'Free college' promises by presidential
candidates come with pitfalls
Los Angeles Times,
by
Evan Halper
Original Article
Posted By: NorthernDog,
6/7/2019 4:04:01 PM
It has become a cliche of this campaign: A White House hopeful pauses from a speech to invite beleaguered university graduates to shout out the size of the debt they carry -- as if competing in an auction -- and the numbers bellowed from the crowd spiral upward. In a nation where student loan debt has reached a staggering $1.6 trillion -- more than double the amount just a decade ago -- the call-outs are potent political theater. The promise of free college has catapulted from the fringe in 2015, when Sen. Bernie Sanders muscled the idea into presidential politics
Reply 1 - Posted by:
ginadee 6/7/2019 4:38:54 PM (No. 92914)
Nothing in life is free. Someone has to pay.
That would be a good lesson for students contemplating entering college to learn.
4 people like this.
Reply 2 - Posted by:
skacmar 6/7/2019 4:42:34 PM (No. 92917)
Not everyone needs to go or should go to college. Paying for college is a choice. You can choose the higher priced college or the more affordable college. However, don't complain when the payments are higher later. It is like buying an expensive car. It feels great initially, but the repairs and maintenance will get you later. Don't act surprised when you have a ton of debt from college when you chose to go to that expensive college. IT WAS YOUR CHOICE!
4 people like this.
Trouble is, colleges---- even the best ones and even the schools I graduated from--- have become indoctrination centers for liberal and socialist nonsense, where critical thinking is not allowed. A diploma amounts to nothing more than an attendance certificate. So-called graduates emerge uneducated, yet so sure of themselves, so entitled. A good example is that Cortez woman representing Queens in Congress.
7 people like this.
Reply 4 - Posted by:
jalo1951 6/7/2019 5:20:37 PM (No. 92953)
If we are all going to fry within the next 12 years who needs college?
4 people like this.
Reply 5 - Posted by:
padiva 6/7/2019 5:51:30 PM (No. 92965)
50 years ago, we lived on a tight budget while in college. Apparently, that is no longer 'cool.'
4 people like this.
The more financial aid is given to students, the more the colleges raise tuition.
Harvard has enough funds in its endowment to pay full tuition for all its students for the next 75 years.
Why doesn't anyone complain about the money-grubbing universities?
8 people like this.
Reply 7 - Posted by:
Vesicant 6/7/2019 7:18:13 PM (No. 93006)
What's the problem? Just tip your server.
0 people like this.
Reply 8 - Posted by:
tsquare 6/7/2019 7:23:24 PM (No. 93012)
It is absolutely essential to have a well educated work force, and electorate. Lets provide free education all the way to PhD...and to be sure we are not being discriminatory, lets abolish the need for a dissertation. And of course, the free education should extend to med school and law school...with for example the bar exam being dropped.
0 people like this.
Reply 9 - Posted by:
Northcross 6/7/2019 7:27:23 PM (No. 93017)
Pitfall #1. It ain't free. Go door to door and beg your neighbors to pay your college expenses. That isn't going to happen. So the government instead will now force you to pay for college for the deadbeat kid next door.
3 people like this.
Reply 10 - Posted by:
cartcart 6/7/2019 7:30:12 PM (No. 93021)
Sorting though all the far-flung baloney, people need to understand that this does not mean that some kid can graduate high school and enroll in the Ivy League University of his/her choice and plan to have four years of fun and frolic on campus with all the campus benefits that colleges have to offer. It will mean that they enroll in a community college, then apply to another university. Is it tuition and books or is it four years of living off-campus in a fraternity house or what. Nobody defines that much. And of course, the classwork will require the young learners to take the obligatory classes decrying the hard-working taxpayer and the so-called white privilege that accompanies that. Who would not vote for this if you got four years at Harvard, never having to lift a finger to work and pay your own way? That is why the free college is such a great campaign theme. Frankly, I would rather my kids work their way through and determine their own careers and not be dependent on taxpayers.
1 person likes this.
Reply 11 - Posted by:
Tennman 6/7/2019 9:54:00 PM (No. 93078)
Those of us who raised kids should remember "If You Give a Mouse a Cookie". Moral is you can never give enough - more and more is expected. Now we'll be expected to pay living costs as well as tuition. Next? spending money? Car allowance? Per-diem just for going to class?
1 person likes this.
Reply 12 - Posted by:
Trigger2 6/8/2019 4:16:03 AM (No. 93179)
If these indoctrinated dumb college people want free college, then get each and every college to pony up the money from their multiple millions and multiple billions of dollars endowment funds. Why should us taxpayers have to pony up one cent for your indoctrination.
2 people like this.
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Comments:
It's hard to justify giving something for free to people who will eventually earn lots more money than those who are footing the bill.