Hour 1 – “This is going to help the next generation of nurses and teachers”
Clay tackles the viral outrage over the Trump administration’s decision (part of the “One Big Beautiful Bill”) to remove nursing and teaching from the federal list of “professional degrees.” He calmly explains this has zero effect on current nurses or teachers — it only applies to future students — and is designed to stop universities from charging $150k–$250k for degrees that lead to $70k–$100k starting salaries. Using real Mississippi numbers (Hinds Community College ADN vs. Ole Miss BSN), Clay had Grok compile the data), he shows a two-year associate-degree nurse can finish for $13k–$16k total, start working immediately at roughly the same pay as a four-year BSN grad, and then bridge online to a BSN for another $4k–$10k while already earning. The policy, he argues, forces schools to cut tuition bloat and protects the next wave of nurses and teachers from crushing debt. He repeatedly stresses this is “tough-love protection, not an attack on nurses.”