Someone on Mastodon made a good observation about how this headline is framed: https://mastodon.social/@jeffjarvis/112238112958275511
The New York Times does not assume Trump’s motives whenever he says or does something; the headline simply reads “Trump Says Thing.” But they will insert a motive for something Biden does. In this case, “swing-state pitch,” instead of “doing more of the thing that he has done several times before.” Can we assume that he hopes to pick up some votes by doing this? Of course. But the NYTimes’ editorial standards are very inconsistent, and worth noticing.
They’re not inconsistent; it’s all on purpose.
He’s basically only forgiving interest or automatically forgiving debt for people who qualify and didn’t apply for existing programs. Or people who have been paying for 20 years.
Anyone who could possibly have heartache about that can fuck right off.
I owe a lot but I can afford to pay and I do not fucking care if I have to pay and some someone else gets their loan forgiven. Good for them. Should have been free in the first place.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
President Biden on Monday announced a large-scale effort to help pay off federal student loans for tens of millions of American borrowers, seeking an election-year boost by returning to a 2020 campaign promise that was blocked by the Supreme Court last year.
Mr. Biden announced the plan in Madison, Wis., the capital of a critical swing state and a college town that symbolizes the president’s promise to make higher-education affordability a cornerstone of his economic agenda.
The original plan relied on a law called the HEROES Act, which the administration argued allowed the government to waive student debt during a national emergency like the Covid pandemic.
Neal McCluskey, the director of the Center for Educational Freedom at the Cato Institute, called the new plan “dangerous policy” that is unfair to taxpayers and would cause colleges and universities to raise their prices.
“The Constitution gives Congress, not the president, the authority to enact law, and the Supreme Court has already struck down a unilateral, mass student debt cancellation scheme by the Biden administration,” he said.
Members of Mr. Biden’s administration fanned out across the country on Monday to talk about the new plan, betting that it will rally support among voters who were disappointed that the court blocked the first one, which would have eliminated up to $20,000 in debt for tens of millions of borrowers.
The original article contains 1,371 words, the summary contains 225 words. Saved 84%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!