have seen double-digit interest rate increases in single years.
- ah, but the US government and the Federal reserve cannot at this point allow the interest rates to go up, it will be politically difficult as the US economy would implode. So the artificial interest rates will be kept low in US dollars by the Fed printing all the money to buy all of the debt (and that is what is happening right now, the Fed is buying all new Treasury debt).
The REAL interest rates are already very high, that is exactly why nobody can actually get access to real investment capital through banks, the real interest rates that come out of real savings are extremely high, high double digits, maybe higher than triple digits, that's because there are no real savings and investments available with all this fake stuff going on.
Yes, I would. And I would wager that in reality, you would as well
- that's because you don't understand economics.
Providing loans to US students is exactly the same as providing loans to US housing market or buying US bonds or buying stocks in most US companies or buying State bonds or buying US municipal bonds, etc.
Why is that you ask? It's because all US debt now is the same, everything is on the US Treasury and Federal reserve, there is NO difference in buying US Treasury debt or US housing debt or US education debt, it all is the same stuff.
Who in their right mind wants to buy long term US debt? You think you can buy US bonds and save for your retirement decades from now? You think with the real negative rates of return and the Fed creating all this inflation you will be making money holding long term US debt?
See, dumb_register, that's why we are different - I can add.
Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The GOP is doing them a favor (Score:4, Insightful)
5) idiots in HR demand degrees to apply for the job even though a Degree has no use for the position.
That right there is where the problem stems from. Morons that have a degree that are in charge of hiring that have the snooty opinion that they only want to hire degree holding employees. yet refuse to pay what a degree holding employee should be paid.
The flicking receptionist does not need a Bachelors degree.
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Fascists.
Re: (Score:3)
The Dems didn;t want it to expire, but they couldn't get it passed without a GOP proviso that they expire. That's supposedly how "bi-partisan" stuff works (as opposed to just blocking everything by saying "No!!!" regardless of what it is until eventually the Dems cave in and say "ok, GOP, what is it you want passed?").
Good twisting of the truth to suit your factually incorrect argument though. Did you get that one from Fox News?
A deeply divided country (Score:5, Insightful)
The U.S is deeply divided into two opposing camps, and the media encourage this by playing the two parties off like football teams.
Your party is not always right. The other party is not always wrong. Politics should not be a "my team's better than yours" shouting match.
Re: (Score:3)
Your party is not always right. The other party is not always wrong. Politics should not be a "my team's better than yours" shouting match.
The Dems are usually wrong; the Republicans are always wrong.
Remember... (Score:3)
Remember when Obama & the Dems wanted to let some of the Bush Tax Cuts expire, and they feverishly argued that it wasn't a tax increase, it was a return the the "normal" rate, that the law included a sunset for a reason?
Then remember when letting the rest of the Bush Tax Cuts expire was an unconcionable burden to place on working Americans?
These student loan rate cuts (passed while Bush was President, which makes me wonder why they aren't referred to as the Bush Student Loan Cuts, but I digress) went into law with a 5 year life, put there by the Democrats with the explicit purpose of expiring a few months before the 2012 Presidential election. Furthermore, President Obama submitted a budget proposal a couple months ago that let the student loan rate cut expire - why would he do that?
Finally, people are starting to warn that we have a "lost generation" - the current generation graduating from college and going years before finding work in their field of study - seems to me the President is trying to buy them off, hoping they won't notice the lack ofopportunities available to them...
Re:Great Idea! (Score:4, Funny)
Lets keep artificially inflating the cost of university education by subsidizing more gender studies majors!
Personally I am quite happy to halve the expense and just study one gender,
Re:Republicans know there constituency... (Score:5, Insightful)
You'd be surprised how many people quickly turn from Dem to Rep once they're out of college and into the real world and have to pay taxes for all of the idealistic things they supported while in college.
Re: (Score:3)
I'm European. We used to have free college. A lot of my former colleagues are against free education.
They don't like to spend the money they make, on their nice jobs, that they got because they have a degree, that they got because of free education.
But now they have kids and the financial crisis is eating away on their salaries. They like free education again. But it's too late. Education has become a business, and a very, very lucrative one. It's gonna be hard to turn this back again.
Funny how polit
Re: (Score:3)
That is called greed.
It's been around forever. Humanity in general is a bunch fo selfish greedy pricks, and when given the opportunity, many will complain about paying to help others.
Re:Republicans know there constituency... (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course not everyone's upbringing is net subsidized. Accounting for how much paid in versus paid out is a zero sum game. But here's an interesting little bit: taxes pay for civilization. Civilization advances the entire social group. In other words, taxes provide more long-term benefits than you can get from not paying taxes. Yes, someone will receive less than they pay in. Congratulations, you discovered the cost of living in a society, where burdens are shared, and some pay more than others.
Really? Is this concept so fucking hard to understand? What the hell did you do in social studies, civics class or even history
Re:Republicans know there constituency... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3)
And since the housing bubble/CDO explosion took place under the last Republican's watch, and he only had the decency to warn the American public shortly before he was out of office, it is going to be a long time before I want another Republican in charge.
Re: (Score:3)
Oh? I've become more liberal since college and am willing to pay higher taxes to support said things.
Maybe that's a tired old cliche and it's not as true as you'd like to think.