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College at $100,000 a year is not a choice. It is a fraud imposed on the American people
by the Globalist Nazis. These losers need to get lost and move to Somalia where they
belong.
But most girls have dreamt of their weeding day since their Disney Princess days when there were five.
I don't mind driving an old car, so long as its reliable.
RWSGFY says
"Colleges are rarely $100K. Going to a $100K per year college IS a choice."
You haven't checked tuition and fees lately, have you?
In a right state you can go to a great public school for roughly $10-20K per year and this is with zero scolarships, assistance and such.
I'm surprised you don't know that, supposedly living in the US and all ....
"In a right state you can go to a great public school..."
You haven't checked tuition and fees lately, have you?
RWSGFY says
"In a right state you can go to a great public school..."
You need to find the right state for lower tuition and fees? In the 60s and 70s people
used to get a university education with a part-time job. What happened?
You haven't checked tuition and fees lately, have you?
RWSGFY says
"In a right state you can go to a great public school..."
You need to find the right state for lower tuition and fees? In the 60s and 70s people
used to get a university education with a part-time job. What happened?
Globohomo is trying to do to the US what it did to Mexico beginning in the late 1960's. Mexico was flush with gold and oil, and was encouraged to take out USD denominated loans. Then in the 1970's, when US interest rates went through the roof, Mexico couldn't repay their USD debts, so the raping began.
In the 60s and 70s people
used to get a university education with a part-time job. What happened?
I did. Have one kid in college RN and other two soon to follow.
In a right state you can go to a great public school for roughly $10-20K per year and this is with zero scolarships, assistance and such.
The_Deplorable says
In the 60s and 70s people
used to get a university education with a part-time job. What happened?
College loans. Easy money always runs up costs.

https://www.advisorperspectives.com/dshort/updates/2025/11/06/household-debt-rises-to-18-59-trillion-in-q3-2025
Your 401K payments when you retire, will be taxed, more than it would have been taxed in your weekly paycheck.
The gigantic US debt means that tax rates today are the lowest they will be in our lifetimes.
This is why I am converting some of my IRA to a Roth IRA. However, I'm not really that committed either way so I am converting $10,000 batches.
The last two places I've worked they offered a Roth 401(k) and I took advantage. 75% of my retirement income will be tax free. I just need to hold out to 59.5 to avoid crazy withdrawal penalties.
Not sure why it's a required course in college.
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As interest rates rise, the math says that it's better if invest any spare cash rather than pay down debt, which is at a low fixed rate (house, student loan, small car loan). However, particularly with the mortgage, there is something to be said for the peace of mind of having it behind me and owning my home outright. I'm fully funding my 401(k), and have a six month emergency fund, but until now, any "free cash" beyond that, I've been diverting to the mortgage. As I sit right now, the goal is have it paid off in the next 5 to 7 years. With high yield savings paying about 4% right now, that's a 1% spread relative to my 3% mortgage.
As much as I could try to invest in the market 1) I'm not that good, and 2) the market has more or less peaked, and I don't see another major bull market given that we are seeing the end of the "everything bubble". Once I own the house free and clear, then I'll have plenty of "play money" to invest or whatever and hopefully catch the next upswing.