Uzique wrote:
Jay wrote:
Uzique wrote:
you only finished paying off your student debts a year ago, i remember you posting about it because i gz'd you. you also had financial aid with the gi bill, as you said "not much but it helped". if you're making 100k a year how has it taken you until your mid-30's to pay off student debts for a low-ranking, relatively inexpensive college education? someone has been popping one too many zolofts
GI Bill payments are based on cost of living, and when he was going to school, were pretty much shit. When I started college I was receiving $1800 a month and expected to pay for my tuition out of that. It changed a year before I graduated and became SUPER AWESOME, but up to that point it really wasn't much, let alone enough to live on. They calculated $1800 a month in New York City, I'd hate to see what they'd calculate out in the midwest where he is from, maybe $700/month.
that's $700 more than a student without the gi bill makes though, no? $700 a month is a pretty handsome amount, imo. i figured out my living costs this year, in one of the uk's most expensive areas, to be around $13,800 (not including any tuition fees cause i won a full excellence scholarship when i "became SUPER AWESOME"). $700/month sounds like a lovely handout to me. bearing in mind someone taking advantage of the GI bill has actually worked a full-time job for year or more before going to college, whereas most 'traditional' route college undergrads enter college with no personal savings. i don't see why you're whining. you got a cash handout to support a career change / higher education path. that's pretty fucking pretty from where i'm sitting.
And we traded years of our lives at low pay and high danger levels in order to receive those payments. I think you fail to understand that at the time I joined the Army was selling the GI Bill as a free college education. All you had to do was serve four years, and voila, education paid for. $700 a month is absolute shit when you have to pay for tuition up front, you have to pay for your dorm, and your meal plan, books etc.
Once the GI Bill changed, I was receiving payments of $3600 a month for living expenses, a stipend for books, and my tuition was paid for up front at no cost to me. As I said, it is now SUPER AWESOME, but back when marine was attending school it basically allowed you to attend school while maintaining a part time job on the side rather than a full time one