Republicans being hypocrites?! How could that be?! They just want to have their way, regardless of whether it is consistent with what they say or do. They don't want the truth, consistency or what is right for all of us, they just want to get their way, and especially whatever their obscenely wealthy donors want!
The obscenely wealthy aren't interested in what is good for the country or other people, they want handouts, and they don't want anyone else getting them. Sounds like some spoiled and immature children, doesn't it? That's because people like that, who sell their lives and integrity for greed and money, aren't mature and emotionally sound. They are even more insecure or less able to cope with their insecurity than the rest of us.
As a response to this insecurity/fear, they slather themselves with money, possessions, power, esteem and apparently their own personal public servants, all to reassure themselves how good they are and that they're better than everyone else, and to hell with the rest of us. They don't share, they want everything for themselves and see any benefits for anyone else as taking away from what they so desperately "need" for themselves.
And, their "owned" politicians are in the same boat. They aren't taking those donations and job offers after office because they are noble. They, just like their donors, want money, power, etc., because that makes them feel more secure. What great role models for upcoming generations, not! And people like that should never be in positions of power where they can sell out the rest of us.
Republican Who Rails Against Student Loan “Bailout” Got $1.5M of Loans Forgiven https://truthout.org/articles/republican-who-rails-against-student-loan-bailout-got-1-5m-of-loans-forgiven/
#GreedKills
#GOPGreed
#InsecurityResponses
#GreedIsAntiSocial
"On Thursday, Republican Rep. Burgess Owens (Utah), who has declared personal bankruptcy five times and had $1.5 million of his debt discharged, held a hearing aimed at attacking President Joe Biden’s student debt forgiveness plan to forgive up to $20,000 of debt for borrowers.
In the hearing by the House Subcommittee on Higher Education and Workforce Development, Owens railed against the concept of student debt forgiveness, saying that it was unfair for those who pursued higher education to seek forgiveness and place the burden of their loans on the public — an argument that debt forgiveness activists have long disputed.
“Many people in this room probably have student loans. However, the blanket bailout that turns loans into target grants and saddles future generations with someone else’s debt is not a solution,” Owens said in his opening statement.
He railed against individuals for taking on loans that created “short-sighted, self-centered and intergenerational debt,” and complained that the education that borrowers received is “low quality,” perpetuating a thread of right-wingers attacking higher education for spurious reasons while disregarding the fact that the vast majority of jobs now require a college degree.
However, debt activists are pointing out that Owens is a raging hypocrite. During his first campaign for office in 2020, it was revealed that Owens filed for personal bankruptcy five times between the 1990s and 2000s.
...
However, as The Salt Lake Tribune uncovered, records show that Owens filed for Chapter 7 in 2005 for $1.7 million in debt...meaning, essentially, that Owens had $1.5 million in debts discharged by courts, per the Salt Lake Tribune.
...
The bankruptcies weren’t Owens’s only financial trouble during his campaign. During his campaign, it was found that Owens had accepted at least $135,500 in contributions that were over legal limits, which amounted to about 40 percent of the funding that his campaign had on hand during the last stretch of the contested run. Later, he was handed a fee by the Federal Election Commission for failing to report $34,000 in contributions to his campaign.
Debt activists also pointed out the hypocrisy of other Republicans on the subcommittee. ...tuition at the University of Miami...is now three times as expensive as it was when Owens graduated. The federal minimum wage then was higher than it is now, adjusted for inflation.
For Rep. Virginia Foxx (R-North Carolina), the chair of the House Education and Workforce Committee, tuition at (UNC) Chapel Hill, was $310 when she graduated in 1968, or about $2,700 in today’s dollars. Now, tuition there is about $7,000, or an effective increase of 258 percent. Minimum wage then was $14 in today’s dollars — a large contrast to the current minimum wage of $7.25 federally..."