http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2011/10/30/ron-paul-defends-eventual-end-to-federal-student-loans/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rss%2Fcnn_politicalticker+%28Blog%3A+Political+Ticker%29So The Honorable Dr. Paul M.D., OBGYN, has finally said what needs to be. For far too long, government has been subsidizing the education industry with federally guaranteed loans, inflating the cost of tuition. Makes sense, you put more money into a market and prices will rise, duh. Thing is, this hurts everybody, as we all have to pay more for education.Ron has a great idea: Let's reduce that inflating effect by cutting out all those people who get loans to go to school. This way, the people who don't need loans can enjoy much cheaper tuition, and wont have to compete with the undeserving. Undeserving? Yes, if these kids who need loans were smart enough and ambitious enough to go to college, they would already be rich. Q.E.motherfuckin-D.
10/31/2011 9:42:36 AM
I believe you're taking the idea out of context.Yes, education prices are incredibly inflated due to the easy access to tuition grants and loans. But stopping student aid won't lower costs.People will get into worse debt by taking out private loans to fund their higher education because of the marketing effort that brainwashed everyone into thinking that anyone can go to college. The unfortunate truth is, no, not everyone is cut out for college. I'd wager that half of the people enrolled in course today don't belong there, not because of their socioeconomic background, but because they aren't smart enough to be there in the first place.
10/31/2011 9:57:55 AM
Well something should be done about student loans. The fact that student loan debt is so huge is a problem and points to the idea that we're giving out loans to people who, even with a college degree, can't afford even a low interest loan, which points to the idea that we're giving people loans to get what are essentially worthless degrees.Yes, I believe there should be loan programs for college education. No, I don't believe the tax payers should have to take on this risk.What this means in the end, I don't know. But why should tax payers be forced to provide loans for people who don't need college degrees, or those that choose career paths that won't allow them to pay back these loans. We shouldn't be funding more business, art, history, etc. majors who may never be able to pay back loans and many of whom will never have a job requiring a college degree.This country needs to get off the idea that everyone needs to go to college. Everyone does not. College needs to be more restrictive than lower education. One such way is increasing academic standards. Another is to make it just expensive enough for people to realize that a college education is not needed, nor feasible, for their chosen field. Maybe loans should be restricted to certain majors that are more likely to result in being better off financially, i.e. STEM majors.
10/31/2011 10:01:40 AM
The real truth is that not everyone's cut out for high school either. All this DOE nonsense trying to establish standards and throw money at the problem. The simple fact of the matter is that only certain people are really capable of learning such advanced topics as Algebra and Biology. This notion of "public education" unfortunately is trying to force an egalitarian utopian idea that people aren't wildly variable in their intellectual capacity. It is simply not the case. We should educate children to maybe the 5th or 6th grade, then let the market figure out who can continue beyond that point through private- and homeschooling.
10/31/2011 10:02:36 AM
Basically what I'm saying is these loan programs are just Affirmative Action for poor people. It's disgusting reverse-classism.
10/31/2011 10:04:39 AM
My entire medical school education is mostly subsidized by the Federal Government. Just because I'm qualified in all respects (except financial resources) to be admitted as a candidate for a degree does not mean I can attend.My financial need exceeded the established unit loan level from Harvard with their offered financial aid package even after extensive scholarships and grants. After the spring term, I should be entitled to more grants and scholarships (if I don't fail). I am still very dependent on federal aid and do not take it for granted.I am not against educating the masses and loaning money to help students receive quality education. We really need to examine how those that borrow pay back their student loans.
10/31/2011 10:15:23 AM
Hey maybe people will stop wasting their time with all these CHASS majors if they have to pay for their education and justify furthering their education!Loan Officer: So why do you need a loan?Student: I want to spend 4 years studying something that gives me no chance to land a job with the ability to pay back the loan.Loan Officer: Next...
10/31/2011 10:17:41 AM
Yup. Another very serious matter that is straining our education system is all these kids getting Gender Studies/Pottery dual major degrees. In fact, if you look at unemployment data closely, you'll see that all this "unemployment" occurring is really just mass unemployability. I don't have the article in front of me, but I'm pretty sure 90-99% of unemployed right now have a degree in either Art History or Latin. All this talk of increasing tuition and decreasing public education equity is smoke and mirrors, the real issue here is that these kids see that free government cash and realize its the perfect opportunity to seize their dream of spending 4 years gaining an entirely worthless skillset that will get them nowhere in life..
10/31/2011 10:24:51 AM
As a society, we should feel responsible to educate our citizens.We need to provide more avenues for affordable (or free), quality education to the masses--especially to those that have a passion to learn. A couple of reputable institutions have already established programs and begun a framework for open or affordable education.We should seriously consider the adverse implications of restricting access to education.
10/31/2011 10:25:26 AM
There's nothing wrong with allowing as few people as possible to be corrupted by the Marxist Educational Industrial Complex. The problem is that too many people are being restricted from the most important education of all:
10/31/2011 10:27:53 AM
^ What's the annual tuition to attend one of these "churches" you speak of?
10/31/2011 10:30:05 AM
Just a flat tax of 10% of your income, and you'll get all the soup kitchen training you'll ever need to land a job at McDonalds in literally any city or town in the country!
10/31/2011 10:34:45 AM
10/31/2011 10:46:44 AM
A few things- Yes, yes we do need to brace for the fact that it makes sense to educate people further today than what we did before. If the economy is advancing at all, the aggregate sum of education needed is increasing. This means college for more, and probably most.- The money we use to subsidize education isn't reverse class-ism. In many ways, it's straightforward class-ism.There was a time when "Social Darwinism" was a valid political view. People ITT and everywhere seem to consistently confuse a class society with "old money". The American elite has a revolving door. Get used to the fact. Also, many of our subsidies to help poor people get educated just increase the size of that door.
10/31/2011 10:52:29 AM
Eh. I think that's a slippery slope to say one concentration is more valuable than another.Undergraduate education is greatly saturated with general education requirements to produce well-rounded graduates. This holds true for just about all universities in the US. A humanities concentrator is capable of crossing-over and filling in roles in unrelated fields. Same applies for a science concentrator.
10/31/2011 10:55:23 AM
^^ and ^, i agree with both of you, that a) unless we have a consensus understanding of the core objective of higher education, it'll be impossible to overhaul the system, and b) it's useless to assign relative "values" to different degrees or concentrations. the real differentiator is the person, not the degree.
10/31/2011 11:04:37 AM
every NCSU graduate should be required to have at minimum 1,000 TWW posts to demonstrate communication skills.
10/31/2011 11:06:37 AM
Sure we need to educate more people, but that doesn't mean all need to go to college or that we educate people in random topics that do little to help anyone. creating another entitlement program to create high school v2.0 will bankrupt this country more than help it. college will not get cheaper, even if you pay for everyone to go. it will only get more expensive.
10/31/2011 11:09:51 AM
I think there needs to be better options of education for the 25-45 year old working adult demographic. Those who chose to enter the workforce early to gain experience and save money before entering higher education. State colleges cater to those fresh out of high school with no experience and, sometimes not enough maturity, to succeed at this type of institution. It is difficult for a working adult to go back to school... someone who has the added responsibilities of family and work/career that they are trying to advance along with the right mindset to WANT to do well in their classes. Right now the options for a working adult are laughable. The only options that work around a working student's schedule are for-profit institutions like UofPheonix and DeVry Institute. And those degrees don't carry much weight at all.
10/31/2011 11:11:14 AM
Pikey , there are plenty of programs at respected universities that cater to working adults up here in New England.http://www.cps.neu.edu/degree-programs/undergraduate/bachelors-degrees/http://www.sas.upenn.edu/lps/undergraduate/http://admissions.yale.edu/eli-whitneyhttp://www.extension.harvard.edu/http://mitsloan.mit.edu/executivemba/
10/31/2011 11:19:33 AM
10/31/2011 12:36:08 PM
Agreed, clearly we need to educate fewer people. Except few a handful of select-chosen individuals who will then build us a time machine that we'll take back to the 1950's. Once there, we'll put our population to work in the manufacturing sector and some other jobs that are more than matched by a high school education. If we do this every 30 years, we can run on the same economic model forever and never worry about competing with post-1970's China for the same market!
10/31/2011 12:41:03 PM
Bring back trade schools. Educate people based on their selected field and actually teach them things they need to know to apply in the workplace. This whole business with force feeding students useless courses and outdated material to be "well rounded individuals" isn't working out so well when they can't even pick up a job after graduating.
10/31/2011 12:44:17 PM
10/31/2011 12:48:41 PM
I am now a well rounded individual because I had to take a random CHASS course while I was in college.I would like to see a breakdown between STEM and non-STEM majors:Employed?Student loan (amount, years taken to pay off, default, etc)Individual IncomeJob requires any college degree?Job requires specific college degree?College degree relates directly, or very closely, with jobMy point is, is that the tax payers should not be on the hook for $40,000 loans for traditionally non-valuable degrees. trade schools, tech schools, community colleges, etc. are great and cheaper avenues. And if a person gets a worthless degree or drops out, but becomes a successful manager, then great, but that doesn't prove that a 4-year art degree was worthwhile.[Edited on October 31, 2011 at 12:50 PM. Reason : .]
10/31/2011 12:49:04 PM
^^^ In what world are trade school graduates doing well? I think many of those schools are guilty of the exact same "general ed" requirements, in addition to the fact that the 2 year colleges have vastly greater fractions of students funded by loans.Your solution doesn't just suck, it makes the problem worse.[Edited on October 31, 2011 at 12:49 PM. Reason : ^]
10/31/2011 12:49:07 PM
10/31/2011 12:58:17 PM
10/31/2011 2:36:40 PM
^^ i know State's bread and butter are the engineering and science programs, but i think in general there's too much bashing of liberal arts degrees. quite honestly, if private loan companies started risk-adjusting their student loans, the first factor would be the quality of university - not the type of degree the student is earning. For jobs focused specifically on engineering, yes, people want an engineer from State. for the 95% of other jobs, most companies would take an English major from Stanford over a State engineer any day of the week. smart and motivated people are sought after regardless of what they choose to study. i don't think the problem is that U.S. universities are turning out too many humanities and social science majors. i think the issue is that university enrollment, in general, is larger than our current job market can handle. Has this been driven by federal loans? In part, I guess - but federal-backed student loans are nothing new, so they're clearly not the full cause. I would wager that public funding of state schools is a MUCH bigger driver of increased enrollment than federal loans. But pretty sure no one on an NC State message board will complain about that Know I won't! And is it really a big problem to have TOO many college graduates in society? Personally, I don't think so - but I DO think that high school students should be given honest information regarding the financial risks/rewards of taking out loans for school, and given enough data to make an informed decision on what school/degree to choose. As well as given information regarding other alternatives available to them (trade schools, pimpin', strippin', etc).
10/31/2011 3:25:33 PM
10/31/2011 3:51:22 PM
10/31/2011 3:52:17 PM
10/31/2011 3:55:50 PM
10/31/2011 4:07:04 PM
^^^ while i don't totally disagree, i wouldn't oversimplify that the sole value of schools in the current system is to filter out candidates...the technical training is still needed in many fields (medicine, law, engineering, etc), just not all of them (i.e. most jobs in business, gov't, services, etc). universities help serve both purposes, and i was just trying to point out that employers do look at more than simply the technical training.and really, i just wanted to stop the liberal-arts-degree-bashing, as I think as State students/grads we take that a bit too far...
10/31/2011 5:34:23 PM
10/31/2011 5:34:33 PM
10/31/2011 5:43:40 PM
10/31/2011 5:49:58 PM
^^ dude, you gotta chill out!btw, just so i get called a shitstain too - yes, companies are absolutely hiring history majors right now. but just the smart ones. and companies are hiring engineering/CSC majors too right now, but just the smart ones. it's not that we have a disproportionate number of smart people who choose to study useless things - it's that the number of smart people right now is pretty much where it's always been while the number of available jobs has kinda shrunk lately. i know that's an oversimplification, but the real issues here are way more complex than a few message board posts could communicate. and it's def more complex than simply "fed loans=more students=higher costs=worthless grads in debt" as dude from Texas wants people to believe, which i think was the OP's point.anyhow, i think we're all probably fans of higher education, but all think the system could be better somehow... regardless of how libertarian of democrat we may be
10/31/2011 6:19:44 PM
A qualified insult, just like a qualified compliment, sort of looses it's emotional power
10/31/2011 6:33:35 PM
I can't believe I typed "it's" in that post and it's over 30 min.
10/31/2011 10:38:40 PM
The Universities are already built and staffed. As has been said, people are brainwashed into believing college is important, so at best all people will do is downgrade to cheaper universities. In response, ending federal student loans would merely reduce prices as upscale universities try to fill their classes with people that are now willing to downgrade to a cheap community college.
11/1/2011 11:58:43 AM
11/1/2011 12:01:14 PM
11/1/2011 12:20:21 PM
You laugh your ass off a lot, bro.
11/1/2011 12:47:51 PM
Str8Foolish you are doing very little to argue against any of the points brought up in this discussion.All of your responses go something like this..."LMAO your arguement of XYZ is dumb because ZYX. It won't work cause it won't work. lmao."Do you actually have any substantial arguments or evidence to refute any of the points brought up by previous posts?[Edited on November 1, 2011 at 12:54 PM. Reason : ;]
11/1/2011 12:54:20 PM
ITT garden variety Republicans are on the side of an anarchist.A lot can change in 4 years.Also, Re: Finland
11/1/2011 2:10:57 PM
the loans themselves aren't necessarily a bad thing, there just needs to be more scrutiny when doling them out...or atleast have a maximum amount loanable based on your degree. if someone really wants a humanities degree, so be it, but the feds shouldn't give 30 grand/year in loans all willy nilly for someone to go to a high priced private school to get one.
11/1/2011 2:45:36 PM
11/1/2011 2:49:35 PM
I like this thread because wdprice is a narrow-minded jackass arguing for the creation of more narrow-minded jackassesI like that
11/1/2011 3:16:58 PM
so what did you major in and did you pay for it yourself?are you currently employed?**this questionnaire is required for continued participation in this thead (at least in a serious capacity)**wdprice's first post was terrific.
11/1/2011 3:25:41 PM