million student march

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Neil Cavuto embarrasses student who wants free college and has no idea how to pay for it

Oh my gosh. This interview. I couldn’t look away. This poor girl, destroyed by simple math. Good for Neil Cavuto though. Brilliant. 

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“such as, that of healthcare in the Merica of the US, and therefore, yes”

WHY WE NEED FREE PUBLIC HIGHER EDUCATION NOW

Published On September 27, 2015 | By James Hoff

We Have Nothing to Lose but Our Debts

Like the struggle to win a $15 an hour minimum wage, the movement for free public higher education in the United States has gained significant momentum over the past two years. What was once the struggle of a dedicated few has now become a national debate, and several states (including Tennessee, Mississippi, and Oregon) have already passed or are considering legislation to make community colleges tuition free, and President Barack Obama has called on all states to eliminate community college tuition. Meanwhile, Democratic Presidential hopeful and U.S. Senator Bernie Sanders has gone even further, introducing legislation in May that proposes to make every public college and state university in the country free, and calling for a million student march on Washington. Though Sanders’ legislation is unlikely to pass, it is clear that the current neo-liberal agenda of austerity and privatization is increasingly untenable, and support among the 99% for free public higher education is rapidly growing. Actually winning such a victory, however, as Elan Axelbank notes in his June article for Socialist Alternative, will not be easy and will require a sustained and even more determined mass movement of students, educators, and activists. In what follows I will explain briefly why Socialist Alternative’s demand for “free, high-quality public education for all from pre-school through college” is so important, what a free higher education system might look like, and what we will have to do to make it a reality.

What Went Wrong?

It wasn’t that long ago that many of the nation’s most prestigious public university systems were entirely or mostly free. Both the University of California and the City University of New York systems, for instance, charged little or no tuition until the 1970s and 1980s, when capitalist crises and a conservative tax revolt led to reduced public spending and steady increases in tuition and fees at almost all public universities and colleges. More recently, powerful corporate interests and politicians from both parties, driven in part by an ideological commitment to the supposed virtues of the free market, have conspired to mount a full-on assault on the public sector. Through a process of strategic underfunding and privatization, these forces have managed not only to radically reshape the landscape of American higher education, but have also aimed to convince ordinary people that education is not a right to which they are entitled as citizens, but rather a good they purchase as consumers.

This model of education as product has had a devastating impact on the culture of higher education. Students are now frequently treated more like customers than citizens, and administrators often view their schools as corporations rather than public institutions. As a consequence, a corporate ethos of marketing, cost-cutting, and competition has replaced the guiding tenets of critical inquiry, access, and public service that fueled the progressive rise of public education in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Boards of Trustees, stacked with corporate executives, have wasted billions on sports stadiums and luxury student centers designed to attract new students and have increased pay for presidents at many schools to corporate CEO levels, all while raising tuition, cutting services, and replacing good-paying campus jobs with low-paying contingent employment, including the increasing use of part-time, adjunct faculty, who are often paid near-poverty wages.

Not surprisingly, this corporate climate and the continued underfunding of public higher education, combined with increasing education costs, have led to skyrocketing tuition increases and massive fees that often hit working students the hardest. At the University of California, for instance, in just one decade yearly in-state tuition increased from an already unaffordable $4,354 in 1996 to more than $12,804 in 2015. That’s more than $50,000 for a four- year degree, not including books and room and board. Meanwhile at the City University of New York, a system with a historic mission to serve the poor and working class of the city, tuition and fees have increased almost 40% (to $6,330 per year) since just 2010, and the percentage of university costs covered by state and federal funding has plummeted since the 1990s. To add insult to injury, federal Pell Grants, which have historically helped the neediest students attend college, were cut in 2015. As a consequence student loan debt now exceeds credit card debt in the United States, averaging $35,000 per borrower, and total student loan debt in the US is now more than $1.2 trillion. That’s more than the combined credit card debt of every person in the country.

Although the problems facing higher education are enormous, the solution to this affordability crisis is, on one level, quite simple: make it free! If we want to fix higher education we must fight for greater funding, the complete elimination of tuition and fees, cost of living and book stipends to all students who need them, and demand that public colleges and universities finally live up to the promise of their original missions: to provide a rigorous and broad education to the mass of working and middle class Americans. Though such a move might sound radical, the benefits would be enormous. Not only would it lead to greater economic, racial, and social equality, it would also drastically improve college access and graduation rates, reduce costs, and positively alter the way we think about the value of education.

Greater Access and Higher Completion Rates

Perhaps one of the most important changes we would see if we were to shift to a tuition-free system of public higher education would be a steady increase in the number of students who both enroll in and complete college degree programs. President Obama has said he wants more Americans to attend and complete college within the six-year window that has become the new average time for obtaining a bachelor’s degree, but he has done little to address the underlying reasons why they don’t. Making public higher education free and supporting students with stipends, as Sweden and Germany do, would not only encourage more students to attend college, but would ensure that many more of them finish their degrees in a timely manner. The logic is clear: the less students have to worry about making ends meet (the less they must struggle to pay for tuition, books, transportation, and housing) the more time they will have to study and focus on their schoolwork. When students don’t have to choose their classes around their work schedules, they will be more likely to complete requirements without taking additional semesters. And when students have more time to spend on campus, they will be more likely to be involved in the kinds of extra-mural activities that keep them engaged and interested and which help them to succeed academically.

Currently, in the United States, only about 50% of students who attempt to obtain a bachelor’s degree do so within six years, and graduation rates for 25-34 year-old students have fallen sharply compared to other countries where tuition is free. In fact, of the 25 countries compared by the OECD (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development) in 2012, the United States, which in previous measures had been ranked at or near the top, was ranked just 19. Meanwhile, countries where higher education is free have, despite their own struggles against austerity, seen huge increases in college attainment. Currently in the US only about 39% of 25-34 year olds will graduate with first-time bachelor’s degrees, while in Iceland, where education is free, more than 60% of people in this age cohort are expected to obtain degrees, and Iceland is predicted to outpace the United States for the total percentage of college graduates per capita soon. Furthermore, three of the other top six countries with the highest rates of first-time bachelor’s degrees, including Poland at 53%, Denmark at 49%, and Finland at 47%, also have no tuition fees. It is clear from the statistics that at the very least there is a strong correlation and likely direct causal connection between free public higher education and increases in college attainment.

Reduced Costs

But what about costs? Wouldn’t making public education free require a huge amount of new investment and massive increases in taxes? Although making college free for everyone who wished to attend would in fact require more public funding than is currently provided, the actual numbers are less than you might think. As Ann Larson and Michael Checque have pointed out, the US government already spends billions on higher education subsidies, such as tax exemptions on student loan interest and Pell Grants to rapacious for-profit institutions like the Corinthian Colleges (which account for a significant percentage of student loan defaults). If you take into account this money currently spent or wasted on for-profits, plus all of the money state and federal governments already spend, the total additional cost to make public higher education free across the country would be just $15 billion. To give some sense of how little money this is, consider that the Pentagon’s F-35 fighter jet program was $163 Billion over budget! So making education free is, quite simply, imminently affordable.

But providing tuition-free education is also much more cost efficient than charging tuition. Under the current system of funding (a combination of decreasing public spending and increasing tuition and fees), public universities are compelled to compete against each other and private colleges to attract more tuition-paying students, wasting billions on stadiums, luxury dormitories, recreation centers, and extravagantly paid “star” professors, the cost of which is then passed on to students in the form of fees and tuition. Remove tuition and competition and you remove the dual incentives to waste money on non-academic needs, while prioritizing the academic mission of universities. This means that tuition-free public universities could actually provide a higher quality academic experience for less money per student.

But of course if we want a truly equitable and socially productive public university system, we will have to do more than merely cover the costs of tuition and fees. Most students will still need help with living expenses, books, and transportation, costs which are often paid for through student loans. Therefore billions more would have to be made available each year to cover the cost of quality dormitory housing, books, and living stipends for working and middle class students. Efficiently planned, such benefits could easily be provided to all public college and university students for just a tiny fraction of the trillions wasted by the Pentagon or the $100 billion in tax exemptions provided to corporations each year.

Social Benefits

This readjustment of priorities would also have a profound beneficial impact on our society as a whole. Not only would it practically eliminate future student loan debt and create greater social mobility and economic equality, it would also provide a living model for the public funding of other human necessities such as healthcare, electricity, and internet access.

As mentioned earlier, average student loan debt in the United States upon graduation is $35,000. Even though they frequently attend more inexpensive colleges and universities, this debt burden still falls disproportionately on the poor and working class students whose parents cannot afford to pay the costs of their education, and this burden has significant consequences. For many students, the cost of college and the thought of a life-time of debt is itself a massive deterrent to pursuing a college education. As the Illinois Student Assistance Commission documented, “Financial constraints was the number one reason (79%) given by college counselors for why some of their college prep seniors did not go on to college.” But the problems do not end there. As The Atlantic recently reported, while many millennials are struggling to get by in the recession economy, those whose parents paid for their educations are doing significantly better. Because they begin their adult lives debt-free, these lucky few are, among other things, much more likely to purchase homes earlier than their debt-burdened peers, which means significantly greater wealth over the long term. It’s easy to see that college costs are a clear contributing factor to the destruction of what little social mobility still exists within the United States, reinforcing the already deep divides between the haves and have-nots. Providing free access and living stipends for college students would mean no student would have to worry about whether or not they could afford college, and that graduates would be able to begin their adult lives debt-free.

But there are other non-material benefits that would also accrue from making college education free. The first political benefit is that a system of free higher education, in which students are fully supported by the public, would operate as a model for removing the profit incentive from other industries such as healthcare and energy. If we could provide a free high-quality public higher education to everyone who desires it, why could we not provide free high-quality healthcare, clean, low-cost energy, and free internet access? Free public higher education would be an incredibly popular program and would offer Americans at least a small taste of how a socialist political economy could function. In addition to the political victory free public higher education would represent, it would also positively alter the way that we think about the value of education itself. Currently, because of the economic risks involved, many students view higher education as a commodity to be purchased, or as some kind of investment towards greater future earnings rather than an opportunity for intellectual growth and development. Because of this they frequently pursue “safe,” career-focused majors, limiting their exposure to the liberal arts and sciences that provide adults with the foundation they need to become active and engaged citizens. If higher education were made available to absolutely everyone who wished to pursue it, then education would no longer be seen as merely a means to end. Instead, like secondary education, it would be viewed as a benefit to society and a path to human self-actualization.

The Struggle Ahead

A student protester confronts London riot police in Parliament Square December, 2010.

The benefits of free public higher education are many and creating such a system would be economically viable without any increase in taxes. But while the economic challenge is easily surmountable, the political challenge, the struggle against the bipartisan policies of austerity and privatization, will be much more substantial. Although the vast majority of Americans, (79% according to Gallup) believe that higher education is unaffordable, and though some politicians say they support measures to make higher education free, it is unlikely that such proposals will stand much of a chance in the U.S. Congress or state legislatures unless there is a mass movement in support of them. Like in all struggles for social progress and change, we cannot sit idly by and expect those in power to do the right thing. This movement will have to begin at the grass roots, with the students who are most directly affected by skyrocketing tuition, and build out from there to engage with larger communities of workers, parents, and the poor. Over the last four or five years there have been several high profile mass student protests from London to New York City against cuts to higher education and increases to tuition and fees—a clear sign that students are fed up. But we have yet to see a sustained national movement for free tuition. Though it’s important that we continue to fight against future cuts and increases to tuition, it is also imperative that we begin to build a movement that demands more than merely the maintenance of the status quo. Like the movement for a $15 an hour minimum wage, we must demand more than what the system is willing to give, otherwise, we gain nothing.

To actually win this fight, however, and we can win, we will have to build a massive and sustained movement of students and educators willing to shut down their campuses and to coordinate national and state-wide actions to demand free public higher education. Are you ready?

http://www.socialistalternative.org/2015/09/27/free-public-higher-education/

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Million Student March

How nervewracking. I practically served as a co-organizer for Texas State’s march alongside my frined, Taylor. In my dream of dreams we have anywhere from 75-100 people show up tomorrow and it goes down as the biggest demonstration on Texas State’s campus since the Vietnam War. We then continue to keep a presence on campus with a united front of political organizations and continuously remind the administration of our demands. Organized dissent. Unite the workers. Unite the students. Together we are unstoppable.

UC Berkeley Students Join ‘Million Student March’ Over Debt, Tuition

UC Berkeley Students Join ‘Million Student March’ Over Debt, Tuition

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BERKELEY (CBS / AP) — Students at the University of California, Berkeley and more than a hundred other colleges and universities staged marches Thursday in support of free tuition, a $15 minimum wage for campus workers and the cancellation of debt from student loans.

Known as the Million Student March, the demonstrations at schools from Massachusetts to Hawaii were inspired by remarks Vermont…

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Neil Cavuto embarrasses student who wants free college and has no idea how to pay for it
A painful exchange with a young student who's organizing for free public colleges, cancellation of all student debt and $15/hour minimum wage for all campus ...

this young college woman sounds like she got all of her education from this godforsaken website… *sigh*

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Million student march Universes are becoming more about profit and less about the students’ education. Education is a human right. I recommend everyone to watch “Ivory Tower” to find out how student debt became such a huge issue.

theblaze.com
Neil Cavuto Repeatedly Confronts Student Pushing Free College Plan With Harsh Facts, Figures During Cringeworthy 9-Minute Interview
Keely Mullen, an organizer for the Million Student March movement, joined Fox Business Network anchor Neil Cavuto on the air Thursday to discuss the movement's demands for free public college, student debt cancelation and a $15-an-hour minimum wage for student workers. In the awkward 9-minute interview, Cavuto repeatedly cited...
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Here Is A Look Into The UCF March Against Student Debt

ORLANDO, Fla. — Student activist groups at the University of Central Florida are organizing a march to bring awareness to student loan debt, one of many planned across the country. The march, which is part of the broader Million Student March, is set to start at the student union and end at Millican Hall, where…

Here Is A Look Into The UCF March Against Student Debt was originally published on Young Progressive Voices

Million Student March: “We want free education and a $15.00 minimum wage for college workers, but we don’t know how to pay for any of it!”

Me:

Live coverage of the day’s events: http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2015/11/12/live-updates-campus-crazies-on-million-student-march/

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I’m so proud of my school. :’)

Why You Should Join The #MillionStudentMarch: Student Loans

With student loans being defaulted on a regular basis, it’s time to examine the inherent economic corruption that comes with them.

Why You Should Join The #MillionStudentMarch: Student Loans was originally published on Young Progressive Voices

Students to protest debt in Million Student March

Students to protest debt in Million Student March

WASHINGTON, Nov. 10 (UPI) — Students across the country will take to the streets Thursday to protest rising higher-education debt and call for free tuition at public universities.

The Million Student March is expected to draw students from some 100 colleges and universities nationwide to demand tuition-free public universities and colleges, the cancellation of all student debt and a $ 15 minimum…

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DENVER, CO

THU NOV 12 - 12:00 PM

AURARIA CAMPUS
900 Auraria Pkwy

Million Student March

The #MillionStudentMarch demands three key things:
1 - Tuition-free public college
2 - Cancellation of all student debt
3 - $15/hr campus-wide minimum wage at every college in the country

The United States is the richest country in the world, yet students have to take on crippling debt in order to get a college education. We need change, and change starts in the streets when the people demand it. With students, college graduates, and workers united we can build a movement capable of winning debt-free college for all and a $15 minimum wage for all campus workers!

Over 40 million Americans share a total of $1.2 trillion in student debt and over half of that is held by the poorest 25 percent of Americans. While top administrators take home six and seven figure salaries, campus workers are paid poverty wages.

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Revolt! College kids demand free tuition
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Students around the nation called for free education via a planned rally. (Credit: Twitter)

Students at 115 college campuses around the nation demanded free education via a planned mass walk-out protest Thursday, saying higher education was a right, rather than privilege, because virtually all jobs nowadays require a university degree.

The students had created a Facebook page to advance their cause, which took the form of a Million Student March. About 3,000 or so had liked the page by Thursday morning, but it’s not clear how many students actually planned to walk out of their classes in protest, Reuters reported.

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The rally at schools nationwide was set for 3 p.m.

“The United States is the richest country in the world, yet students have to take on crippling debt in order to get a college education,” the website stated. “We need change and change starts in the streets when people demand it.”

Judge Andrew P. Napolitano’s “The Freedom Answer Book” provides a clear vision of what your rights are and how you can protect them. Get your copy of this helpful guide to the Constitution today!

The protest movement planned an entire day of action around the theme of free school. Among the group’s other demands: Cancelled student debt and higher minimum wages for college workers.

Various social media posters picked up on the rally call and furthered the message via their own tweets. And their tone was determined.

“We cannot stand by any longer while our education system is destroyed from within,” said Northeastern University student Keely Mullen, to United Press International. “It’s time to take action.”

Mark Serrano, former President George W.H. Bush campaign adviser, issued a scathing assessment of the situation on a Fox Business interview.

He said: “What happened to don’t ask what your country can do for you, what can you do for your country. These students have been raised, over the last seven years or more, on the notion that the government should do more for you. … Where’s the limit? If you think about it, why stop at college loans? Why don’t we give a car to every student, a new car. Maybe we can pay for their clothes. You know, every dorm room should have a case of toilet paper. Maybe we should just break the bank and give them everything we need.”

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confession 1: i hadn’t heard about the million student march, let alone know that it was happening today.

confession 2: my uni’s march made it down to the chancellor’s office while i was leaving the main stacks and it’s a weird experience to be going against the flow of protesters, many of whom were holding signs promoting bernie sanders, when you’re wearing a bernie 2016 shirt that you completely randomly decided to wear today.

confession 3: i was tempted to join the flock–i was bloody dressed for it after all–but decided against it because i was carrying a five-pound backpack on my back and a thirty-pound tote bag full of library books and my paperback copy of genji monogatari for the paper i have due on sunday night.

confession 4: an old white dude, looked like he was bernie’s age himself, who had come up from santa cruz to set up a table for bernie campaign supplies stopped me, complimented my shirt, and asked if i had been actively involved in the campaign; i apologised and admitted that i hadn’t. he then asked if i was planning on joining the protesters that had just gone past us and i admitted that i wasn’t because i had schoolwork to do.

he replied, “i think you need to sort out your priorities. don’t you want to graduate without student debt?”

i wasn’t sure how to reply, so i shrugged and said good-bye before continuing on my walk back home; i was exhausted from spending six straight hours going between the east asian library and the main stacks, stressed about this fucking paper i need to write and i realised along the way that…

confession 5: i think my priorities are sorted out just fine.

i get that i look 16, despite the gigantic sleep deprivation bags under my eyes that have been there since i was actually 16, but i’m not; this is my fourth fucking year at this bloody university that i’m growing more and more cynical about (”best public university in the world” be damned) and i’m already $11k in debt, which is a number that’s only that low because my family is poor enough that i get a ridiculous amount of grant aid, and i have an entire year and a half left in this hellhole of an institution that i have a love-hate relationship with, in which time i will probably accumulate even more debt that i’m only 75% sure i’ll be able to pay off.

maybe prioritising all of this over physically participating in the movement makes me a hypocrite, a traitor to the values i claim to hold, a bad ally. but after seeing tear gas grenades get shot into a crowd behind my house and shattered glass on the sidewalks after almost every ground-level window and ATM on the block i live on had gotten smashed in during the eric garner protests, i’m wary.

confession 6: despite my caution, i have to admit that if the crowd had started shouting “black lives matter” well before i was just barely out of earshot, i would have joined them. if 80% of the crowd hadn’t been holding signs that basically amounted to “eliminate student debt now”, i would have joined them. if that old man had framed the protest in terms fighting racism, i would have joined them.

but they didn’t, so i didn’t.

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the million mask march in trafalgar tonight is absolutely going to have police out the ears- also I’m not mad on the 4chan style anon foundations it has, you get a lot of really bizarrely conservative-anarchist types

Marine photo shuts up college kids crying for free tuition
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Marine James Erickson posted on Twitter a scathing reply to calls for free college. (Twitter)

A Marine with a feisty spirit was able to send a scathing message to the Million Student March for free college tuition taking shape across the nation with a simple photo that expressed way, way more than 1,000 words.

Beneath a selfie of himself in full Marine camouflage gear, James Erickson wrote on his Twitter handle of @SayHiJames: “I wanted money for school, so I marched too … #millionstudentmarch. This one was about 25 miles … #USMC.”

The 25 miles was a reference to the length of road march he was required to make as a Marine.

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His comments come on the heels of a Facebook message call for a Million Student March that pulled in 115 colleges across the nation and an unknown number of students demanding free college, tuition-debt forgiveness and higher minimum wages for campus employees, as reported by WND.

Social media was quick to notice Erickson’s subtle suggestions to these college kids: join the military. Pay for school yourself. Get a job.

One wrote of Erickson’s post: “Boom! Well played.”

Another, the Independent Journal found: “That ends the controversy.”

Read the WND book that inspired the film, “Ride the Thunder: A Vietnam War Story of Honor and Triumph” – autographed at the WND Superstore!

A third: “@SayHiJames … Ditto. My education was earned through military service. I must have rucked hundreds of miles in my career.”

Another: “Yeah … I paid for my college tuition with 4 years in Naval service.”

And yet one more: “@SayHiJames how a Marine wins the internet.”

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Bread pudding and the #millionstudentmarch

Did I just eat left over bread pudding while in my PJs? Yup. Do I love life? Eh duh…I just finished some bomb AF bread pudding in the warm embrace of fleece jammies! What could possibly be wrong?????


Well…

As it turns out there is a lot happening in the world that people aren’t exactly pleased about. The biggest buzz I have heard tonight are the efforts being made by the million student march and to be honest…they have a point.

The education system we have in America is broken and people are right to start a dialogue and ask for change.

I think that the passion many have in this movement is powerful and I admire their willingness to act on their convictions. But there is something troublesome about some of the solutions I have heard. And no, I am not referring to the financial issues and logistical matters that seem to create great challenges when considering many proposed solutions. My issue is much more fundamental than that and it boils down to this…

How does changing who bears the weight of the burden solve the problem?

Isn’t a huge part of why people despise the “1%” because they take from everyone else?

If we take from them does that really fix anything or did we just become the thing we hate?

Taxing those at the top and forcing them to pay for everyone else only flips the situation that people claim to despise. Switching who has to front the bill for this perpetual corruption and injustice does not change that the problem exists. So let’s take our passion and actually FIX the system!

Let’s lower costs and give more people opportunity!!!! Not by simply becoming corrupt ourselves and taking from others but by changing how the system operates.

Make universities serve students instead of big business and government by changing how universities are funded. Take out gov. Take out corporate/gov manipulations and leave who really matters…educators and students. If we start here we can make a system that works. A system that perpetuates learning instead of a system of immoral gain.

I am not saying that I just laid out the grand solution (A. I don’t think there is just one and B. I am a 22 year old who just raved about bread pudding sooooo maybe more than just me should be considering these things) But what I am saying is that when education is left to the people that are supposed to provide and benefit from it then the whole process becomes much clearer, flexible, and a hell of a lot cheaper.

Also speaking of cheaper… BATH AND BODY WORKS CANDLES ARE 2 FOR $24 *PRAISE EMOJI
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CHICAGO, IL

THU NOV 12 - 9:00 AM

DEPAUL UNIVERSITY
1 E Jackson Blvd

Million Student March

Congratulations, If you graduated from college this past spring, you’re part of the most indebted graduating class ever! According to a government data analysis by financial aid experts at Edvisors, the class of 2014 graduated with an average student loan debt of $33,000.

The United States is one of the richest countries in the world, yet students have to take on crippling debt in order to get a college education. We need change, and change starts in the streets when the people demand it.

Over 40 million Americans share a total of $1.2 trillion in student debt and over half of that is held by the poorest 25 percent of Americans. While top administrators take home six
and seven figure salaries, campus workers are paid poverty wages.

We will no longer sit idly by. With students, college graduates, and workers united we can build a movement capable of winning debt-free college for all and a $15/hr minimum wage for all campus workers!

Join the movement for:
1 - Tuition-free public college
2 - Cancellation of all student debt
3 - $15/hr campus-wide minimum wage at every college in the country

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algemeiner.com
CUNY Fails to Condemn Antisemitic Rally at Hunter College
As part of a nationwide campaign on the part of left-wing students […]

As part of a nationwide campaign on the part of left-wing students across the United States demanding tuition-free education and a host of other inalienable “rights,” a rally is being held this afternoon at Hunter College in Manhattan, The Algemeiner reported on Wednesday.

Launching into an openly antisemitic diatribe, the Facebook invitation to the “Million Student March” rally in the Big Apple – aimed at the City University of New York (CUNY) system – says: “The Zionist administration invests in Israeli companies, companies that support the Israeli occupation, hosts birthright programs and study abroad programs in occupied Palestine, and reproduces settler-colonial ideology throughout CUNY through Zionist content of education. While CUNY aims to produce the next generation of professional Zionists, SJP [NYC Students for Justice in Palestine] aims to change the university to fight for all peoples liberation.”

The above epithets were endorsed by: NYC Students for Justice in Palestine; Students for Justice in Palestine at Hunter College; Students for Justice in Palestine at Brooklyn College; Students for Justice in Palestine- St. Joseph’s College; Students for Justice in Palestine at College of Staten Island; Students for Justice in Palestine at John Jay College; CUNY School of Law Students for Justice in Palestine; Students for Justice in Palestine at Pace University – Pleasantville; NYU Students for Justice in Palestine; andColumbia Students for Justice in Palestine.

In response to The Algemeiner report, Jeffrey S. Wiesenfeld, a graduate of the CUNY system who served as a trustee for 15 years, said that “stakeholders in the system should know that when antisemitism goes unanswered by faculty, students and administration — in contrast to their prompt response to other hatreds — that the university is done a grave disservice in public reputation and in the good will of alumni and donors. SJP [Students for Justice in Palestine] is an anti-Jewish, bullying hate group, plain and simple. Their bigotry merits an appropriate response.”

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usuncut.com
LIVE UPDATES: Students Take Over US Campuses Demanding Free College
#MillionStudentMarch

“HAPPENING NOW: Participants in the nationwide “Million Student March” are taking over 120 campuses with three demands: tuition-free public colleges and universities, cancellation of $1.3 trillion in student debt, and a $15 an hour minimum wage for all campus workers.”

The amount of entitlement in these demands is appalling. This once again proves that if you’re shrill, inconsiderate of taxpayers, lack rudimentary knowledge of how the economy works, or responsible enough to avoid crippling debt then you’re like almost every college student these days

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What You Need to Know About Today’s Nationwide Student Protest Over College Costs

Fed up with rising student debt and the continuing climb of tuition costs, college students across the country are planning to walk out of classrooms today to demand change.

Students on more than 100 campuses said they plan to protest—from the University of California system on the West Coast to private colleges around the Boston area in the East. The event, called the Million Student March, was organized mainly through social media, so it’s unclear how many students will show up to participate.

The students are pushing for a $15 minimum wage for student employees on college campuses, free tuition at public universities, and the abolition of student debt.

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The goals were inspired by a comment U.S. Senator and Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders made earlier this year, when he said it’d take a million students marching to make elected officials care about higher education, Kevin Sabo, a UC Berkeley student told the Daily Californian.

“If a million young people march on Washington they [say] to the Republican leadership, we know what’s going on, and you better vote to deal with student debt. You better vote to make public universities and colleges tuition free, that’s when it will happen,” Sanders said during an interview with Yahoo’s Katie Couric in June.

And indeed, the marchers’ demands share a lot in common with Sanders’ ideas. He’s been a vocal supporter of a higher minimum wage and has a proposal to make tuition free at public colleges through a tax on Wall Street transactions.

Even with all the attention on making college more affordable, a nationwide $15 minimum wage for campus employees and free tuition at public colleges are lofty goals. Abolishing the country’s more than $1.2 trillion in student debt is an even bolder demand. But there are advocates pushing to make student debt easier to discharge in bankruptcy court and a group of students from the now shuttered for-profit Corinthian College who are refusing to pay their debt. One of the national organizers for the Million Student March, Keely Mullen, told other media outlets than many students planning to protest today attended for-profit colleges.

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Mullen is a Northeastern University student who estimates she’ll graduate with about $150,000 in debt. While student debt no doubt is challenging more households than ever before (more than 40 million Americans have some), it’s important to bear in mind that Mullen’s debt load is an outlier. Six-figure student debt usually belongs to people who have gone back to school for graduate or professional degrees or attended expensive for-profit programs. The average undergraduate debt is a (still hefty) $30,000 or so.

Finally, while student activists may be passionate about free tuition at public colleges, parents in a recent survey by MONEY and Kaplan Test Prep were less enthusiastic. Yes, making two years of college free for everyone was the most popular of five potential college affordability solutions, but only 45% of parents supported the idea.

Want more college-related content from MONEY? Check out our news and advice page on the new Money College Planner website.


This post originally was published here: http://time.com/money/4110102/million-student-march-protest-high-tuition-student-debt/
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WASHINGTON, DC

THU NOV 12 - 2:00 PM

University of the District of Columbia
4200 Connecticut Avenue

Million Student March

A Day of Action on November 12th.

We Demand:
Tuition-Free Public College
Cancellation of All Student Debt
A $15 Minimum Wage for All Campus Workers
The United States is the richest country in the world, yet students have to take on crippling debt in order to get a college education. We need change, and change starts in the streets when the people demand it. With students, college graduates, and workers united we can build a movement capable of winning debt-free college for all and a $15 minimum wage for all campus workers!

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VIDEO: Million Student March leader fails Economics 101… can’t explain how nation might pay for all student tuition and debt… economic illiteracy on exhibit

By By Mike Adams, NaturalNews Editor (NaturalNews) In what has to be the most entertaining yet instructive video of the year, Neil Cavuto interviews Keely Mullen, the national organizer for the Million Student March, about how Source:: Natural News

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    Million student march Universes are becoming more about profit and less about the students’ education. Education is a human right. I recommend everyone to watch “Ivory Tower” to find out how student debt became such a huge issue.

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