WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

931

Good, Fuck you. We should not be educating the rest of the world on how to harm us anyway. Also, a fuck load of our criminal illegal aliens are VISA OVERSTAYS and often STUDENT VISA'S. They can transfer to a college in Londonstan or something.

Archive: https://archive.today/JSC1q

From the post:

>Colorado universities are bracing for major disruptions to their international student populations this fall in light of federal hostility toward foreign-born students and rapidly shifting immigration policies from the Trump administration. More than 10,360 international students attended colleges and universities in the Centennial State during the 2023-2024 school year, according to the most recent data available from the Colorado Department of Higher Education. International students contribute more than $400 million to the state’s economy and support more than 3,800 jobs, making education Colorado’s sixth-largest export, the agency said. Policy decisions since President Donald Trump returned to office in January — including the sudden revocation of student visas, threats of detention and deportation, social media monitoring and travel bans — have created an adversarial environment that higher education leaders fear will deter international students from studying here, damaging the nation’s global competitiveness and research capabilities.

Good, Fuck you. We should not be educating the rest of the world on how to harm us anyway. Also, a fuck load of our criminal illegal aliens are VISA OVERSTAYS and often STUDENT VISA'S. They can transfer to a college in Londonstan or something. Archive: https://archive.today/JSC1q From the post: >>Colorado universities are bracing for major disruptions to their international student populations this fall in light of federal hostility toward foreign-born students and rapidly shifting immigration policies from the Trump administration. More than 10,360 international students attended colleges and universities in the Centennial State during the 2023-2024 school year, according to the most recent data available from the Colorado Department of Higher Education. International students contribute more than $400 million to the state’s economy and support more than 3,800 jobs, making education Colorado’s sixth-largest export, the agency said. Policy decisions since President Donald Trump returned to office in January — including the sudden revocation of student visas, threats of detention and deportation, social media monitoring and travel bans — have created an adversarial environment that higher education leaders fear will deter international students from studying here, damaging the nation’s global competitiveness and research capabilities.

(post is archived)