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Notes -
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/rubio-says-us-will-start-revoking-visas-chinese-students-2025-05-28/
To what extent is this foreign/defense policy, and to what extent is this a fig leaf for prior CW against higher education and foreign students? Shouldn't we be trying to deprive the PRC of human capital? Being anti-CCP, I'm concerned about stuff like this, but a "to aggressively revoke visas for Chinese students," where "Chinese student" is the only criteria given by the Secretary of State doesn't seem like a good idea.
Edit: A longer quote of Rubio, via Politico (???):
If anything, this just seems dumber - why is it "Chinese students, including those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party or studying in critical fields," rather than "Those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party, regardless of citizenship?"
Noah Smith makes a good case that international students are good, but it's paywalled. However, here's a quote answering the question of whether foreign students displace or subsidize native students:
Lmao, there is no way this order survives as written its first brush with the legal system. This is textbook discrimination and the way they are phrasing it only makes their life harder.
I thought that the Immigration and Nationality Act gave extensive power to POTUS to discriminate between non-citizens on the sole basis of his judgement that their entry may be "detrimental to the interests of the United States".
In particular, it seems entirely appropriate that you would decide to ban entry to anyone from an enemy nation. It's going to be hard to argue that the law wasn't written with that in mind.
You might argue the pretense of nationality is flimsy and that China isn't an enemy nation, but the courts don't make the foreign policy of the United States.
Eh, firstly IANAL and also my knowledge only extends to rudimentary UK law, at least under our system there is literally no way this survives its first brush with the Equality Act 2010 (which is a bit like our version of the Civil Rights act in the US but less extreme) so assumed this would fail on similar grounds in the US but if you don't have even that then yeah, it's hard to see what could be done. I guess the long term consequences to the USA will be the only real feedback here...
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