Republican legislation seeks to ban Chinese nationals from studying in the US
Source: Yahoo! News/AP
Fri, March 14, 2025 at 5:38 PM EDT
WASHINGTON (AP) A group of House Republicans on Friday put forward legislation seeking to prevent Chinese students from studying in American schools, as some U.S. lawmakers are targeting China over national security concerns. Rep. Riley Moore, R-W.Va., introduced the bill that could bar Chinese nationals from receiving visas that allow foreigners to travel to the U.S. to study or participate in exchange visitor programs. Five other Republicans co-sponsored the measure.
By granting Chinese nationals such visas, the U.S. has invited the Chinese Communist Party "to spy on our military, steal our intellectual property, and threaten national security, Moore said in a statement. Its time we turn off the spigot and immediately ban all student visas going to Chinese nationals.
The measure is unlikely to pass, and it has drawn criticism from organizations and scholars over concerns that hostile policies and rhetoric toward Chinese students could hurt U.S. interests. No policy should target individuals solely on the basis of their national origin," Fanta Aw, executive director and CEO of NAFSA, an association of international educators, said in a statement.
"Making international students the most vetted and tracked nonimmigrants in the United States a scapegoat for xenophobic and anti-Chinese sentiment is misguided and antithetical to our national interest," Aw said.
Read more: https://www.yahoo.com/news/republican-legislation-seeks-ban-chinese-213822936.html

BoRaGard
(5,113 posts)
modrepub
(3,822 posts)Most Chinese stopped sending their kids here years ago. This will only throttle back the stranglers.
Too bad for private boarding schools. This was a huge $ maker. A group willing to pay full tuition without begging for grants.
BumRushDaShow
(151,210 posts)When I was a senior in college, I took 2, 6-credit (1 credit = 4 hours) "lab research" courses (1 course per semester) as part of my chem curricula, where the time was spent doing a research project (in my case, doing organo-metallic chem stuff). I shared a lab with a Chinese national who was a grad (or post-grad) student and was probably in his 40s. I really got a sense of "communal" with him because although we supposedly had our own hoods and drawers of glassware, etc., he would routinely go into my drawers and get what he needed if he didn't have the items.