BWV said:
I would question what appears to be the underlying assumption that debt is somehow an inherently bad thing
Then why don't you go to places like Greece or some of the other countries plagued with debt. Go and speak to the places that had their economies collapse, or where they had to default, and ask how smooth the ride was.
Ask the people that are enslaved by the massive debts how they feel about spending the rest of their life just trying to pay it off, and ask the ones where the governments sold them out about how they feel about the process.
Debt is the most powerful weapon that has ever been created.
It is not like a bomb, or a gun, or some biological or chemical agent. Debt is a lot more subtle and a lot more dangerous.
People will overtly condemn overt oppression like guns, bombs, and other such weapons but they will not overt debt because psychologically people think that debt is 'fair' even if the terms for the debt, how it was created, and who created are far from fair.
If I came to your house and robbed your possessions, you would be angry. But if I got you to sign a contract whereby I knew you would not have a chance to pay me back and I collected your possessions, you would blame yourself and I could use that signed contract to really make this point of building up the guilt.
This is what happens not only on the small scales, but on the large ones as well.