The Signal

Revoke the F-1 Visas of the Hate-speakers

- Joe GUZZARDI COMMENTARY Joe Guzzardi is an Institute for Sound Public Policy analyst who has been writing about immigratio­n for more than 30 years.

The coast-to-coast college rioting and destructio­n that marked late April and early May should draw attention to internatio­nal students and precipitat­e a demand from fed-up citizen taxpayers that the federal government tighten up the F-1/J-1 student visa guidelines.

Participat­ing in the criminal behavior at Columbia, Penn, UCLA, USC, North Carolina, and NYU, among dozens of other prominent universiti­es, were students holding temporary non-immigrant visas. More than one million foreign-born students, including 45,000 from the Middle East, arrived on U.S. campuses in academic year 2022/2023.

The premise is that the visa programs give foreign-born university students an opportunit­y to study in the U.S. so that they will be better able to contribute to their countries’ advancemen­t when they return home.

But, in practice, many foreign students remain in the U.S. and hire on with an American company, thus displacing citizen job seekers.

Overstayin­g non-immigrant visas is a crime easily committed, especially since no one in federal immigratio­n enforcemen­t seeks them out. Visa overstays immediatel­y become illegal aliens.

From highly selective UCLA — only 8.8% of its 145,904 applicants are admitted — more than 3,000 students from 85 nations arrive on mostly F-1 student visas, but also on J-1 exchange visas.

Although Berkeley has long been considered the gem of the UC system, its overall admission acceptance rate is 11.6%, 125,910 applicatio­ns and 14,566 accepted. Cal’s internatio­nal F-1/J-1 enrollment is 7,343.

UCLA’S antisemiti­c gang activity was uglier than Cal’s, but the Golden Bears had a critical free speech showdown. ProPalesti­nian students and their outside agitator comrades set up about 15 tents on the steps of Berkeley’s Sproul Plaza on a recent Monday afternoon and vowed to stay put until the university system officially called for an end to the Israel-hamas war, cut its study-abroad program with Israel and divest from companies with ties to Israel.

Berkeley School of Law student Malak Afaneh, co-president of Berkeley Law Students for Justice in Palestine, finally gave the speech Jewish law school Dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y prevented her from giving at an invitation-only lunch he and his civil rights law professor wife, Catherine Fisk, hosted at their home.

In front of Fisk and Chemerinsk­y’s house, Afaneh yelled: “I will keep shouting this speech from the rooftops until Palestine is free.”

In a statement published on the Berkeley Law website, Chemerinsk­y said that he and his wife had been inviting students to their home for dinner since he became the dean.

“I never imagined that something that we do to help our community would become ugly and divisive,” he said.

Chemerinsk­y continued: “I am enormously sad that we have students who are so rude as to come into my home, in my backyard, and use this social occasion for their political agenda.”

“We’re willing to risk suspension,” said Afaneh, a thirdyear law student and a Palestinia­n-american, who believes a Palestinia­n state should replace the country of Israel. “We’re willing to risk expulsion; we’re willing to risk arrest. We’re willing to risk anything to stand here until we achieve our demands for divestment.”

Chemerinsk­y responded, correctly, to Afaneh’s invocation of the Constituti­on when he countered: “This is my house! The First Amendment doesn’t apply!”

One lawyer’s interpreta­tion held by most constituti­onal scholars: “public university students don’t have a First Amendment right to take over a backyard dinner party — even one their school is hosting.”

And from George Washington University professor of public interest law Johathan Turley’s blog: “Regrettabl­y, the scene that unfolded at the home of Dean Chemerinsk­y will be viewed by many as a triumph rather than an embarrassm­ent for their cause. Disruption has become the touchstone of protests in higher education.”

At the same time in what should be a 10-alarm fire warning for Americans watching U.S. sovereignt­y erode, schools like UCLA have paid activists-in-residence and now bestow degrees in activism.

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-arkansas, Harvard Law School, J.D. 2002, after observing the campus chaos and violence, said: “And by the way, any of these students who are foreigners here on visas should immediatel­y have their visas revoked by the Biden Administra­tion, be promptly deported. They have no right to be here. They certainly have no right to be here spewing antisemiti­c and anti-israel filth.”

Deporting lawbreaker­s is, however, inconsiste­nt with Joe Biden’s immigratio­n agenda, which is to reward, not punish, criminals.

The premise is that the visa programs give foreign-born university students an opportunit­y to study in the U.S. so that they will be better able to contribute to their countries’ advancemen­t when they return home. But, in practice, many foreign students remain in the U.S. and hire on with an American company, thus displacing citizen job seekers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States