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UPDATE* Murder Investigation – Lewis Ave. LB

UPDATE* Murder Investigation – Lewis Ave. LB

Homicide detectives are seeking the public’s help to identify the suspect responsible for the murder of 17-year-old victim, Briana Soto.

During a press conference, April 30 the department released video of the suspect responsible for this murder. This video shows the suspect walking in the area prior to the murder. The suspect appears to be a male, unknown age, dressed in all dark attire with a mask over his face. Detectives believe the suspect ran away from the area immediately after the shooting.

Detectives believe someone knows who this suspect is or may recall a person that was acting unusual on the night of Tuesday, March 26. LBPD urges anyone with information to call homicide detectives at 562.570.7244 or submit an anonymous tip via LA Crime Stoppers.

“We are requesting our community’s help to identify the suspect responsible for committing this horrendous crime,” said Chief of Police Wally Hebeish. “To Briana’s family – we will never stop working to find the person who took Briana away from you.”

Anyone with information is asked to contact Homicide Detectives Ethan Shear or Chasen Contreras at 562-570-7244. Anonymously at 800-222-8477, www.lacrimestoppers.org.

Suspect


Originally Published March 30
Homicide detectives are investigating the fatal shooting of a 17-year-old girl that occurred on March 26

On March 26 about 8:26 p.m., officers responded to the area of 11th Street and Lewis Avenue regarding a shooting. Upon arrival, officers found a 17-year-old female victim with a gunshot wound to the upper body. They immediately began rendering medical aid until the arrival of Long Beach Fire Department personnel, who transported the victim to the hospital in critical condition.

On March 30, 2024, the victim succumbed to her injuries. Her identity is being withheld due to her age.

On the evening of the incident, Homicide detectives responded to the scene due to the victim’s life-threatening injuries. The preliminary investigation revealed the victim was walking down the street when she was approached by the suspect(s) and a shooting occurred. The motive for the shooting is under investigation.

Housing Equity Summit and Resource Fair In Partnership with the Dymally Institute at CSUDH

“Housing for All: Empowering Communities through Equitable Access”

Keynote Speaker: Senator Steven Bradford, Chair of the Energy, Utilities, & Communications Senate Committee and Vice-Chair of California Legislative Black Caucus

Three Panel Discussions:
Ensuring Affordable and Inclusive Communities: Strategies for Equity
Navigating Obstacles and Opportunities in Affordable Housing Development
Legislative and Policy Solutions to Foster Affordable Housing

Who Should Attend: Residents; Developers; Elected Officials; Community Leaders

Government officials and housing providers will provide valuable information at the resource fair regarding properties for rent and sites for development. Panelists will discuss the current housing landscape, exploring its multifaceted implications and proposing innovative solutions to address the pressing challenges faced by communities statewide.

Time:10 a.m. to 2 p.m., May 11

Details: 310-412-6120, RSVP here https://tinyurl.com/Housing-equity for parking instructions

Venue: CalState University Dominguez Hills, Innovation and Instruction lecture hall, 1000 E Victoria St, Carson

California Briefs: One Fast Charging Station for Every Five Gas Stations, State Reigns in Increasing Health Care Costs

 

California’s Fast Charging Revolution: One Station for Every Five Gas Stations

SACRAMENTO – Here’s a stat most Californians have likely never heard: for every five gas stations in California, there’s now one electric vehicle fast charging station.

Gov. Gavin Newsom dropped by a Tesla supercharger during Earth Week to highlight the state’s ongoing efforts to build a bigger and better charging network, as well as Tesla’s recent work to open its fast chargers to non-Tesla vehicles.

Watch the Governor’s video to learn more about California’s work to ensure drivers can reliably charge up no matter where they are.

CALIFORNIA’S ZEV RECORD

Since the Governor’s executive order in 2020 calling for a rule to require all new car sales to be zero-emission by 2035, ZEV sales have risen dramatically in recent years.

105,000 public or shared private electric vehicle chargers have been installed throughout California, which is on top of over 500,000 at-home chargers. The state also recently approved a $1.9 billion plan to build a bigger, better charging network. 25% of all new cars sold in California last year were ZEVs, according to the California Energy Commission or CEC
1,846,874 total ZEV sales to date
34% of new ZEVs sold in the U.S. are sold in California, according to the Veloz EV Market Report
If California were a country, it would rank 4th in EV sales behind China, the U.S. and Germany

Thousands of dollars in grants and rebates available for low-income Californians (learn more at ClimateAction.ca.gov)

 

ICYMI: Newsom Administration Votes to Reign in Increasing Health Care Costs

CALIFORNIA— The office of health care affordability’s board voted last week to cap health care cost increases in California – in an effort to rein in increasing health care costs and make critical care more affordable for people.

The 3% cap would be phased in over five years to ensure minimal disruptions and maximum compliance, starting with 3.5% in 2025.

This action is intended to save lives and help people get the preventative care they need to stay healthy in the first place. Too often health care costs drive people away from such care.

The board based the target on the average annual change in median household income in California between 2002 and 2022, which was 3%. In December, the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services said the cost to practice medicine in the United States would increase 4.6% this year alone. And the money Californians spent on health care went up about 5.4% each year for the past two decades.

Details: https://tinyurl.com/Healthcare-Spending-target-CA

24th Annual KJLH Women’s Health Expo Celebrates 35 Years of Black Infant Health Program

The KJLH Women’s Health Expo, one of the largest health events for women in Southern California, will be held May 11, at the Long Beach Convention Center. The annual event will be sponsored by the Black Infant Health Program (BIH) Long Beach/Fresno. This year’s Expo will highlight the BIH Program’s significant 35-year milestone of unwavering commitment to providing culturally affirming services to Black women, birthing persons and their families across California.

KJLH will broadcast live from 8 to 10 a.m. For more information and to register, people may visit the KJLH Women’s Health Expo registration page. Registration is recommended but not required to attend.

Time: Doors will open at 6 a.m., May 11

Cost: Free

Details: Register, https://kjlhradio.com/kjlh-womens-health-expo-2024/ and https://tinyurl.com/Womens-health-expo

Venue: Long Beach Convention Center, 300 E Ocean Blvd., Long Beach

Eat, Shop, Local Carson for Small Business Month

Carson is kicking off their first-ever “EAT, SHOP, LOCAL CARSON” weeklong event of festivities to support the local small businesses in Carson.

The city is celebrating small business month with a full week of activities. Several businesses will be offering discounts and savings such as free dental exams, 10%-15% off at some restaurants, and other raffles, giveaways, discounts .

Fox 11 News Anchor Marla Tellez will serve as the MC for the kickoff event.

102.3 FM Radio Free KLHJ will be on site as well.

City staff members will be there with information and resources to help Carson businesses. Local businesses will have booths providing discounts, raffles and freebies. There will be food and Caribbean music from Upstream.

Time: 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., May 6

Cost: Free

Details:310-952-1741; mrevilla@carsonca.gov and www.eatshoplocalcarson.com

Venue: Carson Event Center, 801 E. Carson St., Carson

Officer-Involved Shooting – Orange Ave. LB

 

The Long Beach Police Department is investigating an officer-involved shooting which occurred on April 26.

About 11:44 p.m., an officer was on patrol near the intersection of South St. and Orange Ave. when he observed a male adult suspect in a parking lot of a business shooting at a male adult victim. The armed suspect fled on foot, and the officer went in foot pursuit of the suspect, north on Orange Ave. During the foot pursuit, an officer-involved shooting occurred.

The officer fired multiple times at the fleeing suspect who was struck in the lower body. Officers began rendering medical aid. LBFD paramedics arrived and transported the suspect to a local hospital where he was listed in stable condition.

The victim that was being shot at by the suspect fled the scene before assisting officers were able to contact him.

Officers recovered a loaded firearm.

The suspect has been identified as Demetrius Imoesiri, a 43-year-old resident of Long Beach. Imoesiri was booked on one count of attempted murder, one count of possession of a firearm by a felon, one count of illegal possession of ammunition, one count of obstructing a peace officer, and one count of owning or possessing a firearm while subject to a restraining order. He was booked at the Long Beach City Jail on $1,000,000 bail.

No officers were injured. No other injuries were reported.

Homicide detectives responded to the scene.

Officers were equipped with body-worn cameras. LBPD is in the process of reviewing the footage and will make that available to the public as soon as possible.

LBPD will be conducting a review of the incident. The Los Angeles District Attorney’s Office will conduct an independent investigation of the incident, as they do with all officer-involved shootings that result in injury or death.

Anyone with information regarding this incident is urged to contact Homicide Detectives Espinoza or Hubbard at 562-570-7244. Anyone wishing to remain anonymous may call 1-800-222-8477, or text TIPLA plus your tip to 274637 (CRIMES) or visit www.lacrimestoppers.org.

California Briefs: State to Buy OTC Naloxone, Supports Ancestral Tribal Land Returns, Expands Climate Corps Partnerships

California to Purchase CalRx Branded Over-the-Counter Naloxone for $24

SACRAMENTO – California’s Naloxone distribution project or NDP delivers millions of naloxone kits, saving hundreds of thousands of lives. To significantly bolster this effort, Gov. Newsom April 29 announced CalRx’s Naloxone access initiative’s new partner – Amneal Pharmaceuticals, which has secured U.S. FDA approval of an over-the-counter or OTC naloxone nasal spray product. This new partnership allows the state to purchase CalRx-branded OTC naloxone for $24 – almost half of the current market price.

To increase affordability and accessibility for Californians, Amneal will be providing CalRx® pricing that represents a 40% reduction compared to current prices for a twin-pack of OTC naloxone nasal spray; down to $24 per pack for the NDP. At this lower price, and with the same resources spent under the NDP, California can buy 3.2 million twin-packs of naloxone instead of the 2 million twin-packs purchased at the previous price.

California’s CalRx® Program is making medications more affordable for all Californians — including naloxone. NDP has distributed more than 4.1 million naloxone kits, resulting in more than 260,000 reported opioid overdose reversals. The CalRx® Naloxone Access Initiative will build on those efforts by making OTC naloxone nasal spray more accessible and affordable, especially for low-income, uninsured, or underinsured individuals.

Gov. Newsom released the Master Plan for Tackling the Fentanyl and Opioid Crisis to support overdose prevention efforts like those announced today. Recently, Gov. Newsom launched Opioids.CA.GOV, a one-stop-shop for Californians seeking resources around prevention and treatment, as well as information on how California is working to hold Big Pharma and drug-traffickers accountable in this crisis.

The CalRx® Biosimilar Insulin Initiative continues to move forward to bring this lifesaving and life-sustaining drug to market as soon as possible. Following recent meetings with the US FDA, CalRx’s partner Civica has a clear path forward. California is using its market power as the 5th largest economy in the world to disrupt a billion-dollar industry to save lives and make health care and medication more affordable. More information about CalRx® can be found here.

Learn more about today’s announcement here.

 

Healing and Restoration: California to Support the Return of Ancestral Tribal Lands and Lands Management Projects

SACRAMENTO – As part of a first-in-the-nation effort to address historical wrongs committed against California Native American tribes, Gov. Gavin Newsom April 25 announced that the state has awarded more than $100 million for 33 tribal land projects. The funding, which was appropriated as part of the 2022-23 and 2023-24 state budgets, will be used for ancestral land return, implementation of Traditional Ecological Knowledge and tribal expertise, habitat restoration, climate and wildfire resilience projects, and more.

As part of the administration’s Native American truth and healing process, the Governor has worked collaboratively with tribes to establish the historic Tribal Nature-Based Solutions grant program. Designed to support tribal priorities – as determined by tribes themselves – grants can be used for ancestral land return, restoration, workforce development, implementation of traditional ecological knowledge and tribal expertise, habitat restoration, and climate and wildfire resilience projects.

Early funding, as offered to time-sensitive and shovel-ready projects, went to the Hoopa Valley Tribe to acquire 10,395 acres of forested property and return Hupa Mountain to tribal stewardship. The Hoopa Valley Tribe’s ribbon-cutting ceremony for this ancestral land return is scheduled for May 14.

Many of these projects will also help bring California closer to its goal to conserve 30% of lands and coastal waters by 2030, also known as the 30 x 30 initiative. The initiative builds on the Governor’s direction for state entities to work cooperatively with California Native American tribes in returning ancestral lands to tribal ownership in excess of state needs, and support California tribes’ co-management of and access to natural lands within a California tribe’s ancestral land.

See the full list of recipients and learn more about today’s announcement here.

 

More States Partner with California Climate Corps, Biden Administration Expands American Climate Corps

SACRAMENTO — With three new states teaming up with California, a third of America’s population now has access to Climate Corps programs, joining the state’s leadership in pioneering this nation-leading initiative.

Illinois, New Mexico, and Vermont created their own state-level Climate Corps in partnership with California volunteers and the Newsom administration, joining 10 other states – Arizona, Colorado, Maine, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, North Carolina, Utah and Washington – that have already established a Climate Corps. The Biden Administration also announced thousands of new paid service positions now available through the American Climate Corps.

What it means:

  • Positions range across a number of fields including energy-efficiency, disaster response and preparedness, and wildfire mitigation.
  • Fellows in state-based climate corps programs will earn a living stipend and, after completing a term of service, will be eligible for a scholarship to pay for college or to pay off student loans.
  • Some participating fellows will earn up to $30,000 (prorated for those serving in a less than full-time capacity) by serving their communities.


As a part of California’s comprehensive strategy to address the climate crisis, Gov. Gavin Newsom created the California Climate Action Corps in 2020 – providing a case study on the success of climate-based and statewide service programs that empower climate action through volunteer and fellowship opportunities.

Metro Board Greenlights Student GoPass Pilot Program to be Free

 

LOS ANGELES — The Metro board of directors April 25 approved a motion authored by Los Angeles Mayor and Metro Board Chair Karen Bass to make the successful Student GoPass pilot program permanent. The motion also directs Metro staff to explore opportunities to provide unlimited free rides to income-eligible riders through Metro’s Low-Income-Fare-is-Easy or LIFE program.

The GoPass Pilot is phase one of Metro’s fareless system initiative, a strategic effort to build transit ridership and support communities with their transportation needs. GoPass participation is now over 350,000 registered students from 1,570 participating schools in 115 participating school districts (including public districts, charter networks, community colleges, vocational schools, and private schools). The co-authors of the motion are 2nd vice chair and Whittier Mayor Pro Tem Fernando Dutra, Director and Inglewood Mayor James T. Butts, director Jacquelyn Dupont-Walker, director and County Supervisor Holly J. Mitchell and director and County Supervisor Hilda L. Solis.

Visit Metro’s GoPass Pilot Program website to learn more and to check participating schools.

Gov. Newsom Announces Appointments


SACRAMENTO – Gov. Gavin Newsom today announced the following appointments:

Heidi Rummel, of Los Angeles, has been appointed to the California Committee on Revision of the Penal Code. She has been a clinical Professor of Law and Director of the Post-Conviction Justice Project at the University of Southern California Gould School of Law since 2006. Rummel served as an assistant U.S. Attorney at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California from 1996 to 2005. She has been president of Parole Justice Works since 2020. Rummel earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in English Literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Juris Doctor degree from the University of Chicago Law School. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $100 per diem. Rummel is a Democrat.

Andrew Tavakoli, of Beverly Hills, has been appointed to the Exposition Park and California Science Center board of directors. Tavakoli has been chief executive officer at Tavaco Properties since 1987. He is a member of the President’s Advisory Committee on the Arts, the University of Southern California Marshall School of Business Board of Leaders, Cedars Sinai Medical Center board of counselors, and the Los Angeles World Affairs Council. Tavakoli earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science from the University of Pittsburgh, a Master of Business Administration degree from California State University, Long Beach, and a Master of Science degree in Business Administration-Finance from the University of Southern California. This position does not require Senate confirmation and there is no compensation. Tavakoli is a Democrat.

Adrienne Mohan, of Long Beach, has been appointed to the San Gabriel and Lower Los Angeles Rivers and Mountains Conservancy. Mohan has been executive director at the Palos Verdes Conservancy since 2019, where she has held multiple roles since 2010, including conservation director and stewardship associate. She was a restoration program assistant at the California Coastal Commission from 2009 to 2010. She earned a Master of Arts degree in Geography from California State University, Long Beach. This position does not require Senate confirmation and the compensation is $75 per diem. Mohan is a Democrat.

Why Do Republicans Oppose Joe Biden’s Efforts to Cancel Student Debt?

So, what is it? Is it that Republicans simply think having Americans in debt somehow works to their advantage? If so, how does that work?

I don’t get it and I’m hoping you can help me figure it out. Why do Republicans oppose President Biden’s efforts to cancel student debt?

[Last] Tuesday, seven states, led by Missouri’s Republican Attorney General, sued the Biden administration to stop his most recent attempt to reduce student debt. In a separate lawsuit, ten other Republican-controlled states filed a separate lawsuit to try to block the same Biden effort.

The week before, somebody slipped this little gem into Maria Cantwell’s must-pass legislation reauthorizing the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) (my inquiry to her press office was never answered):

“The Secretary, the Secretary of the Treasury, or the Attorney General may not take any action to cancel or forgive the outstanding balances, or portion of balances, on any Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan, or otherwise modify the terms or conditions of a Federal Direct Unsubsidized Stafford Loan, made to an eligible student, except as authorized by an Act of Congress.”

In other words, it appears, they’re trying to use the force of law to prevent President Biden from forgiving a large category of student loans. As Forbes noted:

“A proposed bill in Congress would ban mass student loan forgiveness for borrowers who attended certain professional training programs, and advocates are sounding the alarm that this could be a concerning precedent.”

But why?

— No banks are being hurt by these loans being forgiven: they’re all federal loans funded by the government. When the loan is forgiven, the debt simply vanishes: it doesn’t cost any of us a penny and isn’t hurting the big bank donors to the GOP.

— Forgiving student debt is an economic stimulus, freeing people up to buy a new home, start a new business, or just begin the family they’d been putting off because of economic uncertainty. Everybody benefits.

The closest I can come to thinking of a motive for these Republicans is that they think that Biden is essentially “buying” the votes of people whose loans were forgiven, but they’re smart enough to know that people’s politics are influenced by far more than something that simple.

Rightwingers with student debt aren’t going to start voting Democratic; if anything, they’ll take the relief and then brag about how they’re going to vote for Trump anyway.

So, what is it?

Is it that Republicans simply think having Americans in debt somehow works to their advantage? If so, how does that work?

Or is it the old, “You made the commitment, now you must follow through or society will crumble in a mess of lawlessness” argument?

When you search on the phrase “student debt forgiveness” one of the top hits that comes up is a Fox “News” article by a woman who paid off her loans in full.

“There are millions of Americans like me,” the author writes, “for whom debt forgiveness is an infuriating slap in the face after years of hard work and sacrifice. Those used to be qualities we encouraged as an American culture, and if Biden gets his way, we’ll be sending a very different message to the next generation.”

If this is the Republican’s main argument, it is, to be charitable, bullsh*t.

Forgiving student debt is not a slap at anybody; it’s righting a moral wrong inflicted on millions of Americans by Ronald Reagan and his morbidly rich Republican buddies.

Student debt is evil.

It’s a crime against our nation, hobbling opportunity and weakening our intellectual infrastructure. It maintains and in many cases rigidifies the racial and class caste systems today’s Americans inherited from our eras of slavery and indenture.

Combine this decision with the six Republicans on the Court ending affirmative action and legalizing discrimination and it’s clear this is exactly what the rightwing billionaires who put them on the Court and support their lavish vacations and lifestyles want.

They really don’t care about improving the lives of everyday Americans; their philosophy is, “I got mine; screw you.” Educated themselves, they’re now working to “pull up the ladder” behind them and thus maintain their elite status.

As history shows, this harms countries in real and measurable ways.

Every nation’s single biggest long-term asset is a well-educated populace, and student debt diminishes that.

Every other advanced democracy on the planet understands this.

That’s why student debt at the scale we have in America literally does not exist anywhere else in the rest of the developed world.

American students, in fact, are going to college for free right now in Germany, Iceland, France, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Slovenia, and the Czech Republic, because pretty much anybody can go to college for free in those countries and dozens of others.

“Student debt?” The rest of the developed world doesn’t know what you’re talking about.

Student debt also largely didn’t exist in America before the Reagan Revolution. It was created by Republicans here in the 1980s — intentionally — and if we can overcome Republican opposition, we can intentionally end it here and join the rest of the world in once again benefiting from an educated populace.

Forty years on from the Reagan Revolution, student debt has crippled three generations of young Americans: over 44 million people carry the burden, totaling a $2+ trillion drag on our economy that benefits nobody except the banks earning interest on the debt and the politicians they pay off.

But that doesn’t begin to describe the damage student debt has done to America since Reagan, in his first year as governor of California, ended free tuition at the University of California and cut state aid to that college system by 20% across-the-board.

After having destroyed low income Californians’ ability to get a college education in the 1970s, Reagan then took his anti-education program national as president in 1981.

When asked why he’d taken a meat-axe to higher education and was pricing college out of the reach of most Americans, he said, much like Ted Cruz might today, that college students were “too liberal” and America “should not subsidize intellectual curiosity.”

It was the 1980s version of today’s “war on woke”: Reagan hated college students.

On May 1, 1970, Governor Reagan announced that students protesting the Vietnam war across America were “brats,” “freaks” and “cowardly fascists,” adding, as The New York Times noted at the time:

“If it takes a bloodbath, let’s get it over with. No more appeasement!”

Four days later four were dead at Kent State, having been murdered by National Guard riflemen using live ammunition against anti-war protesters.

Before Reagan became president, states paid 65% of the costs of colleges, and federal aid covered another 15 or so percent, leaving students to cover the remaining 20% with their tuition payments.

It’s why when I attended college in the late 1960s — before Reagan — I could pay my tuition working a weekend job as a DJ at a local radio station and washing dishes at Bob’s Big Boy restaurant on Trowbridge Road in East Lansing.

That’s how it works — at a minimum — in most developed nations, although in many European and Asian countries college is not only free, but the government pays students a stipend to cover books and rent.

Here in America, though, the numbers are pretty much reversed from pre-1980 as a result of Reaganomics, with students now covering about 80% of the costs. Thus the need for student loans here in the USA.

As soon as he became president, Reagan went after federal aid to students with a fanatic fervor. Devin Fergus documented for The Washington Post how, as a result, student debt first became a thing across the United States during the early ‘80s:

“No federal program suffered deeper cuts than student aid. Spending on higher education was slashed by some 25 percent between 1980 and 1985. … Students eligible for grant assistance freshmen year had to take out student loans to cover their second year.”

It became a mantra for conservatives, particularly in Reagan’s cabinet. Let the kids pay for their own damn “liberal educations.”

Reagan’s college educated Director of the Office of Management and Budget, David Stockman, told a reporter in 1981:

“I don’t accept the notion that the federal government has an obligation to fund generous grants to anybody who wants to go to college. It seems to me that if people want to go to college bad enough then there is opportunity and responsibility on their part to finance their way through the best way they can. … I would suggest that we could probably cut it a lot more.”

After all, cutting taxes for the morbidly rich was Reagan’s first and main priority, a position the GOP holds to this day. Cutting education could “reduce the cost of government” and thus justify more tax cuts for billionaires.

Reagan’s first Education Secretary, Terrel Bell, wrote in his memoir:

“Stockman and all the true believers identified all the drag and drain on the economy with the ‘tax-eaters’: people on welfare, those drawing unemployment insurance, students on loans and grants, the elderly bleeding the public purse with Medicare, the poor exploiting Medicaid.”

Reagan’s next Education Secretary, William Bennett, was even more blunt about how America should deal with the “problem” of uneducated people who can’t afford college, particularly if they were African American:

“I do know that it’s true that if you wanted to reduce crime,” Bennett famously said, “you could — if that were your sole purpose, you could abort every black baby in this country, and your crime rate would go down.”

These doctrines became an article of faith across the GOP and remain so to this day, as we saw this week with the Republicans suing to stop Biden from forgiving any more loans.

Reagan’s OMB Director David Stockman told Congress that students were “tax eaters … [and] a drain and drag on the American economy.” Student aid, he said, “isn’t a proper obligation of the taxpayer.”

This was where, when, and how today’s student debt crisis was kicked off in 1981.

Before Reagan, though, America had a different perspective.

Both my father and my wife Louise’s father served in the military during World War II and both went to college on the GI Bill. My dad dropped out after two years and went to work in a steel plant because mom got pregnant with me; Louise’s dad, who’d grown up dirt poor, went all the way for his law degree and ended up as Assistant Attorney General for the State of Michigan.

They were two among almost 8 million young men and women who not only got free tuition from the 1944 GI Bill but also received a stipend to pay for room, board, and books. And the result — the return on our government’s investment in those 8 million educations — was substantial.

The best book on that time and subject is Edward Humes’ Over Here: How the GI Bill Transformed the American Dream, summarized by Mary Paulsell for the Columbia Daily Tribune:

“[That] groundbreaking legislation gave our nation 14 Nobel Prize winners, three Supreme Court justices, three presidents, 12 senators, 24 Pulitzer Prize winners, 238,000 teachers, 91,000 scientists, 67,000 doctors, 450,000 engineers, 240,000 accountants, 17,000 journalists, 22,000 dentists and millions of lawyers, nurses, artists, actors, writers, pilots and entrepreneurs.”

Free education literally built America’s middle class.

When people have an education, they not only raise the competence and vitality of a nation; they also earn more money, which stimulates the economy. Because they earn more, they pay more in taxes, which helps pay back the government for the cost of that education.

In 1952 dollars, the GI Bill’s educational benefit cost the nation $7 billion. The increased economic output over the next 40 years that could be traced directly to that educational cost was $35.6 billion, and the extra taxes received from those higher-wage-earners was $12.8 billion, both in 1952 dollars.

In other words, the US government invested $7 billion and got a $48.4 billion return on that investment, about a $7 return for every $1 invested.

In addition, that educated workforce made it possible for America to lead the world in innovation, R&D, and new business development for three generations.

We invented the transistor, the integrated circuit, the internet, new generations of miracle drugs, sent men to the moon and reshaped science.

Presidents Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln knew this simple concept that seems so hard for Reagan and generations of Republicans since, to understand: when you invest in young people, you’re investing in your nation.

Jefferson founded the University of Virginia as a 100% tuition-free school; it was one of his three proudest achievements, ranking higher on the epitaph he wrote for his own tombstone than his having been both president and vice president.

Lincoln was equally proud of the free and low-tuition colleges he started. As the state of North Dakota notes:

“Lincoln signed the Morrill Act on July 2, 1862, giving each state a minimum of 90,000 acres of land to sell, to establish colleges of engineering, agriculture, and military science. … Proceeds from the sale of these lands were to be invested in a perpetual endowment fund which would provide support for colleges of agriculture and mechanical arts in each of the states.”

Fully 76 free or very-low-tuition state colleges were started because of Lincoln’s effort and since have educated millions of Americans including my mom, who graduated from land-grant Michigan State University in the 1940s, having easily paid her minimal tuition working as a summer lifeguard in her home town of Charlevoix, Michigan.

Every other developed country in the world knows this, too: student debt is rare or even nonexistent in most western democracies. Not only is college free or close to free in almost all of the developed world; many countries even offer a stipend for monthly expenses like our GI Bill did back in the day.

As mentioned earlier, thousands of American students are currently studying in Germany at the moment for free. Hundreds of thousands of American students are also getting free college educations right now in Iceland, Denmark, Norway, Finland, Sweden, Slovenia, and the Czech Republic, among others.

Republican policies of starving education and cranking up student debt have made US banks a lot of money, but they’ve cut America’s scientific leadership in the world and, since the institution of trickle-down Reaganomics, stopped three generations of young people from starting businesses, having families, and buying homes.

The damage to working class and poor Americans, both economic and human, is devastating. Even worse for America, it’s a double challenge for minorities.

And now Republicans are telling our young people who weren’t members of the “Lucky Sperm Club” with wealthy or legacy parents that they’re simply out of luck. And, as noted, the GOP is celebrating.

Which raises the question: how gullible do these Republicans think their voters are?

Marjorie Taylor Greene wrote on Twitter that student loan forgiveness was “completely unfair.” She’s the same Republican congresswoman who had $183,504 in PPP loans forgiven, and happily banked that government money without a complaint.

Republican members of Congress, in fact, seem to be among those in the front of the debt-forgiveness line with their hands out, even as billionaires bankroll their campaigns and backstop their lifestyles.

As the Center for American Progress noted on Twitter in response to a GOP tweet whining that, “If you take out a loan, you pay it back”:

Member —— Amount in PPP Loans Forgiven
Matt Gaetz (R-FL) – $476,000
Marjorie Taylor Greene – $183,504
Greg Pence (R-IN) – $79,441
Vern Buchanan (R-FL) – $2,800,000
Kevin Hern (R-OK) – $1,070,000
Roger Williams (R-TX) – $1,430,000
Brett Guthrie (R-KY) – $4,300,000
Ralph Norman (R-SC) $306,250
Ralph Abraham (R-AL) – $38,000
Mike Kelly (R-PA) – $974,100
Vicki Hartzler (R-MO) – $451,200
Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) – $988,700
Carol Miller (R-WV) – $3,100,000

Every single one of these Republican members of Congress has echoed Greene’s criticism of student debt relief or supported efforts to block it. Every single one also eagerly welcomed forgiveness of their Covid-era debts.

So, yeah, Republicans are complete hypocrites about forgiving loan debt, in addition to pushing policies that actually hurt our nation (not to mention the generations coming up).

President Biden has already forgiven over $143 billion in student debt and this week proposed to extend that debt relief from the 4 million he has reached so far to as many as 20 million people. It’s a great start, but if we really want America to soar, we need to go way beyond that.

Just like for-profit health insurance (which was prohibited in most states before the Reagan Revolution: the companies had to be organized as nonprofits), student loans are a malignancy attached to our republic by Republicans trying to increase profits for their donors while extracting more and more cash from working-class families.

If Democrats can regain control of the House and hold the Senate and White House this fall, they must not only zero-out existing student debt across our nation but revive the post-war government support for education — from Jefferson and Lincoln to the GI Bill and college subsidies — that the Reagan, Bush, Bush, and Trump administrations have destroyed.

Then, and only then, can the true “making America great again” begin.