Chinese students anxious and angry after Rubio vows to revoke visas

posted in: All news | 0

By FU TING, KANIS LEUNG, and HUIZHONG WU

HONG KONG (AP) — Chinese students studying in the U.S. are scrambling to figure out their futures after Secretary of State Marco Rubio announced Wednesday that some of them would have their visas revoked.

The U.S. will begin revoking the visas of some Chinese students, including those studying in “critical fields” and “those with connections to the Chinese Communist Party,” according to the announcement.

China is the second-largest country of origin for international students in the United States, behind only India. In the 2023-2024 school year, more than 270,000 international students were from China, making up roughly a quarter of all foreign students in the U.S.

Rubio’s announcement was a “new version of the Chinese Exclusion Act,” said Liqin, a Chinese student at Johns Hopkins University, who asked to be identified only by his first name out of fear of retaliation. He was referring to a 19th-century law that prohibited Chinese from immigrating to the U.S. and banned Chinese people already in the U.S. from getting citizenship. He said Wednesday was the first time he thought about leaving the U.S. after spending a third of his life here.

Chinese international students are a point of tension

China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson, Mao Ning, called the U.S. decision unreasonable.

“Such a politicized and discriminatory action lays bare the U.S. lie that it upholds so-called freedom and openness,” she said Thursday, adding that China has lodged a protest with the U.S.

The issue of Chinese students studying overseas has long been a point of tension in the bilateral relationship. In 2019, during Trump’s first term, China’s Ministry of Education warned students about visa issues in the U.S., with rising rejection rates and shortening of visas.

Last year, the Chinese Foreign Ministry protested that a number of Chinese students were unfairly interrogated and sent home upon arrival at U.S. airports.

Chinese state media has long hyped gun violence in the U.S. and violent protests during the pandemic, and portrayed the U.S. as a dangerous place that wasn’t safe for its citizens. The tense bilateral relationship has also meant that some Chinese students are opting to study in the U.K. or other countries over the U.S. after the pandemic.

Zou Renge, a 27-year-old public policy master’s student at the University of Chicago, said she had planned to take some time off and work in humanitarian aid programs abroad after graduating at the end of this year.

But now, she will refrain from leaving the U.S. and will look for jobs in the meantime. “In a very uncertain environment, I’ll try my best to find myself a solution,” she said.

Hong Kong seeks to draw in talent amid uncertainty

Some were eager to capitalize on the uncertainty facing international students in the U.S. Hong Kong’s leader John Lee told lawmakers on Thursday that the city would welcome any students who have been discriminated against by American policies to study in the city.

“The students who face unfair treatment can come from different countries beyond the U.S. I think this is an opportunity for Hong Kong,” he said. “We will work with our universities to provide the best support and assistance.”

Related Articles


Harvard grads cheer commencement speakers who call for the school to stand strong


Hmong charter lawsuit v. hedge fund: $400,000 in settlement still unpaid


Secretary of State Marco Rubio says the U.S. will begin revoking the visas of Chinese students


As teacher burnout deepens, states scramble to fill school job vacancies


US stops scheduling visa interviews for foreign students while it expands social media vetting

That followed a widely shared post by the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST) inviting Harvard students to “continue their academic pursuits” there after Trump said he would revoke the university’s ability to accept international students.

Other Hong Kong universities including the Chinese University of Hong Kong and City University of Hong Kong also said they would streamline or facilitate applications from international students coming from top universities in the U.S.

Hong Kong, a former British colony that returned to China in 1997, is a popular destination for mainland Chinese students to pursue their university degrees because of its international image and relative freedoms.

The city launched a new visa scheme in 2022 to counter the exodus of expatriates and local professionals that occurred after Beijing imposed a national security law to quell dissent and during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Will Kwong, managing director at Hong Kong’s AAS Education Consultancy, said his company was helping students with offers from American universities to apply to other institutions, predominantly in Britain and Australia, so that they had alternative choices.

U.S. was known for diversity and this will hurt it, students say

“Having fewer international exchanges is definitely not good for America’s development,” said Zhang Qi, a postdoctoral fellow in Beijing. “This could be a positive change for China’s development. More talented individuals may choose to stay at Tsinghua or Peking University, or with the Chinese Academy of Sciences and other top institutions in China, which would benefit the development of domestic science and technology.”

For many, there is little they can do as they now wait for the fallout from the move.

Chen, a Chinese student at Purdue University who only gave his last name out of concern for retaliation by the Trump administration, has been waiting anxiously in China for his visa approval. But he was also angry, and said this was the exact opposite of what he thought the U.S. stood for.

“I was expecting freedom and tolerance. The U.S. was known for its diversity which allows international students to fit in, but it is a pity to see such change,” he said.

Fu Ting reported from Washington, Wu from Bangkok. Associated Press researcher Shihuan Chen and video producer Olivia Zhang in Beijing contributed to this report.

Clive Crook: The US is about to discover if deficits don’t matter

posted in: All news | 0

It’s hard to think intelligently about public debt and deficits. The economics of fiscal policy is complicated and defies straightforward prescriptions. What’s most striking about budget-making in Washington today, though, is not that legislators are confused about what good debt-management requires. It’s that they’ve just stopped thinking about it.

If passed by the Senate, last week’s vast House budget bill would add between $3 trillion and $5 trillion to deficits over the next 10 years. Yet the plan hasn’t divided the country’s politicians according to whether it’s fiscally reckless. Nowadays, that issue rarely comes up. All that matters is who gains and who loses from the proposed changes to taxes and spending. Whether the economy is heading for fiscal breakdown isn’t Washington’s concern.

In 2002, Vice President Dick Cheney famously said deficits don’t matter, noting that the national debt soared during Ronald Reagan’s time in office (from 21% of GDP to 35%) as the economy boomed. Conscientious fiscal neglect, as one might call it, is nothing new. The difference is that Cheney’s comment was provocative and meant to be: It drew attention and was argued over. Not any longer. Nobody in Congress or the White House thinks it necessary to insist that deficits don’t matter. They’ve simply stopped caring.

This suspension of fiscal anxiety might seem puzzling. Perhaps the public debt is now so big, and on such a fast-rising trajectory, that bringing it back under control seems impossibly difficult. A politician might therefore ask, why worry about it? Without this bill, debt was already on track to exceed 150% of gross domestic product by 2055. But there’s no politically feasible way to rein it in. So why not cut taxes by another few trillion dollars over the next 10 years? Sure, this will raise the debt by another 10 percentage points, but the debt was “unsustainable” anyway, so what’s your point?

It turns out that this pattern — the bigger the debt, the less likely politicians are to address it — is lurking in the data. An International Monetary Fund study in 2010 found that adjustments to fiscal policy in a group of 23 advanced economies were more sensitive to rising debt at low levels of debt than at high levels of debt; beyond a certain point an increase in debt actually resulted in a smaller change in budget policy. A new study of the U.S. found that “fiscal feedback” — the extent to which fiscal policy is tightened when projected deficits go up — has fallen markedly (alongside rapidly rising debt) since 2004.

Admittedly, for much of the past two decades, the view that U.S. deficits don’t matter has been legitimately defensible. The reason is complicated debt dynamics. The gap between the real interest rate on government debt and rate of economic growth plays a crucial role in deciding what’s sustainable. If the interest rate is lower than the growth rate, output will expand faster than the debt plus the cost of servicing it. In other words, given sufficiently low interest rates, the government can run a modest primary (non-interest) budget deficit and still watch the ratio of debt to GDP decline.

For a time after the crash of 2008, and again during the pandemic, the real interest rate was not just less than the growth rate but actually negative. Under such conditions, budget deficits and a falling ratio of debt to GDP can go hand in hand.

Unfortunately, the real interest rate is now back above 2%, which outstrips most estimates of future growth. If this difference persists, a small primary budget surplus will be needed to stop the debt getting any higher. The prospect, even without the House budget bill, is for substantial primary budget deficits as far as the eye can see — and the bill makes these expected deficits materially bigger.

The difference between the required primary surplus and the projected primary deficits is a measure of the fiscal adjustment needed merely to hold the debt ratio constant. It’s about 2-3 percentage points of GDP — between $6 trillion and $9 trillion of tax increases and spending cuts over 10 years — again, not counting the new budget.

You can see why politicians might prefer not to think about this. And it’s always possible that the problem will indeed go away if it’s ignored. A lot can change. Faster growth (maybe thanks partly to the budget bill’s tax cuts, or an AI revolution, or who knows what?) would restrain or even reverse the rise of debt. Spending and revenue projections are usually wrong: With luck, they’ll be wrong in a helpful way. Moreover, estimates of the bill’s fiscal impact leave tariff revenues out of account; these are especially uncertain, with policy fluctuating day by day, but they could put a dent in the projected future deficits.

Still, the fiscal risks seem heavily loaded to the other side. As the debt grows, the fiscal adjustment required to hold it steady keeps getting bigger. All these projections assume no recessions, which would put further upward pressure on deficits. The House has held down the cost of its budget with a new batch of supposedly temporary measures and other accounting gimmickry; correcting for this, the 10-year addition to deficits will be closer to $5 trillion than $3 trillion. The Trump administration’s tariffs, and all their associated frictions, will likely mean lower growth. The U.S. also faces an aging population and the prospect of more tightly restricted immigration — together acting as a further drag on growth and accelerator of entitlement spending.

Looming over all is the likely cost of borrowing. Until recently, very low interest rates granted unbounded fiscal space. Not only that, but they were also an expression of financial markets’ confidence that all would be well — particularly reassuring, given that investors have every incentive to look forward and weigh risks. But lately rates have not only risen, they’ve also registered episodes of alarm about aspects of economic policy. Add the administration’s evident preference for a depreciated currency, and investors can no longer take for granted the safety of U.S. government debt. It might require a bigger risk premium. This suggests an inflection point, at which higher risks raise interest rates, which destabilizes the debt, which raises interest rates, and so on. If things unravel, it could happen very quickly.

Here’s one way to look at it. In recent years, U.S. politicians and investors have agreed, for their different reasons, not to think about rising public debt. If investors change their minds about this, begin to wonder where it all leads, and start to place their bets accordingly, an entirely new fiscal regime kicks in. And if that happens, the politicians’ complacency will hit a wall.

Clive Crook is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and member of the editorial board covering economics. Previously, he was deputy editor of the Economist and chief Washington commentator for the Financial Times.

Related Articles


Parmy Olson: AI sometimes deceives to survive. Does anybody care?


Maureen Dowd: Dance$ with emolument$


Ezra Klein: Trump’s BBB — Big Budget Bomb


Snoey, Morocco: The emergency in emergency medicine


Allison Schrager: Republicans like Europe — whether they know it or not

Christopher Harrington: Experiencing the arts transforms the way we see the world

posted in: All news | 0

Sharing my origin story has become a regular part of my role as a leader and mentor, about how a young boy from Detroit, Michigan, would ultimately move to St. Paul, Minnesota, as an adult to lead one of the most prestigious performing arts centers in the world. While it was undoubtedly a non-linear path, the dots can be connected back to being exposed to the arts as a young person by my elementary school teacher, going on field trips to cultural events on the yellow school bus, and having access to places like the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts.

The arts thrive when they belong to everyone. When the Ordway opened its doors in 1985, our chief benefactor and guiding spirit, Sally Ordway Irvine, had a vision to create a place where ALL the performing arts would be embraced and ALL members of the community would feel welcome. That vision is alive and well 40 years later. The Flint Hills Family Festival, presented by the Ordway, embodies this ethos each summer in downtown St. Paul.

It is a gift to the community, and I am proud to champion the Flint Hills Family Festival. Not just because it’s the country’s largest and longest-running festival of its kind, but because it drives economic impact and contributes to the vitality and vibrancy of our community. I continue to be inspired by teachers, parents and guardians who often make sacrifices to share the power of the arts. As a lifelong learner, I have picked up a thing or two from the youngest festival attendees, like hula-hooping and the power of perseverance.

2025 is a big year of milestones for us. In addition to it being the Ordway’s 40th anniversary and the 10th anniversary of the Ordway Concert Hall opening, this year the festival is celebrating its 25th year. This milestone is a celebration of what happens when businesses and communities prioritize the arts as a public good. Since 2001, the festival has welcomed more than 1 million people to Rice Park in downtown Saint Paul to enjoy live performances, concerts and free activities designed to spark curiosity in toddlers, teens and adults alike. This year, the festival will welcome over 25,000 attendees and will feature more than 270 artists, including local veterans and Grammy winners, alongside interactive art stations run by local educators and volunteers.

For 25 years, the passion of Minnesotans has made this event more than just a music festival for families. It’s an invitation to the arts for the next generation. When families attend the Flint Hills Family Festival, they’re part of a legacy. Many of the first generation of festival-goers – kids whose eyes lit up at their first theater or concert experience in 2001 – are now parents themselves. Some of them will return with their children to this year’s event, passing down a tradition of curiosity and artistic discovery.

Nationwide, 25-year corporate partnerships are becoming increasingly rare. For a quarter century, Flint Hills Resources has partnered with the Ordway as a believer in making the arts accessible to all. Together, we’ve weathered economic downturns, shifting trends and a pandemic, all while keeping these formative experiences affordable. We have worked side-by-side to invest in ensuring families of all shapes, backgrounds and socioeconomic status see themselves represented onstage.

Live, in-person, shared experiences with the arts are more important now than ever. When we experience the arts, it transforms the way we see the world, and most importantly, helps us to better understand our place in it. I believe we have a responsibility to invest in the current and future generations of creatives, as well as our business, civic and community leaders. This can be done by exposing young people (and the young at heart) to the arts through longstanding events like the festival, which runs from May 28-31 at the Ordway in downtown St. Paul.

There is a plethora of data that documents the many benefits of being exposed to the arts, including emotional and social growth, better academic outcomes and being more civically engaged. But you don’t need data to feel it — watch a child’s face decorated with paint light up as they step into a crowd buzzing with music, and you’ll understand why this festival — the largest and longest-running of its kind — isn’t just the Ordway’s or Flint Hills’ legacy. It’s all of Minnesota’s.

Christopher Harrington is president and CEO of the Ordway Center for the Performing Arts in St. Paul.

Related Articles


Real World Economics: Pragmatism, not globalist ideology, drove U.S. trade policy


Your Money: Your future is counting on you


Skywatch: High heavenly hair


Joe Soucheray: George Floyd Square is an embarrassment to the man it’s supposed to honor


Letters: What’s your plan, Democrats? It’s so much safer to just criticize

 

Letters: Stop with the antisemitism

posted in: All news | 0

Stop with the antisemitism

Antisemitism keeps on coming back and rearing its ugly head. Worldwide, the Jewish population is actually a very small fraction of the total global population.

There’s approximately 15.3 million people who consider themselves Jewish. Globally, the total population is about 8.23 billion. That comes well less than 0.2%. It’s not even close to 1%. That’s just a very small tick of 1%.

Antisemitism has been around for thousands of years. Antisemitic friends have told me that the Jews control the governments and banking systems around the world. They told me that Jewish people are devious and sneaky. They control Hollywood. They control the media. They control the economies all over the world. Really? A slight tick of 1% of the worldwide population has enough wealth and political power to alter our world? Please. Enough of that ridiculous sentiment.

I ask my friends about how they know this. They reply, well so and so told them that was what they heard from somebody else or they read it on social media, or it was passed or handed down from their families and neighbors. No proof was offered. It’s all of a part of a self-directed self-energized unofficial propaganda campaign against a group of people who are innocent and being society’s scapegoat. It’s probably magnified since WWII.

What purposes and benefits does this antisemitism attitude provide to societies worldwide? For every thousand people you meet, statistically only one or two are Jewish. It’s likely you don’t know who they are, but they can be good friends and they share the same values, dreams and ideas that you do. They look like you and they act like you. They are average people like you.

Their “sin” if you will, is that some of them practice Judaism, or some have Jewish blood and family relations. There are over 10,000 distinct religions in the world. Much of Christianity is based on Judaism concepts. Why do people feel threatened when someone practices a different religion than you? Jesus was a Jew and he practiced Judaism. Are Christians really offended by this fact? When Jesus’ name is raised, are you going to practice antisemitism around his name?

I wish that antisemitism would go away and let the world be at peace with itself. When people practice antisemitism, they give or endow some kind of power to Jewish people who really never had it or wanted it in the first place. Why are people who practices antisemitism so afraid and fearful of people that they really don’t know? Antisemitism seems to be a religion in itself. It seems to be a belief or religious system of hatred.

If you are a part of the antisemitism chain of unfounded claims and no facts, please stop. Think about what you say and do. Just stop. And tell others to stop as well.

Barry Siebert, St. Paul

 

It’s more than just criticism

The May 22 letter (“So much safer to just criticize”) notes the multiple daily articles in the Pioneer Press regarding budget cuts directed by President Trump and the DOGE team that are causing hardships to the American people. The writer states that Democrats put forward nothing but criticisms of these cuts and offer no solutions to the looming budget deficit crisis.

Within these numerous articles the cuts are repeatedly described as random and reckless and that they do very little to resolve the deficit. In the meantime, Trump’s “big beautiful bill” would add trillions of dollars to the deficit.

I agree that a solution requires bipartisan cooperation. For now, flagging destructive, ill-conceived rogue actions is more than criticism. It’s telling the truth.

Steve Masson, St. Paul

 

Consent decree politics: much ado

As observed by a person within our Minnesota state government, “the removal of a federal consent decree agreement ‘doesn’t have any meaningful impact on reform efforts’… because the Minnesota state consent decree also forces the City of Minneapolis to make major policing reforms.”

Minneapolis politicians, and some DFLers, have seized the moment to portray themselves as Department of Justice victims and, accordingly, as Minnesota’s progressive ideology leaders.

Call it all “much ado about nothing.”

Gene Delaune, New Brighton

 

Up to all of us

America celebrated Memorial Day with parades and events to honor the military who served and died to preserve the freedoms we experience today. It is ironic that, at the same time, these same freedoms are rapidly being dismantled by Donald Trump and his supporters.

Congress has the power to reverse this trend.  People must unite and become active — protest, lobby, contact congressmen by email or phone. All or any congressman, U.S. Congress positions affect all residents.

Googling can get lists of congressional members’ phone numbers and email addresses.

These senators and representatives must hear from many and be reminded that their positions may be severely devalued if democracy, as we know it, continues to diminish.

Former President Obama says, “It is up to all of us to fix this.”

Mary DePrey, Roseville

 

They saved the Bur Oaks

Kudos to White Bear Lake City Council members Heidi Hughes, Andrea West, and Kevin Edberg for rejecting the City of White Bear Lake’s Mobility and Parking plan because it required the cutting down of a 150-year-old Bur Oak tree.

They brought an amendment the excluded the tree from being cut, and supported the White Bear Lake community that rose up to defend all the Bur Oaks that were originally slated to be cut for 15 parking spaces.

Honorable mention goes to the White Bear Lake Environmental Advisory Commission that opposed the cutting of the four Bur Oak from the beginning, and persisted when they were ignored; and to the many WBL residents who wrote letters to the White Bear Press, and the 28 people who spoke up to defend the trees at the City Council Hearing.

“Paved paradise” but saved the Bur Oaks.

Ann Frisch,  White Bear Lake

 

What does a city owe its current residents?

What does a city owe its residents? Residents of Lowertown have learned it’s illegal to park on Fourth Street East.  If you park too long, you’ll likely get a ticket. Come down here on a typical day and the street is clear for traffic.

This is not the case during events. Come down here on a Farmers Market morning and you’ll see a dozen vehicles lined up between Wacouta and Broadway. Illegally parked, in the lane of traffic, congesting an already busy area.

If the city and its leaders are working tirelessly to drive more businesses, events and people to the city, what does the city owe its residents who currently live here? Do the residents deserve the proper infrastructure to handle this increased traffic?

If the city was building an event from scratch, I think they would not allow vehicles to be illegally parked and be left unattended directly across the street from where hundreds of people are gathered. Yet, this routinely happens at the Farmers Market.

I’m not just picking on the Farmers Market. This parking issue happens in varying degrees during Saints games, art fairs or any event that drives visitors to the area.  There are plenty of places to park legally in Lowertown. Illegal parking increases congestion and decreases safety.

When I asked the city to help, I was told concurrently that the infrastructure is perfectly fine and if I wanted increased signage to deter illegal parking I would have to pay for it myself.

So what does the city owe its residents? Are we a serious city or are we just pretending? I feel we deserve better.

Ryan Radunzel, St. Paul

 

We’re all responsible for Donald Trump

I find it amusing the number of people who want to blame the Democrats for Donald Trump. We are all responsible for Trump as none were able or willing to stop him.

Those who could have, congressional Republicans, the Supreme Court, and American voters, failed to do so.

So the question becomes what are we going to do about Trump and what future do you envision with Trump?

As Shakespeare wrote,  “The fault lies in our ourselves and not in the stars”

Donald Rohrer, Woodbury

Related Articles


Clive Crook: The US is about to discover if deficits don’t matter


Christopher Harrington: Experiencing the arts transforms the way we see the world


Parmy Olson: AI sometimes deceives to survive. Does anybody care?


Editorial: A building boom on federal land? It just might work


Maureen Dowd: Dance$ with emolument$