TLDR: Totalling roughly $144 billion for about 4 million borrows.

Article is from March 29th, 2024

  • @givesomefucks
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    869 months ago

    9% of total loans, and a lot are people who should have already been discharged through existing programs.

    The thing is, someone thought it was a good idea to put the people making money off student loans in charge of forgiveness programs, so all types of shady shit was happening.

    • @[email protected]
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      409 months ago

      If he was able to get the original loan forgiveness he wanted, my wife and I would have replaced a car with a newer one, or maybe bought a second car. As it stands now, I guess we will be driving ours for a while. I guess the student loan providers wanted our money more than the stock market.

      • @lennybird
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        179 months ago

        We were in a similar position, intending to reinvest in our home, get a utility trailer, while saving up more for land one day.

        Conservatives fucked that up. But I appreciate Biden for trying.

      • @Sanctus
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        179 months ago

        It’s never about making it better. It’s always about shoving as much money in their pockets as possible.

      • @[email protected]
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        -249 months ago

        Or you could keep the car you have, and spend the money on something useful?

        If you car still works, damn right you should be driving it for a while. Pointless consumerism for the sake of having something new is fucking idiotic.

        • @lennybird
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          9 months ago

          You really have no idea what you’re talking about, for this is spoken like someone still of college age. Forget shortsighted. Sure it may be one thing if you’re adept with auto mechanics, but most people frankly are not.

          You do realize there is an inflection-point in both cost and reliability (forgetting newer safety and fuel standards) when owning used vehicles…riiiighhht?

          • @cm0002
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            59 months ago

            You do realize there is an inflection-point in both cost and reliability (forgetting newer safety and fuel standards) when owning used vehicles

            I don’t think these “Just get a 19XX/200X clunker!” Guys actually do lol im convinced they’re all just old mechanics mad that the thing they know best has now been tainted by “computers”

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            You literally spoke about getting a second car, if the first car was so far gone that repairing it was too costly, why the fuck would you humour getting a second car?

            I’ve driven many cars until they broke down, you don’t need to get some shiny new thing just because your current car is a bit old and the world would be far better off for it.

            • @lennybird
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              69 months ago

              That wasn’t me but on reflection I apologize for coming off so harshly.

              I don’t know their situation but sharing a single vehicle can really suck especially if both work and you want to divide and conquer on getting shit done.

        • @[email protected]
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          79 months ago

          The car we have is fine at the moment, but it we expect it will eventually need some costly repairs in the next ~3 years (exhaust? suspension?, etc.) as it gets older. The second car would be because We’re a large family and support another family. We recently hit a deer and it was very inconvenient while we waited for a repair. A second car would go a long way.

          • @CharlesDarwin
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            19 months ago

            ^ This. Having a second or more car really helps in a lot of things, up to and including having the luxury of trying to fix something yourself. If you only have one car, it can be a scary proposition to mess with it as a noob (which I very much am; but I know how to do things like brakes, for example, and for other things, I’ll look up and read about/watch videos to see if it’s something I could attempt).

        • @surewhynotlem
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          19 months ago

          Driving a car into the ground is rarely the best financial move or the best approach from a risk perspective.

          As cars age, the likelihood of unexpected failure goes up and the cost of repairs goes up. Unless you like missing work, or having unexpected $5,000 bills on a $3,000 car, it’s good to replace your car before it becomes a high risk.

          This is the same thing as Terry Pratchett’s boots theory. Poor people are forced to spend more to cycle through shitty cars while people with some money can buy decent cars which will cost them less in the long run.

          I personally sell my cars before they hit the 10-year mark. At that point resale prices plummet. And I buy used ones around the 5-year mark, as that’s another price sweet spot. But of course, ymmv.

    • @Sanctus
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      119 months ago

      Ah, yes, the people with the true say in this country, lobbyists with buckets of money.

    • @[email protected]
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      29 months ago

      LOL that keeps being my thought of… Wait why is it a good thing we took this long to help people that were scammed and forgive the people that were well past it being owed to them.

      It is sad that we are at praising bare minimum of by the books. We are too used to people being fucked over.

      • @givesomefucks
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        29 months ago

        That’s like when they say “Biden forgave more student loan debt than anyone”…

        Well, it wasn’t really an issue until 20 maybe 30 years ago, and few people are paying them off