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propter_hoc 17 hours ago

I'm Canadian, but I know someone from the US who did this. She's living in Paris, moderately successful in academia and as far as I can tell, completely happy to never return to the US. Her family goes to visit her in Europe once in a while.

Perplexing.

dvt 17 hours ago | parent | next [-]

> moderately successful in academia and as far as I can tell

Why not pay your debts then? I totally understand debt forgiveness for extenuating circumstances (and imo, it's a crime that student loan debt can't be forgiven, and the interest rates are often predatory—especially in the case of med school and law school), but this just sounds like stealing with extra steps.

namenotrequired 17 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I may be wrong but I read “moderately successful in academia” as meaning: they have succeeded in gaining some social capital but make little money

propter_hoc 17 hours ago | parent [-]

Sorry - didn't mean to be vague but I don't want to out my acquaintance too much. She has a good job in STEM. I think she does fine for herself and I would have thought her capable of paying the loan.

slibhb 17 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

One of the people in the article was supposed to pay $60/month for 20 years. That seems manageable for pretty much anyone but the article cites "psychological issues" or whatever

propter_hoc 17 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

Yeah. I don't know the extent of her debt or current income, but she went to an in-state school for a STEM degree, she's not someone who got a useless degree from an overly expensive school. She definitely doesn't seem to regret her decision, whatever the financial or moral considerations.

As I said, I'm a bit perplexed.

jdeibele 17 hours ago | parent [-]

She went to an out-of-state school for her master's. Article said that she was a ward of Colorado but went to the University of Oregon for her graduate degree.

No mention of undergrad so hopefully she did go in-state for much lower or free tuition.

I have 2 kids in college and a recent graduate. I am routinely horrified by the choices that some students make in going out of their home state or to a private school instead of a public one.

sieabahlpark 17 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

[dead]

namenotrequired 17 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

Which part perplexes you?

yunnpp 17 hours ago | parent [-]

That they're Canadian.

But jokes aside, I'm curious too. Nothing there seems too extravagant, people move abroad all the time. Maybe it then takes them 30 years to realize they didn't have it so bad after all and move back. I'm not speaking for the US here specifically, but more generally. Those longer term stories I think are more interesting.