Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

U.S. lets foreign talent go, Bloomberg laments

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The New York City mayor, speaking at Stanford University, said the country needs to encourage foreign students to stay after they’ve received their college education in the United States.

PALO ALTO, Calif. (AP) — New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg used his platform as Stanford University’s commenceme­nt speaker on Sunday to lobby for an immigratio­n reform plan that allows foreign students to remain in the United States after they graduate.

STANDING before a packed Stanford Stadium on Sunday, Bloomberg noted that about 30 percent of the university’s 5,000 graduates had attended Stanford on student visas, but that many of them without a way to work legally here would return to their home countries to compete with American companies.

“We invite foreign students to study here, we subsidize the universiti­es they attend with research funding and other aid, and then, after those stu- dents have mastered the material, we tell them to go somewhere else,” the mayor said during a brief speech that also touched on the value of risk-taking and civil rights. “It’s the most backward economic policy you could possibly come up with, and I’ve called it national suicide.”

INSTEAD of letting such home-schooled talent get away, Bloomberg said that every internatio­nal student who had studied science, technology, math or engineerin­g “should have a green card stapled to his or her diploma so they can help our economy grow.” He added that U.S. residents who had been brought into the country illegally as children “should have the opportunit­y to apply for financial aid and go to college. They have done nothing wrong.”

Bloomberg urged the audience to contact their representa­tives and senators about the immigratio­n bill now under considerat­ion by Congress. Lawmakers from both parties’ voted last week to begin formal debate on the first immigratio­n overhaul in a generation, a proposal that would give an estimated 11 million immigrants in the U.S. illegally a long and difficult path to citizenshi­p.

THE MAYOR also discussed the U.S. Supreme Court’s forthcomin­g decisions in two same-sex marriage cases, one challengin­g the constituti­onality of a 1996 federal law that prevents legally married couples from accessing federal marriage benefits, the other a ruling that will determine if California’s voter-approved ban on same-sex marriages lives or dies. The court’s rulings could come as soon as Monday.

“There is no doubt in my mind these two laws will soon be history,” he said. “Marriage equality is the civil rights issue of our time, and I believe it will become the law of all 50 states, if not in my lifetime, then in yours,” Bloomberg said, proudly remarking that same-sex couples have been able to wed in New York state since June 2011.

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