• DeathsEmbrace@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      Remember the lords and peasants system? We actually haven’t moved on from that just given it a new coat.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 month ago

          But hey, we’re living much longer these days.

          Think about how much more productivity time we’re donating to our lords and masters!

      • Maggoty@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Yup. We had a couple moments but we never exploited them to prevent capitalists from turning themselves into nobles in all but name.

  • Snapz@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Not fancy private schools. They’ll cover majority cost of their kid’s private school.

    They want YOUR poor kid to go to a religious school - if they win on the vouchers, eventually the vouchers won’t cover the cost of most of the former public schools and private schools. But those religious schools… They’ll be standing there salivating with open arms and subsidized voucher tuition. Without other options, you’ll send your kid and tell yourself it won’t be that bad, tell yourself you’ll keep communicating with them to contextualize the education versus the religion, but life will happen. The church will have millions more kids to attempt to indoctrinate than they do in today’s regularly declining religious communities.

    Under his fucking eye.

    Vote. Tell your people to vote and call your “both sides” uncle a piece of shit to his misinformed face.

  • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 month ago

    I chose a lower paying job in lieu of going to college and taking on debt. I’d support writing off the debt if the debtor has paid in the loan amounts worth as if it was zero interest, but making it all written off isn’t right by anyone who chose the route I took.

    • vala@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Should we stop trying to cure cancer because it would be unfair to all the people who already died?

      • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 month ago

        “Millionaires want free money” BOoOoOOO! No way!

        “College alumni want free money” Yay! This is totally cool and fair!

        You want me cool with wiping off $80k, give everyone else who didn’t go $80k.

          • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 month ago

            You sound like you want to be the special one who gets something to make your own screw up go away. “I didn’t know what an apr rate was when I took on $80k in a loan to get my studio arts degree”

            • vala@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Having educated and debt free youth is the only way the US is going to remain relevant in the world economy.

              “Crabs in a bucket” arguments like yours really just illustrate how the US has got to the point we are at right now.

              • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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                1 month ago

                Your argument is akin to trickle down economics.

                Further, I’m not against making future college free for anyone who wants it. I’m just against bailing out everyone who willingly and knowingly took on large amounts of debt as their own choice, even when there were other viable options not to.

                • g0d0fm15ch13f@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  But that’s just the point, the inflation of college tuition is borderline predatory. I absolutely went to college because I “had” to, but after 4 years of further self discovery and education I realized I didn’t actually want/need the education I received (the social aspects were absolutely a blast though, don’t get me wrong). If I wasn’t socially pressured by academic advisors and the wealthy into going to college and instead was actually explained what college entailed, I likely wouldn’t have gone (at least in hindsight). Now I work in a profession completely unrelated to my 2 computer science/math degrees and will be paying for the mistake of biting the higher education pill for decades.

        • AA5B@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          I don’t know what proposals you’re looking at but you might look again. That wouldn’t happen.

          Of course since we’re trying it piecemeal instead of systematically, there are many versions of this. But I see prerequisites like already being on income based repayment, ten years perfect record of repaying, up to $10k. There is no wealthy person fitting criteria like this nor would it write off any significant portion of private school tuition.

          All I know is that my ex is still paying off her student loans as a teacher, decades after graduating. If we were still married, we shouldn’t/wouldn’t qualify, but as a teacher with limited income she should

          • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 month ago

            I’m assuming your ex has paid in more than she initially owed, right? As my first statement in here was that someone like her, I’d be fine with debt wiping. I’m not ok with someone who racked up $150k in student loans, only made $25k worth of payments, and gets the other $125k wiped.

            • AA5B@lemmy.world
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              1 month ago

              Right, but that’s the point - every proposal I’ve read would not wipe that high end debt. Every proposal is targeted toward struggling earners. Every proposal already does what you want.

              In a similar vein, my state offers free college tuition! But is it a free bonanza for the wealthy? Not at all. It covers up to three years community college for everyone or four years at a public college or university, means tested. If your parents make a decent income or you want to go to a private university, that’s great for you but you have to pay for it as before

      • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        1 month ago

        Everyone with a hs diploma still gas to compete with everyone else when it comes to buying cars, food, housing, and everything else. The limiting factor of a house for instance is “how much is someone who wants it willing to pay?” College debt means that even if you make more, you may not have much more in available income, or a lower credit score than someone with just a highschool degree.

        Essentially in a world of limited availability (which we all live in) everyone getting their debt paid off after taking it on is going to raise costs of things because it gives more people the extra income to spend on it. Inflation at the expense of everyone who isn’t having their college debt cleared off.

        • AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Gotcha, so you subscribe to the mindset that someone getting something redeuces what you get.

          The thing is, the richest 1% of people are so incomprehensiblly more rich than the rest of us that they could easily pay for school, housing, and food for all of us and still be incredibly rich. That’s the ideal situation IMHO.

          • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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            1 month ago

            Like I said. I’m fine with eliminating the interest and I’m fine with making college free in the future for anyone who wants it. I’m not fine with giving everyone who already received a college degree getting an “out of debt free card”. You don’t deserve that money more than others. The rich needing to be taxed more is a separate issue.

            • AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              I see. So it has nothing to do with limited availability, you just want to decide who “deserves” to be in debt. Disappointing…

              • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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                1 month ago

                Most everyone who isn’t wealthy is in debt. I just don’t want myself or people like me to fall further behind while you’re retroactively given a free college ride.

                How about we use the interest money that you’ve paid into college so far to give everyone who only chose to go to highschool an extra $40,000 a piece?

                “Thanks, friend. That seems fair since you have a higher average earning potential.”

  • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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    1 month ago

    I don’t think this comparison really works. These people are against their money going to other people, whether it’s to a public school or to pay off somebody else’s student loans. Agree with them or not, those things are logically consistent.

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        1 month ago

        Yes, but they see it as their tax money being returned to them. The argument for vouchers is that without them, they’re paying for schools they don’t use.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 month ago

          Are you operating under the absolutely bizarre assumption that the only Republicans who are in favor of school vouchers have school-aged children? Or children at all?

          • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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            1 month ago

            I’m using “they” more broadly here to include people who share that moral foundation. School vouchers slot into the same worldview as being anti-welfare and pro-private-healthcare, for example, which could be summed up as “I got mine, get your own”. I don’t subscribe to that personally, but it doesn’t help matters to completely misrepresent that position.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              1 month ago

              I do not see how a childless Republican got theirs with school vouchers. The only people school vouchers benefit are people with school-age kids that want to send them to private religious school.

              The reason they’re in favor of school vouchers is that they hate public school and they want to religiously indoctrinate children.

              • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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                1 month ago

                You’re being too literal. This is an ideology. They see having money as a proxy for responsibility and success, and redistribution of it as rewarding the unworthy. All practical manifestations of this, whether it’s schools or healthcare or whatever, stem from that ideology.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  1 month ago

                  Except that “the unworthy” are doctors and lawyers. Including Republican doctors and lawyers. Who will be paying back student loans their whole life. So maybe there’s more to it than that.

        • JaggedRobotPubes@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          Which is a dumb and bad argument because better public schools make for the people you run into around town being smarter. Everybody wins.

    • microphone900@lemmy.ml
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      1 month ago

      Here’s a fun thing about student loans: we have stupidly high tuition thanks to CA governor Reagan and president Nixon wanting to reduce the number of students protesting against the Vietnam War. Of course the excuse they used was to balance the budget. This is just one more in a long line of things that Reagan and Nixon ruined in this country for decades.

      https://12ft.io/https://theintercept.com/2022/08/25/student-loans-debt-reagan/

      Also, the real reason school vouchers were pushed was to backdoor segregation after Brown v Board of Education desegregated schools.

      https://12ft.io/https://www.forbes.com/sites/raymondpierce/2021/05/06/the-racist-history-of-school-choice/

      Here’s the original since 12ft.io looks a little weird on mobile. https://www.forbes.com/sites/raymondpierce/2021/05/06/the-racist-history-of-school-choice/

    • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      These people are against their money going to other people

      It’s more strategic. Student loan debt is a mechanism for controlling the employment prospects of college grads.

      Public debt forgiveness becomes a method for funneling students into low paying, morally hazardous jobs (prosecutors, police, the public side of the MIC, education in underfunded neighborhoods, bureaucrat in a corrupt or underfunded agency) where you’ve got an incentive to keep your head down and do the work rather than organize your office or resist deplorable government policies.

      Private industries, similarly, offer the better salaries doing the more morally repugnant work - mining and chemical manufacturing, big finance and HFT, pharma, automotive, credit and collections - which draws in the most talented people to apply their talents in the worst ways.

      You’re constantly asked to sell out your principles for a paycheck/debt relief, or the most invasive and obnoxious applications of technology. You’re never going into business for yourself to challenge a corporate behemoth or pursuing public work that both benefits people and pays well. You’re never going into activism or politics without a corporate paymaster.

      Ever notice how many SCOTUS judges and Senators are in the Federalist Society or from the Heritage Foundation relative to the Sierra Club or the ACLU? A big part of that is simply about the money.

      • cygnus@lemmy.ca
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        1 month ago

        I think you’re ascribing much deeper thoughts and foresight to the average Republican voter than is warranted.

        • UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          It’s much bigger than “Republican voters”. You’ll find plenty of blue states with students drowning in debt and “business-friendly” politicians espousing the exact same “it wouldn’t be fair” anti-debt relief rhetoric.

        • dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world
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          Eh, I don’t think this strategy needs to go much farther than the halls of wherever the RNC is meeting that week. If this is the overarching plan, the political moves the party makes are other things that support this outcome. In this case, any narrative that amounts to “loan forgiveness is bad” is all that needs to be sold to the voter. In fact it’s better that way since they’ll be compelled to vote against their own interest.

          TL:DR: “support your corporate overlords you peasants” doesn’t sit well with most people so they just say something else instead.