us @ronandaily. where is the debt the worst? we re looking at a lot of potential areas. in minnesota and pennsylvania, 70% of students have debt and delaware has the actual highest average debt per student at over $33,000. remember, throughout the week we ll be bringing you not just different facets of this problem but also different potential solutions to the challenges you re telling us about. so on that note, joining us today from washington is alexis goldstein. she s a former wall street worker turned wall street occupier who is now an activist with strike debt. one of the largest groups focused on this problem. thank you for joining us. ronan, thank you for having me. alexis, a pilot program that is a national piece of legislation would allow students at state colleges to avoid state tuition by allowing a smaller percentage of future income, do
maybe you re not sure if you re going to pay yourself or not. i guess that s it s another way of making solar look like a really viable option, that it s really healthy. it is not. the solar industry wouldn t exist without taxpayer subsidies. i would love to see the application for that loan process. did it say with a little flow chart i ll eventually sell it to myself and make profit for myself therefore paying you back. no. if you could see the loan application, i guarantee it s a stack of papers yea big that requires a dozen lawyers to fill it out and get it in. we ll watch you at 9:20 guaranteed where you play yourself. i do indeed. the wall street occupier who wanted to kill a cop is getting death threats of his own. he s saying that s not fair. should he be allowed to complain? up next, the top myths of the tea party and how they could impact the next election. dad, why are you getting that? is there a prize in there?
interest rates were down. eric: you know who is buying it? the most bizarre thing in the world. wall street occupier, capitalism and all that. you should be really mad at obama because they opened the discount window. here is what they did. given the bank the ability to go to the federal government. borrow money at zero, free and turn around and buy treasurys you re pointing out. then we, the taxpayer pay them 3% interest. so we re handing over 3% on literally hundreds of billions of dana: econ 220. [ laughter ] eric: all right. dana, what is your take on the growth? dana: we need to grow at 5% or more to catch up to where we were and do it for several years. the european situation is still unknown. the white house did it right politically. it s not good enough. that is better than what they did early on, early on in the administration they had a good week in the stock market. vice president biden said here
buying it? the most bizarre thing in the world. wall street occupier, capitalism and all that. you should be really mad at obama because they opened the discount window. here is what they did. given the bank the ability to go to the federal government. borrow money at zero, free and turn around and buy treasurys you re pointing out. then we, the taxpayer pay them 3% interest. so we re handing over 3% on literally hundreds of billions of dana: econ 220. [ laughter ] eric: all right. dana, what is your take on the growth? dana: we need to grow at 5% or more to catch up to where we were and do it for several years. the european situation is still unknown. the white house did it right politically. it s not good enough. that is better than what they did early on, early on in the administration they had a good week in the stock market. vice president biden said here is the obama recovery. i said you can t judge that. bob: exactly.
interest rates were down. eric: you know who is buying it? the most bizarre thing in the world. wall street occupier, capitalism and all that. you should be really mad at obama because they opened the discount window. here is what they did. given the bank the ability to go to the federal government. borrow money at zero, free and turn around and buy treasurys you re pointing out. then we, the taxpayer pay them 3% interest. so we re handing over 3% on literally hundreds of billions of dana: econ 220. [ laughter ] eric: all right. dana, what is your take on the growth? dana: we need to grow at 5% or more to catch up to where we were and do it for several years. the european situation is still unknown. the white house did it right politically. it s not good enough. that is better than what they did early on, early on in the administration they had a good week in the stock market. vice president biden said here