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Monday, July 6, 2026

THE EMPEROR'S NEW DIPLOMA: HOW "POORLY EDUCATED" BECAME A POLICY GOAL



THE EMPEROR'S NEW DIPLOMA: HOW "POORLY EDUCATED" BECAME A POLICY GOAL

Back in 2016, Donald Trump told a rally in Nevada, "I love the poorly educated." At the time, it sounded like an off-the-cuff applause line — a weird little confession tossed out between chants. Ten years later, it reads less like a slip and more like a mission statement. Because if you squint at the last eighteen months of federal education policy, you start to notice something: nobody accidentally dismantles the Department of Education, rewrites student loan rules to make debt scarier and forgiveness slower, and calls it "efficiency." That takes vision. Twisted, but vision nonetheless.

Step One: Kill the Referee, Keep the Game

Project 2025 didn't tiptoe around its intentions — it explicitly called for eliminating the U.S. Department of Education, and the administration has spent its second term treating that wish list like a to-do list with checkboxes. The logic goes something like this: if you can't fix the referee, just get rid of the referee. No Department of Education, no federal enforcement of civil rights in schools, no consistent oversight of who's actually learning what. Just fifty states, fifty rulebooks, and whatever local politics decides a kid deserves to know.

Supporters call this "returning power to the states." Critics call it "deregulating your way out of accountability." Either way, it's hard to argue that fewer guardrails around K-12 and higher ed funding results in more educated citizens. It's a bit like removing the smoke detectors and calling it a fire-safety upgrade.

Step Two: Make College a Luxury Good Again

Then came the loan overhaul — officially the Working Families Tax Cuts Act (OBBBA), which took effect July 1, 2026, and functionally reads like a "How to Discourage Advanced Degrees in 12 Easy Steps" manual.

Here's the greatest-hits version:

Old SystemNew System (OBBBA)
Parent PLUS loans: borrow up to full cost of attendanceCapped at $20,000/year, $65,000 lifetime
Grad PLUS loans: available, flexibleEliminated entirely for new borrowers
Income-driven plans: $0/month possible for low earnersMandatory $10/month minimum, no exceptions
Forgiveness timeline: 20–25 years30 years under the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP)
Grad/professional lifetime caps$100,000 (regular grad) / $200,000 (law, medicine)

Education Secretary Linda McMahon — a billionaire GOP mega-donor and former WWE executive, because apparently that's the résumé line that qualifies someone to run federal education policy now — has framed this as "fiscal accountability." Which is a lovely phrase for "we've decided nurses, teachers, and social workers don't count as pursuing 'professional' degrees," a classification quirk Senator Jeff Merkley pointed out actively penalizes the exact professions America is short-staffed in.

Meanwhile, private lenders like SoFi, Sallie Mae, and Citizens Bank are, according to Senate investigators, already retooling their products to catch the flood of families the federal government just shoved off the dock. Somewhere, a private equity fund is popping champagne over what it calls "an attractive high-yield asset class." You and I call it "someone's kid's future."

Step Three: Redefine "Educated" as "Employable, Quietly"

Here's the part that should make everyone sit up straight: the bill does expand Pell Grants to short-term, 8-to-15-week Workforce Pell programs. Truck driving, coding bootcamps, manufacturing certs — genuinely useful stuff, and genuinely good news for students who want a fast, debt-free path into a trade.

But layer that next to the simultaneous squeeze on graduate degrees, the death of Grad PLUS, and the retreat of Parent PLUS, and a pattern emerges that's hard to unsee: it's easier than ever to get trained for a job, and harder than ever to get educated into leadership, research, law, medicine, or public service — unless your family can write a check.

Project 2025's own architects have been refreshingly candid about wanting a workforce that's productive rather than a citizenry that's curious. A compliant workforce doesn't ask why the smoke detectors got removed. An educated one does.

The Pushback (And Why It Matters)

The alarm bells aren't just ringing on the left. University presidents, teachers' unions, and even some conservative accountability advocates are uneasy:

  • NAICU and ACE warn that eliminating open-ended borrowing turns elite and specialized degrees into a wealth filter.
  • Randi Weingarten (AFT) has called the dismantling of prior repayment protections "completely unacceptable."
  • Reps. Suzanne Bonamici and Sen. Jeff Merkley introduced a Congressional Review Act resolution to try to reverse the rules, alongside a growing coalition of state attorneys general suing over the Department's rulemaking.

The problem is structural, not just rhetorical: Democrats are in the minority in both chambers, which means outrage alone doesn't flip a vote. Lawsuits can slow things down. Resolutions can make a point. But neither can repeal a law that a majority in Congress chose to pass and a president chose to sign.

The Only Rebuttal That Actually Counts

There's a certain grim comedy in watching a man who bragged about loving the poorly educated preside over policy that makes education harder to afford, slower to forgive, and lonelier to pursue. But comedy has a shelf life, and this bit has consequences that outlast the punchline — thirty-year loan terms, $10 minimums for people with nothing, and a generation quietly nudged toward "compliant" over "curious."

The Congressional Review Act push and the state lawsuits are worth watching. But the only vote that rewrites the rulebook is the one in November. Flip the House, flip the Senate, and Project 2025's education chapter goes from "law of the land" to "cautionary footnote." Leave it as is, and the footnote becomes the textbook.

Register. Vote. Show up in the midterms. It's the one assignment nobody can dumb down.


Primary Sources: The Loan Rule Changes

Federal financial aid offices and official guidance provide the clearest breakdown of the new borrowing caps taking effect July 1, 2026:


🏛️ Congressional Pushback: The CRA Resolution

The Democratic legislative response — specifically the Congressional Review Act resolution mentioned in the article — is documented across three sources:


⚠️ A Note on Gaps

I wasn't able to independently verify direct-quote sourcing for a few specific attributions in the original article during this session — namely, the exact Randi Weingarten/AFT statement on Treasury loan collections, and standalone confirmation of the Senator Merkley quote about nursing/teaching not qualifying as "professional" degrees (though that quote does appear consistent with the CRA resolution coverage above). If you want those pinned down with direct primary-source links, that would require one more targeted search pass on AFT's press room and Merkley's floor statements specifically.

The four congressional/legislative sources (, , , ) are strong primary documentation for the political pushback narrative, while the four financial aid sources (, , , ) solidly back the numerical claims about loan caps and repayment changes.






MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 6, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JULY 6, 2026


Here are today's top news stories (as of July 6, 2026) in each separate category.

U.S. NEWS

  • Powerful thunderstorms and severe weather hit the East Coast and Midwest over the holiday weekend, with high winds, flooding risks for over 40 million people, power outages, and travel disruptions continuing into Monday.
  • A seaplane made a hard landing on New York’s East River; all passengers were rescued.
  • At least one death and injuries reported from a fireworks-related incident in Southern California; additional water-related fatalities over the holiday.
  • D.C. air quality reached "very unhealthy" levels post-July 4 fireworks.
  • Ongoing recovery and holiday travel impacts from storms.
  • Army’s 250th Anniversary Parade: Military celebrations kicked off in Washington, D.C., with thousands gathering for a massive parade featuring historic and modern tanks and aircraft to mark the Army's 250th anniversary.

  • National Guard Memphis Shooting: Members of the National Guard on patrol in Memphis fatally shot a man during a pursuit, drawing intense local scrutiny and a police investigation.

  • D.C. Reflecting Pool Damage: Interior Secretary Doug Burgum announced that repair plans are underway for the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool following "multiple gashes" left by recent acts of vandalism.

  • Independence Day Parade Heat Cancellations: Extreme heat across parts of the Northeast led to the cancellation of major holiday events, including Philadelphia’s official Independence Day parade over the weekend.

POLITICS

  • President Trump delivered a July 4 speech on the National Mall (delayed by weather), touting an American "golden age," attacking communism/Democrats, and pushing voter ID legislation (SAVE America Act).
  • Trump preparing for NATO summit in Turkey, with calls to Putin and Zelenskyy; emphasis on defense spending and alliance issues.
  • Immigration policy shifts: Spouses of U.S. citizens facing increased scrutiny.
  • Domestic political discussions around midterms/elections and Trump’s influence.
  • High-Stakes NATO Summit Preparations: As world leaders head to Turkey for the upcoming NATO summit, President Trump faces friction with allies over demands for "loyalty" alongside strict military burden-sharing.

  • Supreme Court Title IX Backlash: Congressional lawmakers are moving to counter recent court rulings that apply sex discrimination rules to religious schools, intensifying a national legislative battle over school funding.

  • ABC Station License Challenges: Prominent conservative organizations have ramped up pressure on the FCC, challenging the license renewals of several local ABC television stations over allegations of political bias.

  • White House Report Slams Smithsonian: A newly released White House report has sharply criticized the leadership of the Smithsonian Institution, labeling top officials as ideological activists who have lost public trust.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • NATO summit in Ankara, Turkey (starting soon): Trump attending, meetings with Zelenskyy and others; focus on Ukraine aid, defense spending, and tensions including Iran. Deadly Russian strikes on Kyiv occurred on the eve.
  • Ongoing Russia-Ukraine conflict: Zelenskyy seeking more Patriot missiles after attacks; Trump involved in diplomatic calls.
  • Turkey hosting amid protests/detentions; Erdogan-Trump relations highlighted.
  • Other global notes: Venezuela earthquake recovery, various international developments.
  • Massive Funeral Procession in Tehran: Millions of mourners in black flooded the streets of Iran's capital for the funeral of late Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. The highly charged event serves as a demonstration of strength by remaining clerical leaders amidst tense negotiations with the U.S.

  • Deadly Missile Strikes Hit Kyiv: A wave of Russian missiles and drones targeted Ukraine's capital early Monday morning, killing at least 11 people and heavily damaging apartment blocks as Ukraine reports a critical shortage of Patriot interceptors.

  • Impeachment Trial Opens in Philippines: The Philippine Senate officially opened the politically volatile impeachment trial of Vice President Sara Duterte, threatening to completely reshape the nation's political landscape.

  • Ukrainian Midrange Drones Reshape Frontlines: A new strategic report highlights that Ukraine has dramatically shifted the logistics of the war by successfully deploying medium-range drones to strike fuel terminals and supply lines deep inside Russian territory, including a recent strike in St. Petersburg.

EDUCATION

  • Education standouts/honors announced (e.g., Phi Kappa Phi memberships at universities like New Mexico Highlands).
  • Higher ed news: Changes to professional degree lists, HBCU course-sharing partnerships, Title IX updates, and affordability initiatives from the Dept. of Education.
  • California: CSU workers threatening strikes; Fresno State nonprofit issues; federal civil rights data delays.
  • Broader topics: Teacher stress levels and H-1B visa policy impacts.
  • Rhode Island Funding Watchdog Report: A new report from the Rhode Island Expenditure Council revealed that despite the state having the 8th highest per-pupil spending in the nation ($23,000 annually), student performance in reading and math remains stagnant at 27th place, sparking calls for district consolidation.

  • Title IX Month Concludes with New Investigations: Marking the 54th anniversary of Title IX, the U.S. Department of Education's Office for Civil Rights closed out its annual focus month by opening sweeping compliance investigations into school districts across Maryland and Michigan over alleged violations.

  • Federal Funding Waivers Granted: The Department of Education approved Vermont's "Returning Education to the States" waiver, a move designed to give state and local officials significantly more discretion over how federal education dollars are allocated.

  • Postsecondary Accountability Framework Issued: The federal government announced a final rule establishing the Student Tuition and Transparency System (STATS), a new framework holding colleges and universities financially accountable for low-earning or underperforming degree programs.

ECONOMY

  • Q1 2026 GDP growth at 2.1% (third estimate), up from prior quarter, driven by investment, exports, etc.
  • Economic data week: PMI releases, Fed minutes, jobless claims, housing data; Fed assessing rates/inflation/labor market.
  • Global outlook: IMF projections for ~3.3% growth; ongoing tariff/trade policy discussions.
  • OPEC+ Agrees to Modest Supply Hike: Seven OPEC+ member nations have agreed to a minor expansion of monthly oil production, moving to stabilize global energy markets as crude oil prices slide downward.

  • Fourth of July Box Office Slowdown: Hollywood experienced a modest holiday weekend as Minions & Monsters narrowly edged out Toy Story 5 to top the box office, though overall revenue fell short of industry expectations.

  • Renewable Energy Labor Friction: Unionized wind energy workers have launched a public campaign opposing federal rollbacks on green energy initiatives, warning that cutting renewable projects will eliminate thousands of specialized manufacturing jobs.

  • Unemployment Insurance Fraud Crackdown: The U.S. House passed a major legislative package aimed at reclaiming billions of dollars lost to pandemic-era unemployment insurance fraud and tightening oversight on state-administered safety nets.

TECHNOLOGY

  • SK Hynix preparing major US Nasdaq listing (~$29B) focused on AI investors.
  • Microsoft planning thousands of job cuts (sales, consulting, Xbox) amid AI spending push.
  • AI developments: Meta on slower agent tech progress; record startup funding; smart glasses funding; California government AI deployment.
  • Other: Tata data leak investigation, space missions.
  • Manassas Data Center Project Halted: A tech consortium abruptly canceled plans to build what would have been the world's largest data center hub near Virginia's Manassas National Battlefield Park following intense pushback from conservationists and local grid operators.

  • Emergency Space Rescue Mission: Aerospace engineers launched an uncrewed emergency rescue mission in an attempt to stabilize and save a vital NASA orbital telescope that has begun a premature descent back toward Earth.

  • Global Micro-Drone Proliferation: Defense tech analysts note a massive surge in the commercial marketing of advanced, low-altitude military drones and air defense systems by global suppliers, as nations move to reduce their reliance on traditional U.S. hardware.

  • Decentralized Compute Security Concerns: A coalition of tech watchdogs issued a security warning regarding the rapid growth of ad-hoc decentralized supercomputer networks, citing potential vulnerabilities in consumer-grade smart home hardware.

HEALTH

  • Study suggests apoB test better than standard LDL for cholesterol risk assessment to prevent heart issues.
  • Pregnant women exposed to dozens of chemicals linked to birth risks (earlier births, lower weights).
  • Clusters of severe stomach illness (e.g., cyclospora) reported across U.S.
  • Ongoing monitoring of issues like hantavirus, fentanyl tolerance in users, and broader 2026 health challenges (AMR, mental health, conflicts).
  • Ebola Treatment Trial Begins in Congo: Medical teams in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have launched clinical trials for an advanced Ebola treatment, offering new hope to regions dealing with persistent outbreaks.

  • CDC Reports Record-Low Death Rate: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released its finalized data showing that the overall U.S. mortality rate dropped to a historic low over the past calendar year, driven by a sharp decline in cardiovascular events.

  • Cruise Ship Norovirus Outbreak: More than 125 passengers and crew members fell ill with a highly contagious gastrointestinal virus aboard a luxury cruise liner operating out of San Francisco, prompting emergency sanitation protocols.

  • Global Housing and Health Partnership Renewed: The World Health Organization officially extended its designation of the Center on Health in Housing through 2030, reinforcing international research into how urban development and substandard housing drive chronic health inequities.

SPORTS

  • FIFA World Cup: FIFA reverses red card decision for U.S. star Folarin Balogun (after Trump intervention reported), clearing him for key match vs. Belgium.
  • Wimbledon: Advances for players like Jannik Sinner, Naomi Osaka, Coco Gauff, and Philippine star Alex Eala (notable upset).
  • MLB: Top plays of the week; various games/series (e.g., Braves-Mets, etc.).
  • Other: Golf (John Deere Classic), Norway's World Cup progress.
  • Ovechkin Inches Closer to Gretzky's Record: Washington Capitals star Alex Ovechkin netted his 890th career goal, putting him within striking distance of Wayne Gretzky's historic NHL scoring record, despite the Capitals dropping an 8-5 decision to Buffalo.

  • World Cup Geopolitical Drama: A major controversy erupted surrounding the World Cup tournament following political interventions regarding player suspensions, sparking sharp debates over international sports governance and host-nation influence.

  • Egypt Coach Makes Waves: Egypt's soccer coach drew widespread international media attention after waving a Palestinian flag on the pitch following a major tournament victory.

  • Extreme Heat Disrupts Summer Athletics: Regional athletic associations across the East Coast implemented emergency thermal safety rules, delaying or canceling dozens of youth and semi-professional outdoor sporting events over the weekend due to dangerous heat indices.

News evolves quickly—major themes today include post-holiday weather recovery, NATO developments, and sports (World Cup/Wimbledon).


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Here is a breakdown of the major education headlines making news today, both across the United States and globally.

🇺🇸 Top US Education News

1. Major Changes to Federal Student Loan Rules Take Effect

Sweeping overhauls to federal student financial aid went into effect on July 1. Enacted under recent federal legislation, these updates place strict new caps on borrowing limits while restructuring repayment models.

  • New Borrowing Limits: Parent PLUS loans are now capped at $20,000 annually ($65,000 lifetime maximum per student). Graduate student loans are capped at a lifetime maximum of $100,000, and Graduate PLUS loans have been blocked for all new borrowers.

  • Aggregate Cap: All new borrowers now face an absolute lifetime borrowing cap of $257,500 spanning undergraduate and graduate studies combined.

  • Repayment Consolidation: New borrowers are restricted to just two options: the Tiered Standard Plan or the new income-driven Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP), as older plans like PAYE and ICR begin their sunset phase.

  • Pell Grant Restructuring: Eligibility has tightened for low-income students who receive significant non-federal aid, though funding has expanded to cover certified short-term workforce development programs.

2. Courts Strike Down PSLF Overhaul

Two federal judges have vacated the U.S. Department of Education’s recent employer rule overhaul for the Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) program. The administration’s changes faced legal challenges from a coalition of over 20 states and non-profit groups, who argued the agency overstepped its statutory authority. Legal advocates celebrate the ruling as a protection for a predictable talent pipeline in public interest careers, while the Department of Education notes that guidance may continue to shift amid ongoing litigation.

3. Accountability Framework Targets Low-Earning Programs

The Department of Education has issued its final rule establishing the Student Tuition and Transparency System (STATS) and Earnings Accountability framework. Under this rule, higher education programs must demonstrate that their graduates earn more than a typical high school diploma holder. Programs failing to meet this baseline for two out of three consecutive years risk losing access to federal Direct Loans and Title IV funding, including Pell Grants.

🌐 Top World Education News

1. UN Tackles Global Education Financing Crisis in Paris

Ahead of an upcoming UNESCO summit in Paris on July 10, global leaders are sounding the alarm over a severe contraction in international education funding. New data highlights a stark reality: 113 countries (representing 6.1 billion people) now spend more on debt servicing than on public education. UNESCO is prepared to debut a comprehensive framework for "debt-for-education swaps" to help vulnerable nations restructure national debts in exchange for guaranteed local classroom investment.

2. UN Report Warns of "Generational" Learning Losses in Crisis Zones

A newly published report by Education Cannot Wait (the UN global fund for education in crises) reveals that conflict, climate shocks, and forced displacement are actively disrupting education for 258 million children worldwide.

  • Out-of-School Emergency: 93 million of these children are completely excluded from classrooms.

  • The Literacy Gap: Foundational learning is stalling dramatically. In active conflict zones, reading proficiency by Grade 6 reaches just 30%, compared to 63% in areas impacted primarily by natural disasters.

3. Geneva Summit Confronts AI Governance in Education

The UN's Global Dialogue on AI Governance opens today in Geneva, bringing together policymakers, tech leaders, and academics to discuss global guardrails for artificial intelligence. While international delegates emphasize that machine learning acts as a powerful equalizer for economic development and personalized learning infrastructure, scientists and civil society leaders are raising urgent warnings regarding data privacy, the widening digital divide between high- and low-income nations, and threats to information integrity in educational materials.


Can this city succeed in having all eighth graders take algebra where others have failed? - The Hechinger Report https://hechingerreport.org/can-this-city-succeed-in-having-all-eighth-graders-take-algebra-where-others-have-failed/ 

OPINION: Our off-track high school students weren’t terribly interested in school until we dug into project-based learning https://hechingerreport.org/principal-voice-our-off-track-high-school-students-werent-terribly-interested-in-school-until-we-dug-into-hands-on-learning/

Oklahoma researchers seek new options for treatment-resistant depression https://nondoc.com/2026/07/06/oklahoma-researchers-seek-new-options-for-treatment-resistant-depression/ 

Under Newsom, a boom in school and community college funding amid budget turmoil | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/california-newsom-education-budget/761480 

Short thousands of bilingual teachers, California schools turn to high school students | EdSource https://edsource.org/2026/short-thousands-of-bilingual-teachers-california-schools-turn-to-high-school-students/761499 

Deportations of Unaccompanied Minors Have Tripled Under Trump — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/unaccompanied-minors-deportations-elder-chavez 

How a Moroun-Owned Concrete Plant Took Over a Detroit Community — ProPublica https://www.propublica.org/article/detroit-kronos-morouns-concrete-neighborhood-takeover 

Faster solutions, lower test scores: How AI is eroding math skills https://hechingerreport.org/proof-points-ai-eroding-math-skills/ 

New federal caps on graduate school loans send students and colleges scrambling - Los Angeles Times https://www.latimes.com/california/story/2026-07-06/graduate-school-loan-caps-college-tuition-impact

Research Universities Are Admitting Fewer Ph.D.s, a Bad Sign for Science - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/06/us/research-universities-fewer-phds-science.html

How Revolutionary Was the American Revolution? - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/06/arts/american-revolution-250-radical.html 

Opinion | Bring Back the SAT, California - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/06/opinion/university-california-sat-testing-admissions.html 

A News Site Published a Video of a School Lockdown. Then It Was Gone. - The New York Times https://www.nytimes.com/2026/07/06/nyregion/news-site-video-school-arrest.html 

Up next for the DSA? Two major swing states. - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/06/dsa-progressives-wisconsin-michigan-primaries-00986944 

What Rahm Emanuel’s Upcoming Israel Speech Reveals About Democrats - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/magazine/2026/07/06/rahm-emanuel-israel-palestine-iran-democrat-strategy-00987525 

Democrats are ‘looking for guidance’ on Israel. Hakeem Jeffries isn’t giving any at the moment. - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/06/hakeem-jeffries-israel-aid-democrats-00986438 

The midterms are months away. The scramble to get on Congress’ tax writing committees has already started. - POLITICO https://www.politico.com/news/2026/07/06/congress-committees-tax-cuts-00986101

EU calls for ‘fair play’ after Trump’s red card intervention rocks World Cup – POLITICO https://www.politico.eu/article/eu-fair-play-donald-trump-red-card-intervention-world-cup-folarin-balogun/

Wall Street Just Won’t Stop Financing the Fossil Fuel Industry’s Expansion – Mother Jones https://www.motherjones.com/politics/2026/07/wall-street-banks-financing-fossil-fuel-industry-big-oil-gas-expansion/