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To: SeekAndFind
As a result, thousands of young people -- who are also facing high unemployment -- are forced to tackle mountains of debt immediately after graduating
TFB - it was their choice.
Speaking of choices: I believe the gov't will forgive a large part of student loan debt if you serve in the military.
IIRC, the same goes for serving in Ameri-Corps or Peace Corps, or whatever they call it these days.
2 posted on 10/26/2011 8:35:23 AM PDT by oh8eleven (RVN '67-'68)
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To: oh8eleven
IIRC, the same goes for serving in Ameri-Corps or Peace Corps, or whatever they call it these days

I see this as a money laundering scam.
1. Student pays exorbitant tuition fees to attend college.
2. College professors receive increasingly higher salaries and benefits.
3. Student loans are forgiven by government.
4. College professors very active in donating to election campaigns .
5. Taxpayers pick up the tab for higher education of an increasing number of fanciful liberal arts majors.

27 posted on 10/26/2011 9:00:40 AM PDT by oldbrowser (Democrats have no superego.)
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To: oh8eleven

You can say, “Too bad, it was their choice,” and you’d be right. But remember, these are 17-year-old kids with no life experience being asked to make the choice. All their lives, they’re told, “You have to go to college. You have to choose the right courses to get into college. You have to take an SAT prep course so you can do really well on your SAT and get into a good college.” All their lives, from the time they’re very young, that’s all kids hear—from parents, counselors, teachers. No one ever says, “You could be a plumber and not have to go to college. You could fix cars. You could be a production splicer for the phone company. You could start a landscaping company,” or any of the other things people do to make a decent living without a degree. These aren’t presented as desirable alternatives for the average middle-class kid, and indeed, they’re not: given a choice between working in a nice clean office doing something you’re good at and snaking out other people’s toilets, most young folks would not choose to be a plumber.

So don’t be too hard on them. When you hear nothing else your whole life except “Go to college,” it’s unsurprising if you do decide to go to college. Especially if you’re just 17 or 18 when you make that choice. And when even a state university costs so much that you can’t work your way through, as I did, it’s not surprising that the inexperienced kid signs up for loans. The colleges make it very hard not to get financial aid.


43 posted on 10/26/2011 9:44:06 AM PDT by ottbmare (off-the-track Thoroughbred mare)
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