Zand
Well-known member
Is that Stratton?
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that is tough.i have been making payments for 12 years. i have paid an amount equal to approximately 60% of my principal balance. my principal balance is higher than the day i left fordham.
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Throwing money at the problem (via debt forgiveness and easy loans) doesn't fix the root cause of the issue. Several things need to happen:
1) We need to stop encouraging all kids to go to college and stop stigmatizing those that don't. College isn't for everyone and high schools need to stop the silly notion that it is. There are plenty of people that would be far better off going to a trade school than college for example.
2) We need to get kids to understand the costs and make more cost effective choices. If demand for expensive private colleges remains high, there's also no incentive for those schools to do anything about costs. Drop demand for them and maybe they will wake up.
3) Stop making money so readily available and stop preying on students. I actually do agree with one thing Kusty said earlier in this thread about interest rate limits for student loans. Student loans should not be overly profitable for either the government or any private institution that offers them. I don't think interest rates should be 0 though as I do think some debt with some small interest rates teaches kids a bit about financial responsibility. 0% interest just turns it into "free money" again which doesn't help the root cause.
Kudos to anyone that read my entire rambling. The notion of debt forgiveness rubs me the wrong way, but so do the astronomical rates schools charge today. I personally think it is downright shameful what my own alma mater charges now and it really bothers me whenever I see the numbers.
Agree 100%.I believe the advent of double income families has generally raised-up many middle/upper middle class folks standard of living compared to 50 years ago. Fancier cars, fancier homes, more expensive grown-ups toys, more leisure travel, way more dining out, but at a cost of less one-on-one time between children and parents, especially for Moms.
I've skied loon a bunch of times but I avoid the gondola to the point that I didn't even know that view from aboveloon. they put in perfect seeded bumps for a few hundred vertical right at hte gondola base
I was in the room when we (The Boston Co.) did the first Euro Transaction in The United States.lol did this guy really just tell you to invest your childrens' college funds solely in ford stock? jesus fuckin christ this guy.
Agreed on nearly all points (especially those that tackle the root cause of the problem: there is no imperative for colleges to rein in tuition increases), but disagree on the merits of a one-time debt forgiveness.
I graduated HS in 89, did the CC thing for 2 years. Had a scholarship that paid for a good chunk of it. I think it was $1000 a semester. Best class I ever had was there, Marine Biology. Most of the class even showed up on a Saturday for an optional field trip.
Moved onto NJIT and the schorlarship rolled over to there. Probably covered a 3rd of the tuition. I lived at home, so that saved a boat load. My last undergrad semester I did something called the BS/MS program. Take 2 grad courses and it counts for both. That program also allowed you to work 10 a week for free tuition and another 10 for the same amount in a stipend. I think it was around $3500 a semester. That continued for grad school. Got off cheap I guess. I would not complain if my kids took a similar route.