Here's a tale of two Americas: personal finance expert George Kamel went around Chicago asking random people about their debt, and what he found was basically the financial equivalent of looking at parallel universes. In one universe, you've got young people who've already thrown in the towel on ever being debt-free. In the other, there's a 20-year-old who owns a house outright.
The backdrop makes this divide even more striking. About a third of Americans are either struggling or in outright financial crisis, and more than half are living paycheck to paycheck. But within that grim landscape, some people have figured out how to win the money game while others have accepted permanent defeat.
When Student Loans Become Life Sentences
The debt stories Kamel heard covered an enormous spectrum. Some interviewees were dealing with $20,000 to $25,000 in student loans—not fun, but survivable. Others revealed the truly terrifying side of America's education financing system: six-figure debt loads that could hit $500,000 for specialized degrees like dental school.
One young person carrying $25,000 in student debt told Kamel something that perfectly captures a certain brand of millennial and Gen Z fatalism. They had "no plans on paying it off" and expected to "die with it." Kamel didn't let that slide. He pointed out that student loans can't be wiped out through bankruptcy and can lead to wage garnishment. Comparing creditors to "the mafia," he urged the person to "drop the cynicism and start betting on yourself."
Even the people actively fighting their debt face brutal timelines. Those with six-figure balances reported 15-year repayment plans, and that's when they're "going hard on it."
Medical Bills and Emergency Loans Pile On
Student debt isn't operating in isolation. Several Chicago residents were actively chipping away at medical bills ranging from $4,500 to $5,000. Others had taken out personal loans to handle emergencies—what happens when you don't have enough savings and life decides to test you.
One interviewee's story captured something interesting about how Americans think about credit. They took out a car loan despite putting down 50% and having enough cash to buy it outright. They called it "intentional debt" and said the reason was building credit. That's how deeply the credit score system has worked its way into financial decision-making—people are taking on debt they don't need just to prove they can handle debt.
The Debt-Free Playbook Requires Serious Trade-Offs
The most fascinating interviews came from people who'd managed to avoid debt entirely. A 20-year-old certified nursing assistant pulling in about $8,000 monthly had stayed completely debt-free, paid $20,000 cash for a used car, and bought a house at age 20 in Florida. How? Hard work, talent, and ruthlessly living below her means while saving aggressively.
Other debt-free people shared their paths. One cited growing up "pretty poor" as their motivation—traumatic enough to keep them away from debt for life. Others recommended union jobs and trade apprenticeships, working "one and a half jobs" until they cleared their debts.
Full-ride scholarships through financial aid or college athletics offered another route, though Kamel noted these require "significant dedication and sacrifice of time and energy."
Two Schools of Thought on Getting Out
Among people carrying debt, the strategies split in different directions. One person plans to knock out $14,000 in car and personal loan debt before the year ends by slashing discretionary spending. Another person with $20,000 in student loans and $16,000 in savings chose a different approach—budgeting for gradual repayment while continuing to build savings at the same time.
Kamel shared his own origin story: he paid off $38,000 in 18 months after college through side hustles and living frugally.
A software developer illustrated what you might call the middle path—sitting on enough savings to wipe out $20,000 in student loans immediately but choosing instead to balance debt repayment with maintaining a financial cushion.
The Harsh Math of Borrowing
Kamel's final take was blunt: debt "never makes your financial situation better" and amounts to "robbing of your future income and your financial future." For people making only minimum payments, high interest rates can cause balances to explode. Throw in unexpected health problems or other emergencies, and debt can make or break someone's entire financial trajectory.
The Chicago street interviews painted a picture of America split not just by income levels, but by fundamentally different philosophies about money. Some people are building generational wealth in their twenties. Others have already waved the white flag and accepted decades of debt servitude. The difference often comes down to choices, sacrifices, and sometimes just luck—but the gap between these two groups keeps getting wider.