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The Monday reprint of a Los Angeles Times editorial advocates going slower on self-driving cars. The editorial supports this opinion with several anecdotes but lacks the only relevant information: How does the accident rate of these autonomous cars compare to those driven by people? Maybe we should be going faster, not slower.
Harold A. Roberts, Excelsior
STUDENT LOANS
Give them interest relief, at least
We all know that to take out a loan is to agree to repay it in a timely, responsible manner.
The writers who decry student loan debt relief ("Your loans shouldn't surprise you," Readers Write, July 5) fail to get one basic piece of this puzzle for borrowers. A $10,000 forgiveness on a student loan is virtually nothing by comparison to the thousands of dollars our students are paying in interest rates well above rates on our savings and investments. These high rates mean that many borrowers will still be paying loans well into their 40s, if not beyond. This is usury on the part of lenders. Lenders are making a ton of money on the backs of our kids. How about giving our borrowers a break on loan interest at least?
Mary Jane Miller, Chanhassen
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