How wiping out $1.5 trillion in student debt would boost the economy
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/ho...omy-2019-09-09
Originally Posted by eccieuser9500
what a maroon you are. first, the person quoted in uberlib Berman's article .. more on that liberal sack of shit later .. Nathan Hornes went to Corinthian Colleges which went out of business. and was investigated for fraudulent behavior. they were lucky they had accreditation, but that does not mean that those degrees were accepted by major universities meaning an associate degree primarily in vocational fields got you nothing in terms of continuing education.
here's the WIKI link .. and guess who pops up .. Kammy Harris!!! yous can't make this shit up ... even on WIKIPEDIA bahhaaaaaa
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corinthian_Colleges
Corinthian Colleges faced numerous investigations and lawsuits, including a federal criminal investigation.
[7] California Attorney General
Kamala Harris alleged that Corinthian Colleges targeted
single parents living close to the
poverty level, a demographic that its internal documents described as "composed of 'isolated,' 'impatient,' individuals with 'low
self-esteem,' who have '
few people in their lives who care about them' and who are 'stuck' and 'unable to see and plan well for future,' through aggressive and persistent
internet and
telemarketing campaigns and through television ads on daytime shows like
Jerry Springer and
Maury Povich."
[8]
On July 3, 2014, Corinthian Colleges agreed to execute a controlled shutdown of twelve schools and sell off eighty-five other schools.
[9][10][9][10] On 19 February 2015, the government of Ontario suspended the company's operation license, resulting in the immediate closure of all Canadian campuses.[
citation needed]
In February 2015, the nonprofit
Educational Credit Management Corporation took ownership of more than half of Corinthian Colleges campuses, agreeing to
forgive student debt on Corinthian College's Genesis loans.
[11][12]
On April 26, 2015, Corinthian Colleges announced that they would cease operations at all remaining locations effective April 27, a move affecting more than sixteen thousand students and employees.
[13]
On May 4, 2015, Corinthian filed for
bankruptcy in Delaware.
[14][15]
basing your case on a votech college that did not have the highest level accreditation to transfer over to colleges and universities that also when bankrupt leaving students no credits to apply elsewhere is not a case for forgiving student loan debt across the board.
are you saying someone who goes to the University of Texas for example .. should have their student debt wiped out? sure!! okay. BAHHAA
oh it gets better! this uberlib bitch Jillian Berman? guess what? she's studying at Columbia .. wait for it .. on a 60k FELLOWSHIP.
she is a grad of the University of Michigan. i'm betting her PARENTS PAID FOR IT. doesn't say.
https://journalism.columbia.edu/Colu...t-fellows-2020
Columbia Announces 2019-2020 Knight-Bagehot Fellows
In its 44th year, the program is the largest and the most rigorous mid-career journalism fellowship in the world with 400 graduates
The Knight-Bagehot Fellowship in Business and Economics at the Columbia Journalism School announced today ten Knight-Bagehot Fellows for the 2019-2020 academic year. They come from top media publications and their work has been published in Bloomberg, MarketWatch, Quartz, Politico, Mother Jones, BBC, Africa Report, The Washington Post, Reuters, and The Journal News in White Plains.
“These Fellows reflect what was one of the most globally competitive and diverse applicant pools the Bagehot program has seen in its 44 years,” said Raju Narisetti, professor of professional practice and director of the program. “When they graduate in 2020 with a much deeper understanding of business, economics, technology and public policy, they will join 400 other Knight Bagehot alums living up to the mission of providing better context and understanding to their audiences globally.”
The mid-career journalism fellowships provide full tuition and a living stipend of $60,000 for experienced journalists to take graduate courses at Columbia University, primarily at Columbia's Schools of Business and Journalism. Fellows also attend special seminars at the Journalism School, led by seasoned journalists, media business executives and a broad range of tech, finance and economics experts during the nine-month program, which begins in August.
This year’s fellows are:
Jillian Berman, 29, is a reporter at MarketWatch, where she covers student debt and higher education. Her reporting on America's $1.5 trillion student loan problem has been recognized as a Gerald Loeb awards finalist and as a winner of the Education Writers Association's National Awards for Education Reporting. In 2017, she also received the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing's Larry Birger award, which honors business journalists under 30. Prior to MarketWatch, Jillian covered retail and food companies as well as workplace diversity for HuffPost. Her work has also appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg and USA Today. She is a graduate of the University of Michigan, where she was the news editor at the campus paper, The Michigan Daily.
you really need to think things through and do some research before you just paste in some liberal bullshit diatribe that "supports" your socialist idiocy
BAHHAHHAAAHHAAAAAAA