Posted on 05/31/2012 6:39:59 AM PDT by Michael.SF.
Even as total outstanding student debt rises to $1 trillion, lawmakers have yet to allow loans to be discharged in bankruptcy.
Without an escape clause, these loans can strangle a person.
Take 36-year-old Nick Keith, who remains $142,000 in debt eight years after graduating from culinary school. He's featured in a new film, "Default: The Student Loan Documentary," in which several college graduates expose the pitfalls of the private student loan industry.
"I want to educate the public about the facts," Keith said. "My life has become a daily swim in a tar pit with very little hope of ever getting out."
Keith's father only agreed to co-sign a student loan if he stuck with an engineering degree at Iowa State University, but even with decent grades, he knew it wasn't a right fit.
He dropped out sophomore year and later turned to the California Culinary Academywithout his dad as a safety nethoping to put his love for healthy eating to use.
"The culinary academy commercials were on the Food Network every 15 minutes," he said, and only required 12 months of study with a three month externship.
He fell for their sales pitch, hook line and sinker
"I should have seen all the signs. [The campus tour guide] had a used car salesman answer for everything," Keith recalls.
(Excerpt) Read more at finance.yahoo.com ...
My son just finished his first year of college. The Universities he’s spoken with and the one he’s attending are VERY blatant about manipulating the kids.
They will openly and repeatedly tell the kids they are an ‘adult’ and their parents don’t control them any more. Exactly what kids want to hear.
Sure this guy is dumb for getting that deep into debt. However what the universities are doing is unethical and immoral.
He got a first class degree in victimhood.
Nick’s Dad must be so proud of his son who refused to take any of his advice and is now a homeless bum living out of a van and collecting “permanent disability” checks
Dad dodged a bullet by not co-signing a loan for $60K to make his son a short-order cook, but what heartache is tough love, to see a beloved son sink so low
Funny how the only advice Nick chose to take was that of some fly-by-night attorney who told him to stop paying his debt in hopes Congress would change the law...yeah
LOL, you got him confused with Elizabeth Warren.
actually there IS a way.
It is called a “hardship discharge” and can discharge student loans in VERY RARE situations. It has not be out of control of the debtor and no chance of ever ever ever bouncing back. Usually some medical or industry extinction reason. (ie buggy whip maker etc)
That said,
Student loans SHOULD be dischargable and schools force to guarantee them out of their bloated endowments.
That’s a lot of money for culinary school. There are all kinds of affordable Vo-Tech schools he could have done for less than $10,000.
Culinary school? If he thought that was a good plan with well over $100k in debt, he’s probably too stupid to succeed as an engineer. Either he needs to buckle down and get a real job or a second job (I worked three jobs 40 hr, 40 hr, and 32 hr a week for two miserable consecutive summers). He’s had eight years to whine about how unfair life is, but it’s time to grow up and deal with the choices he has made.
I imagine his solution is for “the government” to rescue him from his stupid decisions. Only a liberal would think that our children should pay for other people’s mistakes. When you borrow to get an education, that is a business decision. If one chooses well, the engineering/medical/legal education will more than repay the risk taken. When a student chooses poorly, it’s not appropriate to compel those who didn’t go on to college or those who chose useful careers that justified the cost to pay for a gender/race/women’s-studies degree, for a culinary degree, or for some other degree that prepares its graduates only for a career in the food service industry.
“lawmakers have yet to allow loans to be discharged in bankruptcy.”
If people could discharge their student loans, there would be absolutely no reason to charge tuition at colleges. Higher education would be free.
The author fails to explain why I should have to foot the bill for someone to go to culinary school.
What ever happened to working a part time job while going to school ?
I waited tables, changed tapes at an automated FM radio station, and held a couple of other gigs while chasing the elusive BA...
I would not disagree with that.
In this case though it appears he was somewhere between 26 and 27 when he made the decision to quite engineering school. He was hardly a doe eyed 19 year old.
Why not finish engineering school, then if not happy go pursue his dream?
This clown spent $142,000 learning to COOK and I’m supposed to feel sorry for him??? If he was pulling decent grades in Iowa State’s engineering program, he’s not stupid. A fool, maybe, but not stupid.
My kid is smarter than that. He was “thinking” about changing schools because the major he had entered into isn’t really in-line with what he wants to study. So I pointed out that he couldn’t afford to change schools. We had just so much put aside. He had used up 1/4 of it his first year,thus burning up that portion and loosing the significant scholarship that allowed him to go to a 4 year school in the first place. This really precluded transfer to another school if he planned on doing it without taking on debt.
Well - he found a new fit in another department at his current abode, and is even excited about it. It is a “better” fit, not perfect.
It’s amazing what reality can do!
His real goal is to “get the sheep skin” and get into the work world. He is doing several extra-curricular things to build up a resume. Next summer I expect him to have an internship in his field of study - he REALLY needs too, and he agrees. Seems that is the best way to have something waiting for you when you finish your education.
2 years community college= $6,500
2 years state university = $16,000
Total= $22,500
The government has no business making loans, or making it easy to get loans. By forcing loaners to make loans cheap and easy to default on, the government makes it more difficult for people to get loans at reasonable rates.
The people who are taking loans and paying them off are also paying for all the defaulted loans.
We need to bring back the poorhouse.
I don't believe they should. The "student" entered into an agreement for a service / education. Once they get that education its okay to just not pay the loan? How about if the "student" entered into an agreement to buy a car and then decides to not make the payments on the loan? The "student" should get to keep the car?
Point is, these folks can't "give back" or have their education repo'd. It sucks for them, truly, but they as individuals freely made that choice. Now, if the lending instituitons would place a little bit more emphasis on WHO they are lending to and weighing the feasible outcomes of getting repaid, I'm betting we would see an entirely different outcome. Sadly, that will not take place until "student loans" are no longer backed by the Government (i.e., us taxpayers).
Then get a job as a chef and pay your loan back.
If you can’t, then perhaps you should kick yourself for not listening to your dad who was helping you, you idiot.
This guy seems to have problems with his dad. His dad co-signed for a loan to a real college for a year. He WANTED his dad to co-sign for the cooking school. Sounds like he didn’t plan on paying back the loan and was expecting his dad to pay them off. And I’ll bet his dad is on the hook for the loan to the real school.
Now “things turned sour” with his dad and he had to move out of the garage.
He spent money he’d saved so he could move “back west” to find work? This whole story is bull.
Bottom line is: he made is bed in the van. Now he can sleep in it.
The banks were so cruel to force this poor guy to attend colleges. They maliciously offered him loans to cover both his tuition and his living expenses! And when he started working and made no payments for 10 years, the monsters kept adding interest.
I feel so sorry for the guy.
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