Bold and frank, just like his father, former US President Donald Trump
- Donald Trump Jr. did not say words when speaking about current US President Joe Biden's plan to waive some student debt.
- Trump Jr. was apparently eager to bring the whole idea out of the window
- insisting that "blue-collar workers" would pay for a group of "upper middle class people" to obtain degrees in "gender studies" that would prove futile to improve society.
Biden essentially wants blue-collar workers like truck drivers, who didn't have the luxury of going to college to get drunk for four years, to save a group of upper-middle-class kids who chose to spend tens of thousands of dollars they didn't have in genderthemia, "he told The Washington Post.
His remarks came shortly after harshly criticizing student loan forgiveness during a rally in Ohio just last month for JD Vance, who hopes to be in the Senate. But Trump Jr.
- is not the only Republican person who seems deeply concerned about President Biden's potential to reduce student debt.
- Recently, President Biden suggested that a possible decision on student loan forgiveness might be coming in the near future
- but made no attempt to formally clarify what that would really look like in practice.
However, Biden said he was not considering forgiving $ 50 thousand in debt for everyone involved in borrowing from the federal government. While several reports have been issued indicating that the exemption may identify those earning less than $ 125 thousand a year Education Department ", it appears that the Education Department does not have the capacity to cap relief solely on the basis of income.
However, it should be noted that President Biden has shared Trump Jr. '
"The idea of going to Pennsylvania and paying a total of $ 70 a year, and the public has to pay for it?" Biden said. "I disagree."
- Speaking about the pandemic's hiatus from loan payments caused by the COVID-19 outbreak, Representative Virginia Fox
- a member of the House Education Committee and a senior Republican on the committee, said last month
- The student loan bill for graduate students and Ivy League lawyers is $5 billion a month, while their portfolios are drained by high inflation. "
The pause in student loan payments is scheduled to end in the last half of August.
A recent report by the Roosevelt Institute claims that relief would greatly benefit low-income earners, and although Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told senators just last week that the impact of tolerance still needed further analysis, she was clear that "it could be good for the economy."
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