Mike Rowe is lid van Facebook. Meld je aan bij Facebook om in contact te komen met Mike Rowe.
Mike Rowe is lid van Facebook. Meld je aan bij Facebook om in contact te komen met Mike Rowe.
Mike Rowe, profile picture

I work hard on this page, (not as hard as I could, perhaps, but pretty hard), to avoid the politics of the moment, and comment only on topics that impact the foundation I’m proud to run – a foundation that awards work-ethic scholarships to individuals who choose to forego an expensive, four-year education in favor of a skilled trade. When I do weigh in, I try to acknowledge both sides of the argument, and make my points with as much respect as I can muster. Today, however, I can see only one side. Today, I can find nothing to respect in the President’s decision to transfer billions of dollars in outstanding student loans onto the backs of those people my foundation tries to assist - the same people I’ve spent the last twenty years profiling on Dirty Jobs.

With that in mind, I’m not going to write the piece I just sat down to write. Instead, I’m going to share the attached article from Charlie Cooke, who writes better than I do, and shares my disdain for what just happened. If you share our disdain, then please, share this post as well. This decision is without question, the biggest pre-Labor Day slap in the face to working people I've ever seen.

----

BIDEN'S STUDENT-DEBT BONFIRE IS A CLASSIST MESSAGE TO THE UNCREDENTIALED: SCREW 'EM
By Charlie Cooke

A few moments before I sat down to write this piece, I opened the door to six guys in blue shirts who had come to my house to replace our air-conditioning units. The Florida weather being what it is, I’ve seen some of these guys work on our air conditioners before, and they’re as skilled and knowledgeable and conscientious and hard-working as you might expect. The company they work for, which is local to North Florida, was started by a guy who chose to forgo college in favor of taking out a small-business loan to strike out on his own. Most of the technicians who work for him didn’t go to college, either. They took a different path. And, well . . . what absolute chumps the president has just made of them for that!

Squirm if you like, but that’s the truth of the matter: As of today, the six air-conditioning technicians in my house are on the hook for college loans that were signed for, spent, and enjoyed by other people. Confirming the measure today, President Biden announced that any American who has both college debt they vowed to repay and an individual yearly income under $125,000 (or a family yearly income under $250,000) will be given up to $20,000 by the Treasury — which means by you, and by me, and by everyone else who pays taxes in America.

Why? Well, that’s the question.

The answer can’t be, “because that’s what the relevant law anticipates or requires.” As of yet, Congress has provided no authorization for the executive branch to arbitrarily write off some of the money that borrowers owe to taxpayers. As of yet, Congress has passed no rules that allow down-on-their-luck presidents to throw money at people for political gain. As of yet, Congress has given no instruction that if the president’s friends might like a little more cash, he can raid the Treasury to give it to them. Certainly, Congress has set up a loan program. But the deal there is rather simple, all told: First you borrow, and then you pay back what you borrowed. There is no mention of “forgiveness” days or of “help” or of rolling Chekhovian jubilees, and by pretending otherwise, President Biden is making a mockery of his oath to uphold the Constitution.

Another answer that won’t fly is, “To lower the cost of education.” As President Biden made clear today, this is a one-time deal, a lottery, a lightning strike. People who paid off their loans last week aren’t covered. People who will take out new loans after the policy has run its course aren’t covered. The problems in the system aren’t addressed. The colleges, and their endowments, are left unmolested. American culture’s increasingly credentialist presumptions aren’t altered. Within four years, overall debt will return to its present level. With the stroke of a pen, the already-fake deficit savings within the Inflation Reduction Act will be wiped out. This isn’t a reform. It’s not even pretending to be reform. It’s a contemptuous, abusive, unbelievably expensive shot in the dark — the net effect of which will be that fewer people correctly calibrate whether college is worth it, fewer colleges change their offerings to meet market demand, and, because this sort of executive giveaway will now loom large as a possibility, fewer people feel the need to save for college.

It seems so arbitrary. Why does Biden not want to do the same thing for loans on trucks owned by plumbers? Why not for mortgages — which, given how heavily it subsidizes them, the federal government clearly thinks are worthwhile? Why not for credit cards or auto payments or mom-and-pop credit lines? The answer, I’m afraid to say, is disgustingly classist: Because Joe Biden and his party believe that college students are better than everyone else. Because Joe Biden and his party believe that college students are of a finer cut. Because Joe Biden and his party prefer college students to you, and they think that those students ought to be rewarded for that by being handed enormous gobs of your money.

Electricians, store managers, deli workers, landscapers, waitresses, mechanics, entrepreneurs? Screw ’em. Sure, college graduates make more money than non-graduates, and their unemployment rate is lower, too. But non-graduates don’t have access to the president, so they don’t matter. They’re tradesmen, the riff-raff, the great unwashed. They’re background noise, dirty-handed types, second-classers. They don’t deserve $10,000 in debt reduction. What would they even do with it? Go hunting? Give it to their church? Their role is to subsidize the superior people, and the superior people go to college.

Why did Joe Biden do all this? That’s why. Why was this what Joe Biden chose to break his oath to achieve? That’s why. When it came down to it, good ol’ Scranton Joe sent cash from the sort of people he cynically pretends to care about to the sort of people he actually cares about: the privileged, accredited, self-dealing clerisy that his ever-dwindling political party now calls its base.

May be an image of ‎3 people and ‎text that says '‎fr. Giribel TICaM タト cidee م drfo MAe/ a Faye 50 NR. (20+) ® The clome チとすガータ አብዬ sive Backfires Facebook Jobe DIScO... Crist? Weico AOL.COM YouTite White Educators ReasomTV-Mke-R.. -Miko-R.. Enough NR PLUS POLITICS POLICY POLITICS&POLICY Biden's Student-Debt Student Debt Bonfire Is a Classist Message to the Uncredentialed: Screw 'Em Share f E0 012INTE 0.9_าว_.. 264 Vacuraming- mp4 Vacuuming.‎'‎‎
Joe Sottile, profile picture
Joe Sottile
We paid $2T so rich people didn't have to pay taxes.

Where was your outrage about that?

The predatory student lending industry is fleecing citizens who were over-charged for their education and are being crushed by the debt they took on with the unfulfilled promise that it would get them ahead.

This is a nice first step, but we have to do better to keep capitalist greed from siphoning off every drop of the American dream from future generations.
Mike Rowe, profile picture
Mike Rowe
Joe Sottile - Where was I? I was on the record, in hundreds of similar posts, where I argued that bailouts were dangerous, and "too big to fail was fallacious." Here's one from 2009, regarding the bonuses paid to AIG. https://mikerowe.com/2009/03/is-it-really-about-the-aig-bonuses/
Victoria Robinson, profile picture
Victoria Robinson
Thank you for sharing. Absolute 100% the unequivocal truth. “They” can spin it any way they choose, it doesn’t change the facts. Since I try hard not to curse (much), these emojis have been coming in handy for me these days. 🤬🤬🤬🤬
Greg Wickherst, profile picture
Greg Wickherst
So Mike has been a champion for the average Joe (just not the Joe from Scranton, he's Elitist) for many years, you know, the blue collar hard worker that goes and gets an education at a trade school. But now I'm confused. Because in this article, it calls out college graduates as "Superior." So which is it? Are tradesmen that go to college superior? And is this forgiveness given to Bidens Buddies? Because they cap it at 125K. If you make 125K or more, you don't qualify. So there goes that "classist" argument. He is not giving a tax break to the super wealthy, like Trump did. He is helping those that were hurting.under the strain of a runaway college education system that has been overcharging students more and more each year. But he wasn't helping the super rich. He was helping the ones that make under 125K. The tradesmen that went to trade school. I don't need a college education to read through the BS. Is this college forgiveness thing perfect? No. Should they have addressed the rising cost first? Maybe. But instead if battling the corporations and education system for years, he chose to give some relief to the folks that need it now. Is it fair? No. But no matter what he does, there will always be someone that complains that it isn't fair. Am I changing anyone's mind by writing this? Probably not. Is anyone still even reading this far? If so, I'm amazed! I just wanted to call out Mike because the article calls out Joe for being Elitist, when it is the exact opposite in all honesty, and I'm disappointed in Mike for spreading this fake news.
Nicole De Graff, profile picture
Nicole De Graff
This makes me so angry. I can’t say it better than you.
Susan Meyer Spiller, profile picture
Susan Meyer Spiller
Kan een afbeelding zijn van de tekst 'People cry "My body my choice" well I say "Your student loan, your payments."'
Paul Matthew, profile picture
Paul Matthew
I normally do not weigh in either, but I teach HS students HVAC in Portland ME and this is the stigma my students face daily. My students are told they are nothing without a 4 year degree, but they aren’t smart enough for college so go to trade school. This is from their guidance counselor and academic teachers. The irony is my students leave my program employed and potentially making $70K in four years instead of owing it. College loans are handed out like candy, but after graduation my students struggle to find financing if they want to further their skills by attending trade based education. I have 30 years experience in multiple trades, but cannot get paid as a trade instructor at the master level because I couldn’t afford to finish my degree from UMASS 25 years ago. Even if I had graduated my major does not pertain to what I’m currently teaching, but just having the paper somehow would make me worthy of fair pay. We should not negate the importance of college, but we should give equal respect to the skills and intelligence of our trades people as well. There’s so much more to this than fits here. Thanks for all your support Mike Rowe.
Susan Meyer Spiller, profile picture
Susan Meyer Spiller
Kan een afbeelding zijn van de tekst 'If your college degree doesn't have enough value for you to pay it off, it certainly doesn't have enough value for me to pay it off.'
Nicole Garbati Poirier, profile picture
Nicole Garbati Poirier
Student loan forgiveness shouldn’t even be THOUGHT of until regulations have been put in place for college tuition. Loan payoff doesn’t solve the problem if tuition is allowed to be astronomical! Regulate college tuition FIRST. Then maybe a forgiveness plan could be considered.
April Mitchell, profile picture
April Mitchell
I was working for the public service student loan forgiveness. I figured if I worked 10 years as a nurse that was a fair trade, but this is something different….
John Connell, profile picture
John Connell
My wife and I scraped and saved for years so our kids wouldn't be in debt. I couldn't afford college so I joined the Navy and served my country for 20 years. It is absolutely unconscionable that those of us who didn't have the opportunity to go to college and decided to choose other career paths should have to pay for those that did. Not to mention the people that have paid their student loans off, or chose to go to a trade school instead. Someone please make it make sense. This is nothing more than purchasing votes at the taxpayers' expense. PERIOD. 
Scott Brown, profile picture
Scott Brown
The President does not have the legal authority to forgive student loans on his own. Only Congress has the power of the purse. Executive action can be used only when it has been specifically authorized by Congress. …
Thomas George, profile picture
Thomas George
By this logic:
- freeing the slaves isn’t fair to past slaves who died in bondage
- women’s suffrage wasn’t fair to past women who couldn’t vote
- the GI bill wasn’t fair to past vets who paid for their own school
- pay no attention to the individual republican politicians who got hundreds of thousands of dollars of PPP loans forgiven.

Get real.
Susan Vandervliet, profile picture
Susan Vandervliet
It is disgusting & so unfair to the people that did pay their student loans off!!
Ellen Dayhoff, profile picture
Ellen Dayhoff
Where do they come up with the $125,000/YEAR...??? If I made that much I could easily pay for MY OWN college education...I'm sure they used some brilliant average...but it was MY choice to go to school. MY responsibility. Unreal
Marissa Taylor-Dance, profile picture
Marissa Taylor-Dance
Why don’t they do something about the interest rates for these loans … so the students in the future can have a chance a normal lives and paying back their loans
Waylon Martinez, profile picture
Waylon Martinez
But we can bail out banks Wall Street and corporate America Im fine with it helping regular people about time
Vicky Dal Santo, profile picture
Vicky Dal Santo
Any attempt to resolve the nightmare student debt situation is pointless without addressing the runaway costs of a college education. I see many people decrying the predatory lending institutions, but not enough outcry about the insane educational-industrial complex that has such a grip on our nation.
Craig R. Brittain, profile picture
Craig R. Brittain
In a "great economy" with "0% inflation and 10 million jobs" everyone can easily repay their own debts.
Paul Plumley, profile picture
Paul Plumley
I went to college full time Mon-Fri and worked a 8 hour day 6 days a week. Had my student loans paid back within the first year out of school. Decided to join the military after the fact and as a Army veteran I now have a nice GI bill but zero college debt to spend it on. I’m only saying this because accountability, suffering and hard work makes you a better individual. The younger generation could use more. To me a strong work ethic is more important then any college degree.
Carol Elsner, profile picture
Carol Elsner
My husband went back to school later in life to finish his degree. His loans were just paid off when he was 49 years old. This is BS.
Vivina Ciolli, profile picture
Vivina Ciolli
Get over it. Helping others is moral, ethical, and well: kind. Everyone is fine. We are all OK. We are on our path. We are GOOD. “Now they have it, and I don’t” is two-year old talk. Instead rejoice at the good fortune of others.
Tricia Nelson, profile picture
Tricia Nelson
My husband and I sweat blood to pay our debits for school and everything else in our lives. Now this.

Words fail me now.
Stacy Richards, profile picture
Stacy Richards
Your anger should be directed at predatory lenders not Biden. My loans have almost doubled since I have graduated 5 years ago. That isn’t ok. I’m not well off I work in a job where I serve others. This is super awesome of Biden to help. I applaud him.
Tanya Marling Wells, profile picture
Tanya Marling Wells
It’s unbelievable that we as a country seem to not believe in personal responsibility. It’s sad really. This “loan forgiveness” is just a fancy way to get votes and not actually fix the problem of schools being outrageously expensive.
Dan Swanson, profile picture
Dan Swanson
But bailing out Wall Street, Big Pharma, the Auto Industry, and trillions of dollars in tax breaks to the ultra wealthy is okay?
I love you Mike, but believe you are way off base here.
Having a well educated populous, for free, is exactly what we need. It is exactly the reason we are soooo far behind the rest of the world. In everything.
Also, I am a tradesperson.
Robbie Andrew, profile picture
Robbie Andrew
People who couldn't afford to go to college in the first place and had to work since a young age are now forced to pay off the debt of people who could afford to go to college, via taxation.

People who were responsible and paid off their student debts are being punished while those who weren't responsible and didn't pay off their debts are being rewarded.

We live in backwards world.
Lars for President, profile picture
Lars for President
Since the economy is "the Best Ever" and Unemployment is at an all time low, People should have lots of money to pay off student debts especially now that Inflation is at "zero" .
Bill Birkdale, profile picture
Bill Birkdale
Could not agree more. What about people that lived within means, worked extra. They paid off their own loans and sent their children without loans. How about the plumber or electrician that started their own shop in 2019, took out loans for a truck and tools. Do any of them get a break, nope.
Robert Hanson, profile picture
Robert Hanson
I'm throwing in the towel. Hard work and perseverance only gets you screwed. Oh and income tax? Lets go Brandon!