The disingenuous argument about student loan debt relief is what really irks me. The broad stroke generalizations that all these people in debt graduated from a private liberal arts school that costs $60K a year with a degree in Gender Studies, Basket Weaving, and Philosophy is bad faith. It doesn't get to the core of the issue, and is an attempt to just scream louder than the other side. If you don't like student loan forgiveness for other, justifiable reasons then you come off as someone who doesn't REALLY have an argument. I went to be a teacher, and went to a state school. My parents made too much money for me to get financial aid, but they never had enough to pay my education. I had to take loans. I knew I wouldn't make a lot of money, but we need teachers. I didn't make a bad decision, but I'm painted as someone who did?
Then the argument shifts to, "well you knew you were taking loans out, you should have known what you were getting into." Yeah, that's partially true. However, we millennials spent the entire 90s and 00s being told we MUST go to college. You can't work in the factories anymore, they're closing. If they aren't closing, they don't have pensions or great insurance anymore. Anecdotally, my parents said this REGULARLY as my dad worked his ass off in a factory swing shift and didn't want me doing the same. So we were conditioned since 1st grade to get to college to live a better life. We do this, now we have people saying, "HA you idiot, you wasted time and money at school," and "NO ONE WANTS TO WORK IN THE TRADES ANYMORE!!! WHYYYYY?!?!" So yeah, paying loans back is tough, we can't declare bankruptcy, private and government loan servicers are raking in the interest with how they calculate it, and again we are left with "should have known before going."
That last part is also a lead to the next. Cost of education now compared to annual inflation. The old boomer quote of, "I worked my way through school." Yeah, because if we adjust for inflation that school tuition now well outpaces the inflation rate from the 60s ad 70s. It's also no wonder that when the government got its hands on loans tuition increased. The schools are bad guys too here. They saw that guaranteed money from the government and upped costs, paying more and more admin, while pay for professors stagnated.
All of this to say, stop the generalizations. You just are the person screaming loudest. Loan holders didn't make bad decisions. They made career decisions. Doctors and lawyers unable to afford to pay loans off. Yeah, they made bad decisions.