 So, if we were to all pretend that Elizabeth Warren was not backtracking on the issue of Medicare for All, if we pretended for a minute that she was supportive of Medicare for All unequivocally, then she would be a virtually perfect candidate because week after week she comes out with a new proposal that I think is bold, it's innovative, it's fresh, and she keeps going up in my book with the exception of Medicare for All. However, she proposed a college plan that would do two things. One, it would make public colleges and universities tuition-free, and two, it would deal with the current student loan crisis in a meaningful way, and a really, really meaningful way because she put forward a plan that is by far and away the best out of any presidential contender in the field. So she has a two-pronged approach to tackling the student loan debt crisis. The first is to make sure that people currently burdened with student loan debt get relief, and the second thing she wants to do is make sure that future college students don't deal with the current crisis that millennials are facing today. So she's calling for up to $50,000 in student loan debt to be canceled for 42 million Americans. This is huge, and ever since Jill Stein originally floated the idea of canceling student loan debt, I have been screaming about other Democratic Party politicians, namely progressives, to make this part of their agenda, and finally, a major candidate is adopting this. So she explains, my plan for broad student debt cancellation will cancel debt for more than 95% of nearly 45 million Americans with student loan debt. I'm going to rip out student loan debt entirely for more than 75% of Americans with that debt, substantially increase wealth for Black and Latinx families, and reduce both the Black-White and Latinx-White wealth gaps, and provide an enormous middle class stimulus that will boost economic growth, increase home purchases, and fuel a new wave of small business formation. So that's her broad plan to relieve students currently plagued by student loan debt, and here's what she's proposing when it comes to free college. She wants all students to graduate with zero debt. She wants to give every American the opportunity to attend a two-year or four-year college without paying a dime in tuition or fees, make free college truly universal, not just in theory, but in practice by making higher education of all kinds more inclusive and available to every single American, especially lower income Black and Latinx students, without the need to take on debt to cover costs. So this is the way that all candidates, especially progressives, should be talking about the student loan crisis. It's not enough to just say that we need to make public colleges and universities tuition free, because that's certainly important. It's certainly going to help future generations, but for those of us who already went to college and now have all this student loan debt, you have to do more. And Bernie Sanders, I love him to death, but he just has not been bold enough when it comes to tackling the current crisis. Because his plan is basically the same as Obama's and Hillary Clinton's. He'd limit the payments to a percentage of your income and forgive it after a number of years. But what Elizabeth Warren is doing here, it's just objectively better. And I'm glad that she's coming out with this because this challenges even your favorite candidate, Bernie Sanders, Tulsi Gabbard, to move further to the left and take a more bold stand here. And I want to do get into the specific numbers she talks about with regard to her plan, because it's very thorough, it's incredibly specific. And you can read her medium post where she goes into great detail about what she wants to do. So it cancels 50,000 in student debt for every person with household income under $100,000. It provides substantial debt cancellation for every person with household income between $100,000 and $250,000. The $50,000 cancellation amount phases out by $1 for every $3 in income above $100,000. So for example, a person with household income of $130,000 per year gets $40,000 in cancellation, while a person with household income of $160,000 gets $30,000 in cancellation. It offers no debt cancellation to people with household income above $250,000, and that's the top 5% of income earners. For most Americans, cancellation will take place automatically using data already available to the federal government about income and outstanding student loan debt. Private student loan debt is also eligible for cancellation, and the federal government will work with borrowers and holders of this debt to provide relief. Cancelled debt will not be taxed as income. So this is absolutely gigantic. This is her best proposal by a mile and a half. This is great. And she has a number of proposals that I absolutely love. But this is a game changer. She just went up substantially in my book. And if she actually supported Medicare for All unequivocally, which is my number one issue, I'd say she's getting competitive with Bernie Sanders in my book. She may not have the political courage or the street cred that Bernie Sanders has, but this type of policy innovation is incredibly important. Because we need to not just be vociferously advocating for policy ideas that we all care about, but we need to be pushing the envelope and coming up with new ideas. Now this isn't the first person to propose student loan debt cancellation. Just like AOC isn't the first person to propose a green new deal. This is why I think the Green Party is so important, because Jill Stein had a lot of these ideas first. And even if it took a couple of years for it to catch on, this is why I think third parties are important. But with that being said, let's get into some additional details. First of all, she's going to be able to fully fund her plan here for both student loan debt cancellation and free college, all with her 2% asset tax. That's amazing. She's creating a fund specifically for HBCUs, which is also important. These are underfunded institutions. She wants to stop giving federal money to private institutions. And she wants to prohibit college admissions from discriminating against people with criminal records and non-citizens. My hat goes off to Elizabeth Warren. I've been critical of her before, but this is a phenomenal thing to propose. And I think this will resonate with a lot of people, especially millennials, which is why Bernie Sanders. It would be very smart of him to come up with this policy. Although, when you look at David Cerota, who is part of Team Bernie, his response really kind of rubbed me the wrong way, because he says, remember when Bernie Sanders proposed tuition-free higher education in 2016, and the media slammed him? And now only three years later, the media laws the idea as a brilliant innovation without even mentioning Bernie's tireless work campaigning for it. Good times. Now, he deleted that tweet and put up a similar tweet with different headlines. But what I hear from that is him being defensive. But you've got to acknowledge that Elizabeth Warren's plan is just objectively better than Bernie Sanders. Now we can be extra kind to Bernie and say he's the best on Medicare for all by a mile and a half. But on this issue, Elizabeth Warren takes the cake. She's just better than Bernie here. And I do find it frustrating that the media now is OK with this idea, since other people are proposing free college. And they kind of dismissed Bernie Sanders, and all of his ideas is pie in the sky. I do find that frustrating. But rather than getting defensive, compete. Push Bernie to do better. Push Bernie Sanders to propose his own student loan debt cancellation plan, because I've been screaming for years as a Bernie supporter that this is what he needs to do. And I've been trying to get Bernie Sanders on the program now. And in the event I were able to be successful at doing that, the first question I would ask him is, what are you going to do about student loan debt? Because again, free college in and of itself is phenomenal. It ensures that my nieces and nephews will be able to go to college and not graduate with debt. But what are you going to do currently for people who already have this debt? Now, Bernie Sanders is cognizant of the fact that you've got to do something, but you've got to call it like you see it. Elizabeth Warren just outflanked Bernie Sanders from the left. Now, you can give Bernie credit for being the OG and being the first to propose free college, but at the same time, she's the first major Democratic Party presidential candidate to even talk about this in a really meaningful way. Student loan debt cancellation is a game changer. So don't get defensive, David Sarota. Compete, come out with a better plan, come out with 100% cancellation, because this is what I would do. If I'm even considering Elizabeth Warren's plan, if I were Elizabeth Warren, I'd say we're going to cancel 100% of student loan debt. That 1.5 trillion, we're deleting all of it, because you won't actually get that, but when you negotiate, you'll negotiate down to something that she's actually aiming for. So I would go bolder and Elizabeth Warren just outflanked Bernie from the left, but she left him enough room to where he can still top her on this particular issue.