Anonymous ID: 0afb9a June 29, 2022, 5:14 a.m. No.16554475   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4506 >>4508

Student loans are bullshit.

 

I'm not saying they should be forgiven - no, not at all.

 

They should however, be treated like any ofther form of debt with the ability to be discharged in bankruptcy. Allow them to be discharged in bankdruptcy and watch how fast the student loan companies fall apart. That debt will be sold 10x inside of 6 months and each time for 50% of the face value that the last guy bought it for. I'd bet that you could buy your debt back for no more than 10 cents on the dollar after 3 months.

 

Why?

 

Because the marketplace knows that student debt is a scam and everyone will go rushing to get rid of it…The Great Reset? it already got me and 100s of thousands like me. I've owned nothing for 25 years becuase of my student debt. The one time I came close to having enough money to buy something was the height of the housing bubble. Got myself a condo for $235K. After job loss and bankruptcy due to that - the condo sold for $40K. At $40K I could have kept it….in the two years I owned it I had payed $30K on it…

 

 

https://www.congress.gov/bill/116th-congress/house-bill/770/all-actions-without-amendments?q=%7B%22search%22%3A%5B%22hr+5%22%5D%7D

Anonymous ID: 0afb9a June 29, 2022, 5:19 a.m. No.16554506   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4508

>>16554475

 

OPINION

Don't Cancel Student Loans. Let Bankruptcy Law Forgive Them

 

| Opinion

SARAH SHARER CURLEY , RETIRED FEDERAL BANKRUPTCY COURT JUDGE

ON 6/21/22 AT 3:52 PM EDT

 

OPINION

Don't Cancel Student Loans. Let Bankruptcy Law Forgive Them | Opinion

SARAH SHARER CURLEY , RETIRED FEDERAL BANKRUPTCY COURT JUDGE

ON 6/21/22 AT 3:52 PM EDT

 

BANKRUPTCY

 

I'll never forget a case I presided over while still a bankruptcy judge in the District of Arizona, the case of a woman I'll call Myrna. Myrna had taken out student loans in the early1970s, and then decided to work in public health as a children's psychologist for San Diego County, CA. Myrna bought a home and helped troubled children, and she made sporadic payments on her loans over the years.

 

Years later, Myrna retired, sold her home, and she and her husband moved to Arizona. Her husband did odd jobs, and they collected social security. Then the student-loan debt collector came-a-knocking. In 2010, he demanded immediate payment. Myrna filed a bankruptcy petition in response. Myrna had few records of her payments over the years, and, tellingly, the collector was having difficulty calculating the total amount owed. By the time Myrna appeared in my courtroom for trial, she was seventy-three-years old, and she owed $584,854.99.

 

The creditor presented no evidence, but Myrna carried the burden of proof. She had little documentation to support her repayment of her student loans or her salary over the years, because she had taken out the loans so long ago.

 

I saw incredible inequities in this case. Myrna did not meet all of the legal criteria to have her student loans forgiven. However, if she had filed her bankruptcy petition before 1998, the law in place at the time would have forgiven her loans after seven years. If she had filed a bankruptcy petition prior to 1976, she would have received forgiveness of her loans as any other consumer debt. But Myrna didn't think about bankruptcy back then.

 

Part 1 of 2

 

https://www.newsweek.com/dont-cancel-student-loans-let-bankruptcy-law-forgive-them-opinion-1717664

Anonymous ID: 0afb9a June 29, 2022, 5:19 a.m. No.16554508   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16554475

>>16554506

 

Part 2 of 2

 

Myrna had also worked in the public health sector, which under later law, would have forgiven her loans after 10 years of service. So, using those factors, I decided that she only needed to pay for three more years, based upon her income level, and the student loan debt would be forgiven. The parties later stipulated to a form of judgment consistent with my ruling.

 

How did we ever get to such a place? Under the prior bankruptcy law, student loans were treated like any other consumer debt. They were routinely forgiven. But in 1976, an Amendment to the Higher Education Act that also amended the bankruptcy law changed the game. It required that education loans not be forgiven unless a period of five years after the loan was entered into had passed or the borrower could show that he or she would experience an "undue hardship" if the loan were repaid. It was left up to the courts to determine what undue hardship meant. The Bankruptcy Reform Act of 1978, the "Bankruptcy Code," incorporated the changes.

 

In 1990, the Crime Control Bill changed the waiting period from five to seven years, and added additional types of loans that were difficult to forgive under the Bankruptcy Code. Finally, on October 7, 1998, President Clinton signed the Higher Education Act Amendments, which eliminated the waiting period altogether. Then, only undue hardship could "free" a borrower from student loan debt in bankruptcy.

 

Today it is extremely difficult for student loan borrowers to get relief in bankruptcy. Under the current bankruptcy law, borrowers must meet the test set forth in a 1985 case called "In re Brunner," which introduced three criteria of "undue hardship" borrowers must meet before their debt is forgiven: The borrower is living at the poverty level, will continue to do so for the foreseeable future, and has made good faith efforts to repay the student loan debt.

 

If a debtor cannot meet one of the criteria, the debt cannot be discharged. "In re Brunner" is followed, with some modification, in nearly all of the United States Circuit Courts of Appeal.

 

This standard is unjust and misguided. It's time to reverse the damage done by these laws.

 

Too many Americans are hampered in their ability to advance economically by student loans. Moreover, there is a racial justice element to this. Research has shown that Black and Hispanic students are disproportionately affected by the student debt crisis. They are more likely to attend for-profit colleges that don't lead to high-paying careers, and they borrow more money to attend. Black college graduates owe an average of $25,000 more in student loan debt than white graduates.

 

We have a crisis. At the end of the first quarter 2022, Americans owed $1.59 trillion in student loan debt according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, an increase of $14 billion over the fourth quarter 2021. On May 31, 2022, the Department of Education announced that it would automatically wipe out $5.8 billion owed by 560,000 borrowers who attended the for-profit Corinthian Colleges because of the chains' "bad behavior."

 

https://www.newsweek.com/dont-cancel-student-loans-let-bankruptcy-law-forgive-them-opinion-1717664

Anonymous ID: 0afb9a June 29, 2022, 5:30 a.m. No.16554566   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4617

>>16554518

My friend's father just died of that shit….

 

probably took the vax and 4 boosters. was over at my friends place for dinner…

 

next day doesn't feel well….goes to doctor.

 

Doctor sends to hospital.

 

dead 2 days later….they called it a clot in his "large intestine"

 

J Exp Med. 1937 Apr 30; 65(5): 613–639.

doi: 10.1084/jem.65.5.613

PMCID: PMC2133514

PMID: 19870622

 

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2133514/

 

THE COAGULATION OF BLOOD BY SNAKE VENOMS AND ITS PHYSIOLOGIC SIGNIFICANCE

Harry Eagle

 

Abstract

Nine of the 17 venoms here tested were found capable of coagulating citrated blood or plasma. As has been believed by most workers in the field, 7 of these 9 coagulant venoms convert fibrinogen to an insoluble modification resembling fibrin (Bothrops atrox, Bothrops jararaca, Bothrops nummifera, Crotalus adamanteus, Crotalus horridus, Crotalus terrificus basiliscus, Crotalus terrificus terrificus). The optimum pH for this coagulation was determined for 3 of these, and was found in each case to be approximately pH 6.5, the same as that for the action of thrombin on fibrinogen. Unlike thrombin, however, the fibrinogen-coagulating activity of the venoms was unaffected by the antithrombin elaborated in the course of anaphylactic shock. In addition to coagulating fibrinogen directly, 3 of these venoms (Bothrops atrox, Bothrops jararaca, and to a less extent, Crotalus terrificus basiliscus) acted on prothrombin to convert it to thrombin, without the necessary intervention of either calcium or platelets. Finally, 2 venoms (Notechis scutatus, and to a slight extent, a mixed Micrurus venom), which had no demonstrable effect on purified fibrinogen, nevertheless converted prothrombin to thrombin. Unlike the reaction between the venoms and fibrinogen, this activation of prothrombin has no definite pH optimum, but takes place over a wide zone (pH 5.6–8.3). In the case of Bothrops atrox, there was some indication that the initial velocity of the reaction increased with increasing alkalinity, but that the amount of thrombin ultimately formed decreased. Extraordinarily minute quantities of some of these venoms sufficed to produce a demonstrable activation of prothrombin. Thus, the fer de lance (Bothrops atrox) venom was active in a 1:25,000,000 dilution, and that of the Australian tiger snake (Notechis scutatus) was active in a 1:4,000,000 dilution. The thrombin formed was indistinguishable from that produced by the action of calcium + platelets on prothrombin. Like the latter type of thrombin, and unlike venoms which act directly on fibrinogen, thrombin formed from prothrombin by venom was inhibited by antithrombin. Every one of the 9 non-coagulant venoms in this series destroyed prothrombin; and 5 of these destroyed fibrinogen as well. As is discussed in the text, there is reason to believe that these several properties of the venoms (coagulation and destruction of fibrinogen; activation and destruction of prothrombin) depend on the proteolytic enzymes which they were found to contain. These observations lend further support to the thesis that, in the course of physiological coagulation, (a) calcium plus platelets (or tissue derivative) constitute an enzyme system which reacts with prothrombin to form thrombin, and which is thus analogous to trypsin and to several of the proteolytic venoms here discussed, and (b) the thrombin so formed is itself a proteolytic enzyme which, like papain and the majority of the coagulant and proteolytic snake venoms here studied, reacts with fibrinogen to form a fibrillar gel, fibrin.

 

  • this is why anon hasn't fully dismissed the snake venom theory on vaxx.