Ending SAVE Is a Broken Promise to Student Loan Borrowers
Ending SAVE isn't just a legal correction — it's walking back a promise millions of borrowers used to make real financial decisions about their lives and careers.
25 articles · Page 2 of 3
Ending SAVE isn't just a legal correction — it's walking back a promise millions of borrowers used to make real financial decisions about their lives and careers.
America's housing shortage wasn't an accident. It was built by decades of zoning laws designed to protect property values at the expense of everyone else who arrived later.
The U.S. spends $13,000 per person on healthcare—double most wealthy nations—yet gets worse outcomes. A public option is the pragmatic fix America needs now.
Five years of test-free admissions at the University of California have produced little equity gain at flagship campuses. The data is in. It's time to rethink.
Xi Jinping's first Pyongyang visit in seven years reveals how much leverage Kim Jong Un has gained on Beijing — and how urgently China wants it back before Pyongyang drifts further toward Moscow.
The Democratic Party is hemorrhaging support from men of every demographic. Until leaders stop explaining it away and start listening, nothing will change before November.
Twelve people shot near a Toledo festival, two critically. We have normalized mass shootings at public gatherings, and that is a choice we keep making.
The 2026 World Cup opens June 11 across 11 American cities. What happens to soccer's American fanbase over the next month could matter for a generation.
Rates locked at 3.5–3.75% and no cuts coming until 2027 — the Fed's caution is defensible as policy, but devastating as reality for millions of Americans trying to buy their first home.