Archive for August, 2022

Redacted FBI Affidavit Is Out!

August 26, 2022 By: Half Empty Category: Uncategorized

Wanna read what you can of the FBI’s affidavit that sold Magistrate Judge Bruce Reinhart on granting the FBI the first-ever search of a former president’s residence? Well, here it is. Enjoy.

The Student Loan Debacle

August 26, 2022 By: Nick Carraway Category: Uncategorized

Author’s Note: I know this one is longer than most. I did the best I could to cut as much fat as possible. It’s an important issue that deserves a full airing.

Yesterday, social media was all abuzz when Joe Biden announced his plan for student loan forgiveness. The upshot is that most borrowers can qualify for up to $10,000 in total forgiveness. There was a ton of rhetoric and a ton of snark yesterday on both sides. The crisis has three underlying causes.

College Costs have Exploded over the last 20 years

Nationally, the average cost for a public college was over 20,000 a year. That ballooned to over 30,000 for private colleges. The average cost in 2000 was just over 8000. I’m not good at math, but that’s close to a 150 percent increase over 20 years. That obviously is well beyond the rate of inflation for that time period.

Now, we could go into the whys this has happened, but if we dive down that rabbit hole we may never make it out. The question is one of responsibility. For instance, had I known that I was going to become a teacher I probably wouldn’t have gone to a private college. Students should choose an institution that’s as cost effective as possible. Yet, it cannot all be on them.

College Degrees aren’t worth what they used to be

One commenter yesterday made reference to “Mesoamerican Lesbian Studies”. Yeah, we all know it’s an exaggeration, but still we need to define our terms. As much as people might laugh at liberal arts degrees in general, they are not necessarily coming from a genuine place. Back in the 1960s and 1970s you could get a college degree in anything and still get a good job. That was less true in the 1980s and 1990s, but it is far more true than it is today. Somewhere along the way the rules of the game changed. It’s not students’ fault they changed. Sure, we can expect them to adapt, but they aren’t unique in getting liberal arts degrees that might not sync directly with the job market.

The issue is more acute for those without the means to pay for college or support at home. My wife and I can advise our daughter on college. We can coach her into choosing a major that makes sense. Some kids don’t have that at home. Buyer beware goes only so far.

The Nature of the Loans Themselves

Someone on social media showed their loan expenditures for their undergraduate and graduate degrees. The totals ended up being well over 150,000 with total monthly payments coming in at over 1000. That by itself is bad enough. Then you throw in the fact that those 1000 payments barely touched the principal at all. So, they are in effect stuck with those payments for the rest of their natural life.

Those of us that are older objected to the idea of forgiveness. They were responsible. They repaid their loans. It is not fair that the current generation is “too lazy” to take care of their own loans. Again, it’s not that simple. At some point we have to realize how ridiculous it is to pay twice as much as what was loaned to you because of the nature of the loan. Mortgages don’t work that way. Car loans don’t work that way. Why should student loans work that way?

Putting it all together

As I said in an earlier post, monies spent by the government are an investment of sorts. It is fair to ask whether that is the wisest way we could spend our tax dollars. I would argue for a measured approach that addresses these issues from multiple angles. The first question we should ask is how many kids are majoring in something we might consider frivolous? I imagine it is lower than people think. However, it wouldn’t be difficult to target certain careers and subsidize students studying those things. It wouldn’t be difficult to require graduates to work in certain fields for a fixed period of time in exchange for forgiving their loans. We already do that in limited circumstances.

Finally, we have to admit that college is just too damn expensive. We educate students in public schools for around 9000 a year. That includes people like me that are support staff. Colleges don’t have nearly as many of those. They aren’t serving students with severe disabilities in the same way we are. Yet, they cost more than twice as much. That money isn’t going to the professors. So, where is it going?

Friday Toons

August 26, 2022 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

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Oops!

August 25, 2022 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

I messed up.  I accidentally trashed the Alex Jones page and Anna the Geek is going to try to find it for me.

Until then, here’s the latest interview.  It’s one of my favorites except that he looks tired.  He’s promised to sleep all weekend!

Heads up – Both Jones’ lawyers from Texas and Connecticut have a real hard day in Connecticut.

 

It’s Goofier Than You Think

August 25, 2022 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

In case you were wondering about the bizarre relationship between TFG and Rudy Giuliani, and if you have you need to avail yourself of a free brain cleansing from Thelma which consists of a big stick, shear force, and your ability not to scream, and then enlighten yourself with this

 

No.

Not a tunnel. Please, not a tunnel. Oh be still my synapsing neurons.

Yes, tunnel! Our friend Deb checked and here it is on the historic drawings of Mar a Lago.  Bottom, left, oh hell – there’s a tunnel to the beach.

I cannot, and I will not, even imagine what manner of crapola is (1) hidden there, (2) what was brought in through there, (3) if the FBI had a key to the tunnel, or (4) why that sucker doesn’t flood during high tide. But mostly I wonder if anybody could tell the difference between Rudy and the nocturnal bats who obviously live there.

Our friend Deb also did some art for us over at craiyon.com

 

Occasionally, Justice and Extreme Irony Collide…

August 25, 2022 By: El Jefe Category: Alternative Facts, Qanon, Roe v. Wade

Luke Bowen.  Never heard of him?  Well, you will now.  Luke Bowen is was political director of extreme anti-choice activist PAC Texas Right to Life.  He’s also apparently been a blogger for the Texas GOP.  David Lowe, a Republican candidate for the Texas State House, tweeted last night that Bowen, trying to help Lowe’s primary opponent, had smeared him by spreading a rumor that he is a human trafficker.  Nice, huh?  Well, justice and extreme irony collided a couple of weeks ago when Bowen was arrested in Conroe on charges of…wait for it…online soliciting of a minor for sex.

Texas Right to Life says they fired him the same day.  SubStack blog Current Revolt has all the juicy details including the arrest record.

What is it that they say about those who scream the loudest?  I think it has something to do with the most guilty.  The irony is a bonus.