if you get a masters in medicine, in 2012 it's $135,000. but as you can see, back in 2004, it started at $103,000. >> there is plenty of evidence that people went into these programs -- medicine and law, and a whole raft of other students, student study programs -- knowing at the end of the road their debt would be forgiven. so they ran up a whole lot of debt knowing that the taxpayer was going to subsidize them at the far end. i repeat: 1.3 million people tried to walk awaykp &c@ from $72 billion, $73 billion worth of student debt. i maintain that that is maybe the sound of the student loan debt bubble bursting because it's now $1.1 trillion in student debt. $1.1 trillion, doubled since the year 2007. people can't afford it. they're looking for ways of getting around it and they're giving the taxpayer the bill. >> as the taxpayer always winds up with the bill. what started out as a