Wednesday, March 2, 2011

I feel left out, let's start our own revolution...

"You say you got a real solution
Well, you know
We'd all love to see the plan".

                 -Beatles

It's a really interesting time we are living in; the flattening of the world. The Internet age has brought about an evolution in the worlds of science, religion, politics, business and the way that we communicate. Twitter, Facebook, YouTube and others are allowing us to share our ideas in a way that gives even the most modest man a voice. They are enabling the common people, the peasants, the working class with the ability to reach out to eachother under a shared vision and goal. Whether it's the overthrow of a dictator in Egypt, the creation of call centers in India, or the pedagogical shift in thinking of the media in the U.S., the rise of social media across the entire globe is changing the way we live, and I want to be more deeply involved.

I am well-educated, well-mannered, well-spoken, and well-read. I am not well connected. I don't have a trust fund. I don't have handlers giving me advice. I am a common man and I feel stifled; not by a dictator or a way of life based on religous fanatics. I am held back by the burden that is student debt. Throughout my childhood, I was consistently hammered with the idea that success is borne from education. I started taking entrance exams for private schools when I was 11. The burden of tuition was a bit much then, but by the time high school came around, I began seriously considering it. At $7,500/year, Xaverian was "affordable" for my parents. They scraped by for 4 years because they promised admittance to a high-end college or university. Although I couldn't afford it, I chose to attend Fordham University, a private Jesuit school. That decision was based on a $20,000/year grant I was issued. Still, even at half tuition, I had to take out loans totaling about $80,000 over the 4 years with an interest rate over 6%. In high school and college, I received a well-rounded education on world history, economics, values of the media, psychology, physics, religion amongst many other helpful subjects. What I wasn't taught was how crippling those loans would be. Upon graduation in 2007, years of financial irresponsibility finally began coming to fruition in what was referred to as ther "financial crisis". Businesses adopted hiring freezes as they tried to hide the mistakes of the past while banks and investment firms were probed for corruption. I chose to pursue a career in teaching to avoid the mess. I spent 3 years working in the Catholic schools of Boston making a little more than poverty level income while deferring my loans by going to grad school, because my salary could't support my debt. I tried living on my own at the time, and I could barely afford it due to my deferred loans. All the while I was adding more debt while accruing interest. Eventually I had to move home once I finished grad school because deferrment had ended, and now the loans would need to be paid. I am now 26 years old, I still live at home, and I am paying over $500/month in loans. The kicker; that is only covering the interest I am accruing. That doesn't even begin to cover the principal balance.

I have sat and watched as banks have been bailed out, as unemployment levels have grown, and those collecting have been supported. Because I am educated, I am being punished. Unless I come up with an idea that will allow me the financial freedom to pay my debt in a lump sum, I will never be able to afford a mortgage. Let's face it, higher education has become as much a business as anything else. Tuitions for private univerisities are reaching astronomically high levels. Fordham is actually charging $56,000/year for students needing room and board. Loan providers such as Sallie Mae have been issuing loans at a debilitating interest rate for years, and they seemingly hand them out like candy. Before I go any further, I want to ensure I am not complaining, I know full well I got myself into this. My concern is that something needs to be done before others accept this albatross without proper understanding. If the U.S. wants to move forward, and out of this recession, policymakers need to consider helping out recent graduates with this debt or even before they get themselves into it. Whether it's by offering more affordable public education (UMASS Amherst is now charging over $20,000/year for residents), or by issuing loans at a lower interest rate, a change needs to be made.

I have been conditioned my entire life that knowledge equals power. We are made to believe that the U.S. government prefers an educated, aware, and active population, but this trend is proving otherwise. I am not empowered by my education, I am asphyxiated by it. I can't help but think this is our nation's plan to keep the low/middle class where it is. Education should lead toward opportunity not misfortune. I now call for my fellow oppressed to unite. We can make some noise if we ban together. If you feel the way I do, than we obviously have the education to make something happen.

8 comments:

  1. I am with you on this one love... The next bubble to burst will most definitely be the " Student Loan" bubble with these Private companies who act as nothing more then harassing loan sharks. It is all about regulation my friend and no one on the federal side of things, the people who are supposed to be protecting our rights, can seem to grasp how these companies work. The real question is not if but when the bubble bursts who will be protected us or them?

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  2. I agree that private high schools lead people to believe that the ultimate goal is to go to a high tuition private school. I have been ranting about this for some time now and think that many kids are lead down a path of financial ruin. On the other side of the coin, how did you overlook such an important issue? I actually specificly remember you mulling over this decicion in 03 so I dont totally buy you not knowing what you were getting into. I'll give you a pass because loans don't seem as bad on the front end and you had baseball dreams at the time. Still though, I went to Xaverian too and realized that being one of four children, my parents could not afford to completely pay for St. Anselms. They simply told me I would have considerable loans. I then talked to a few cousins about what they were paying from various schools and the ONLY decision to make was Umass. Like I said, your mistake is one many make. My real issue is this consistent mind set of yours that someone else should always bail you out. Its so foreign to me to not take responsibility for my own actions and try to fix them myself. I do a lot of dumb stuff so I quickly learned that blaming others is even dumber. Yes, the education system is f'ed up but it was this way when you signed up. Try not having your great education or a room at your parents house to stay at while you climb out of debt. Empowerment from an education doesnt mean they hand you a stack of cash and a high level job it means you are intellectually capable of succeeding when rigorous hard work is added. Plus it lead you to a free masters degree and you are currently helping your dad blow up a dynamic business so stop you liberal whining already jesus.

    disregard grammar and spelling please

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  3. Clough...really liberal whining? We have worked our asses off for years with the hope that our children could have better. We wanted our kids to go to college more than anything else you could imagine. When Matt got accepted to Fordham it was the ultimate feeling for both Pete and I a proud moment, which I'm sure all parents experience. See neither onr of us had the opportunity to go. Matt is the oldest grandchild

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  4. so have been able to ask cousins for advice was not an option, but Sallie Mae was have you heard of her? She gives hope and promise to working class people who want more than anything for their kids to get a higher education. She promises loans to ignorant parents and their vulnerable 18 year olds the promise...the American dream! Don't worry for 4 years, go have fun, learn, dream. I could go on forever, Guess what though? Matt and Billy were able to give that advice to Maggie, she is now commuting to UMass Boston. What great brothers you are to have warned her about that bitch Sallie Mae!

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  5. I think loans are great, I have about 9k. Thats about 100 monthy which is totally reasonable considering the economic status I am in. Maggie is much better off going to Umass Boston. Her education will be just as good as Matt and Bills and she wont be sunk with debt when she gets out. Unless you are specialized like and engineer or doctor it makes no sense to go to a school just becuase its got a sexy name unless its Ivy. But if your thing is having a reputable name, then god bless you but I don't understand whining about the cost. The peice of paper just allows you a foot in the door, its hard work and motivation that separate people not the school on their degree. I hope I didnt offend anyone that wasn't my intention.

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  6. Nah. I wasn't offended at all! My problem is with Billy's interest rate. One of them is 22,000 on just one year with an interest rate of 13.75. We tried to consolidate all 4 years to no avail. "he doesn't have enough credit was the reason." If just that loan was lowered to his others that are at 6% I could deal and I think he could also.

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  7. You can blame the banks for being fiscally irresponsible, but I think the same could be said for you. You knew exactly what you were getting into when you accepted student loans. Millions of students are in the same position as you. What makes you special, why do you feel you should be relieved from your debt? I have loans to pay too, and I started working right out of college in an entry level position which did not pay much at all. But guess what, just because you got a degree doesn't mean you get handed a 70k job right out of college. You actually have to show up, work hard and it will pay off. Sounds to me like you have some buyers remorse and don't want to have to work too hard. You say you're against handouts- but it sounds like that's exactly what your fishing for now. Waaaaaa

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  8. This last response to this post reads as entirely disingenuous. You write as though there should have been some way for those who were not in the know to predict that the entire economy was built on a very shoddy house of cards, which would have required some specialized understanding and information (generally only available to the educated... go on, feel free to explain a derivatives market to the general public). While it can be said that individual borrowers were irresponsible, they were unknowingly irresponsible; they were under the impression the economy was going strong. However, those in the investment and banking sectors, at least those who were not mere schleps, knew quite well that the ship was sinking, or in danger of sinking, and continued to shovel bad loan after bad loan on the unsuspecting public. This kind of decision-making is not penalized by those in power, but rather given kisses and bandages (see banking bailouts), while those who are unable to make their voice heard have their livelihoods and homes stripped from them. In short, I think your compass is bent.

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