[Previously, at WEJB/NSU: “black Nigerian ‘Bodybuilding, Aspiring Actors’ Testified against Jussie Smollett.”]
By Eahilf
Thursday, December 9, 2021 at 5:53:00 A.M. EST
(link):
Public records paint a picture of two men in dire financial straits. Olabinjo “Ola” Osundairo, 27, was also no stranger to violence. ... Court records show that Olabinjo Osundairo was charged with attempted murder in a 2011 stabbing ... Olabinjo Osundairo reached a plea deal with prosecutors and pleaded guilty to aggravated battery; he was sentenced to two years of probation and ordered to pay a $674 fine.
So from attempted murder to aggravated battery with a sentence of probation and a small fine – again, most Americans have no idea how standard this is.
Court records show both men filed for bankruptcy in September 2016 and collectively owed more than $120,000 in student loans. ... At the time, neither brother reported having a full-time job. Their monthly incomes, they said, were $160 and $142, which they earned from various odd jobs.
So $120k in student loan debt but no job.
Believe it or not, there’s a good deal more at the link – these guys are just more third-world dreck.
3 comments:
My original thought was that they were drug smuggling. Nigerians among the international criminal elite. Everywhere. At least they are good at that.
All Jesse needs to say is he was doing research for a role in an "Afternoon Special" on "hate crime" he was going to produce...because that's how bad the plot of this whole thing was, as implausible as the typical 80's "Afternoon Special" they used to run to try to frighten the kids out of the latest teen pathology.
>So $120k in student loan debt but no job.
The way this country routinely burdens its young people with burdensome debt so they can attend post-secondary schools is a scandal -- I don't think you will find this, or this to the same extent, in any other country.
I know some of the debtors are foolish, but ultimately it's the political and media establishments, as well an 'academic industrial complex', that pushes this, and leaves young people thinking that if they want to go somewhere in life there is no alternative to college, even for people who really don't belong there or choose useless majors.
Credentialism is also a problem.
The skyrocketing cost of higher education and ballooning student debt are two phenomena that have emerged only over the last 40 years or so -- it wasn't like this at all when I was at university in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
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