Handyman
Hug someone you care about...
Don't take the bait. Just ignore him.
I couldn't help myself :^(
Don't take the bait. Just ignore him.
Not sure which farm loans you’re talking about not getting paid, but I assume you will enlighten me. As for the ppp loans, they were specifically deemed by Congress (you know, the branch of government that writes laws) to be forgivable if certain conditions were met. Because the government took away the businesses ability to generate income, they were intended to let businesses continue to pay wages and such. Don’t think Congress made any similar legislative determinations for student loans.Like the farmers amirite? Or the PPP loans...
I suppose repaying a loan that you received, and promised to pay back, is too obscene to contemplate.
Guys, he's just adding your posts to his spank bank.
Not sure which farm loans you’re talking about not getting paid, ...
He's back on Ignore.
Not sure which farm loans you’re talking about not getting paid, but I assume you will enlighten me. As for the ppp loans, they were specifically deemed by Congress (you know, the branch of government that writes laws) to be forgivable if certain conditions were met. Because the government took away the businesses ability to generate income, they were intended to let businesses continue to pay wages and such. Don’t think Congress made any similar legislative determinations for student loans.
And while you will get all pedantic and say "Congress passed that" that isn't even the point nor is it even relevant to the discussion and you know it.
So not a peep about the 220 EOs that Trump signed (a record for a 1-termer... a record with a bullet). But now... NOW it's a problem.
Ok. Noted. Dismissed.
So not a peep about the 220 EOs that Trump signed (a record for a 1-termer... a record with a bullet). But now... NOW it's a problem.
Ok. Noted. Dismissed.
If you’re paying any attention at all, you’d know that if student loan forgiveness gets thrown out in these conservative-leaning courts, it’ll have nothing to do with the underlying legal soundness of the law passed by a Republican trifecta in 2003 to make waiving or modifying student loans during national emergencies an option in the first place.
"Oh, but I generally always oppose them. I shouldn't have to vocally oppose all of them. Do ou want me to disavow every EO ever? That seems like a lot of work."
-Hovey, probably
Long before Trump ever set foot in the White House I posted, maybe a couple of different times, that I thought the practice of EO's was bad, and criticized the Bush's, Clinton, etc..., for the practice. Unlike others around here, I tend not to come in and post the same thing every day.
I don't know what's going to happen in this case. A lot of times they seem to get decided on something like standing or something other that what all of the rest of us might think is the real issue.
As for the "legal soundness" of the law passed in 2003, I don't know if that'll even be the issue. The law in 2003 was passed and signed into law, and I don't think anyone questions whether that was a legally passed piece of legislation.
As I understand it, I think a lot of it will have to do with interpreting how broad was the power extended by Congress to the Secretary of Education. That is always open for interpretation.
Unlike most posters here, I actually still believe that Courts make decisions on non-politically partisan basis. Hence, Trump's repeated losses with his frivolous election lawsuits before judges he appointed, or even the recent decision by the Supreme's compelling him to produce his tax returns. In fact, I think repeated and public proclamations that the courts decide things only on a partisan basis, as are made repeated here in Cafe, do more to harm the Republic than anything any of our elected clowns ever dreamed of doing.