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Scientific Research Encountering More Restrictions

vab writes "MSNBC is running an article that details how the MIT AI Lab, the birth place of the free software movement, walked away from a $404K study because the government wanted to restrict participation by foreign students. The article talks about further restrictions the US Government is trying to impose in the name of homeland security and how other research institutions are reacting."

505 comments

  1. Hey I'll take the money by inteller · · Score: 1

    I'll stand on my head and pledge alliegence to GW if someone gives me 404k. I can think of a lot of other universities that would gladly take that money too.

    1. Re:Hey I'll take the money by MImeKillEr · · Score: 2

      I won't be greedy - I'd do it for $1000.

      Heck, I'd do it for the $200 I need for a new motherboard and RAM for my new Athlon XP 2200+ !

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    2. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Old+Uncle+Bill · · Score: 2, Funny

      Definitely! I'm sure there are a lot of racist Universities out there with little or no ethics.

      --
      Yes, I am an agent of Satan, but my duties are largely ceremonial.
    3. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You would gain 404k and lose an unimaginable amount in competent software engineers.

      I'll trade you 2 shiny brand new pennies for that old tattered hundred dollar bill, after all, 2 is more than 1!

    4. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds to me like Al Quaida could buy you rather easily. Perhaps the towel-heads should start sending you checks. Then you can change your nick to inteller bin laden.

      Extreme yes... but not everyone has such a [low] price. Schools are meant to be "pure", for learning purposes. When they become puppets and jump through hoops for material gain, then that purity (agenda for learning) is lost. I think it takes balls to say "no" to it, but is 400k a lot to this particular school? Obviously not enough to dump their beliefs.

    5. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I can think of a lot of other universities that would gladly take that money too. But they are not MIT. It's not a question of to pledge or not to pledge, but a question of having a hard problem to solve and having the intelectual power to do it.

    6. Re:Hey I'll take the money by dhartman · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Puppets? I don't know what school you went to, but most, if not all, undergraduate programs exist only out of necessity. Universities reward professors based on the amount of funding they bring into the system. Maybe this type of funding, while it may be racist, is just what we need to encourage more US born people to pursue advanced degrees. The percentage of foreign grad students is pretty high in most universities (I'm talking technology based degrees...who cares about a PhD in History)

      So you can go on living that fairy tail...I'll just rememeber who to contact when I decide to sell my swamp land in Florida.

    7. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then what terminology would be the one to use here?

    8. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's fairy tale, you insensitive clod!

    9. Re:Hey I'll take the money by NecroPuppy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      There is no saying it was racist.

      Nationalist, sure, but that isn't the same thing.

      If the 'strings' had said "No French" or "No Germans", then this conversation wouldn't be happening.

      In this case, the NSA wanted to pre-screen any foreign nationals working on the project.

      I'm sorry, but I don't see the racism there. They didn't say that they (the foreign nationals) automatically couldn't work on the project, they just wanted to check out whichever ones did.

      Profiling? Maybe. But it happens regularly in government and business. The last two companies I worked for had a much more rigorous screening process for foreign nationals. In their defense, they'd gotten burned at least once.

      But then so has the US Government. I don't blame them for being careful.

      --
      I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
    10. Re:Hey I'll take the money by RCO · · Score: 1

      I think the terminology would be "nationalist"

      --
      'And all the monkeys aren't in the zoo Every day you meet quite a few...'
    11. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 1
      There is a difference between race and national origin.

      True, but many people use "racist" as shorthand for "bigoted" or "discriminatory on the basis of race/ethic origin/religion/nationality", on the grounds that they are morally interchangeably misguided concepts.

      (the exception of this is rightwing americans, who restrict the term 'racist' to some nebulous (and erroneous) biological notion so they can justify their bigoted statements along the lines of "I'm not a racist, because 'raghead' isn't a race".)

    12. Re:Hey I'll take the money by nicsterrr · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What makes you think that more funding will improve the situation? The reason the percentage of foreign grad students pursuing PhDs is so high is because (this is the case in the uk and I assume also the us) the income from a PhD is so low. When faced with the choice of doing a PhD and earning $12k per year for 3-4 years or taking that job offer with company xyz for $30k per year rising to $60k after 4 years, it's easy to see why uk born graduates take the job.

      More funding will simply increase the amount of new PhDs available, not increase the salaries of the people doing the PhDs.

      Also, many of the PhD graduates I have known have the opinion that one's employability after completing the PhD is the same (and sometimes less) than before the PhD, unless the objective is to stay in academia.

    13. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when do we have an obligation to educate our foreign enemies? This is my country, not theirs.

    14. Re:Hey I'll take the money by filekutter · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I wouldn't take a cent from that administration. Bush's presidency has become an Orwellian nightmare which DOES parallel Hitler's rise... (compare the sloganeering of Bush with the exact same from adolph) "404" K ----- just like a non-existent website? the money will never show? ROFLMAO! good for MIT, they have the balls to stand up to that rascist-texas-moron....

      --
      I call computer-illiteracy job security
    15. Re:Hey I'll take the money by dhartman · · Score: 1

      Sorry I'm lacking the proper amount of caffeine this morning. Thanks for pointing out my grammatical inadequacies. I'm sure I'll sleep better tonight knowing that someone will be there to correct me if I slip.

    16. Re:Hey I'll take the money by zenyu · · Score: 2


      There is no saying it was racist.

      Nationalist, sure, but that isn't the same thing.


      While I would agree that it probably is just dumbfucks in the government not racism, those two sentences just don't make sense together after the 20th century.. Like, well, NAZI -- "Nationalist..." Milosovitch... Just about every murder in the last century was for nationalist reasons, millions upon millions of people... and there was a tinge of racism in both the cases I mentioned. As there was with Stalin, Jonson&Nixon, Truman, and most other nationalist war criminals.

    17. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I am almost certain that you will be able to add Bush to that list in the near future. Sigh.

      God Bless the U.S.S.A.

    18. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Listen+Up · · Score: 3, Insightful


      "I'll take the money"..." There is no saying it was racist."...what a couple of ignorant, blind, apathetic as*holes.
      This is McCarthyism all over again, folks. The Bush adminstration needs to be taken out of office NOW. Land of the free??? Land of the federated, pre-fascist states. The government told MIT that the only way that MIT could get a $404k research grant was to let the NSA do a complete background investigation on all "non-Americans and foreign nationals" only, in the name of "Homeland Security". MIT said to piss off and forfeited the grant.
      YEAH MIT!!!
      Could you imagine how f*cked we would have been in WWII if the Department of Homeland Security wouldn't let Einstein work on research in our country because he was German (and a supporter of Communism)?
      "Homeland Security" = xenophobia and racism. Period.
      Mistakes of our past are meant to be lessons in which we learn from to not make again, they are not meant to be repeated. One of my favorite quotes in the world..."They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety -- Benjamin Franklin." That is exactly that the Bush administration is.

    19. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Could you imagine how f*cked we would have been in WWII if the Department of Homeland Security wouldn't let Einstein work on research in our country because he was German (and a supporter of Communism)?

      And I'm sure Einstein had a huge FBI file and was investigated quite a bit.

      "Homeland Security" = xenophobia and racism. Period.

      Every nation has a right to defend it's national security. Performing background investigations on foreign nationals working on government grant projects is not a big deal. It certainly has nothing to do with racism.

    20. Re:Hey I'll take the money by glwtta · · Score: 2
      There is a difference between race and national origin.

      but there is a lot less difference between racism and xenophobia.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    21. Re:Hey I'll take the money by DroppedPacket · · Score: 0
      This is McCarthyism all over again, folks. The Bush adminstration needs to be taken out of office NOW. ... Could you imagine how f*cked we would have been in WWII if the Department of Homeland Security wouldn't let Einstein work on research in our country because he was German (and a supporter of Communism)?

      Um, dude? You do know that Soviet archives do show that McCarthy was correct in his assertions about Communists trying to control content in Hollywood? (You do also know that Richard Nixon proved Alger Hiss to be a Communist working for the Soviet Union? Soviet archives showed him to be correct also.)

      Just thought I would point these things out to your biggoted white liberal ass. Oh, sorry, did I make a wrong assumption there? Perhaps you are just one of the decadant Americans which must be converted to Islam or killed. Whoops, that would just be another biggoted statement on my part.

      You can also be pretty damn sure the FBI did investigate Einstein before bringing him into any research. Just as they did for all the people on the Manhatten Project.

      You do know that to get a security clearance, you need to get a background check, right? Or are you just professionally ignorant?

      --
      I am not a resource! I am a free man!
    22. Re:Hey I'll take the money by glwtta · · Score: 2
      They didn't say that they (the foreign nationals) automatically couldn't work on the project, they just wanted to check out whichever ones did.

      I am not getting into the rest of the argument, but why do I find these statements so very, very hard to stomach?

      The picture of this warm and cuddly NSA "simpley checking things out" just somehow doesn't materialize.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    23. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are JAISDDA.

    24. Re:Hey I'll take the money by schmink182 · · Score: 1
      I don't blame them for being careful

      I agree. Perhaps we're not yet being careful enough. Let's cut funding to schools who want to teach foreign students.

      And now that I think of it, there's a pretty good chance, with all this anti-terrorism shit going on, that a few Americans might want to help the terrorists. Maybe we should just make it so that the government needs to do a background check on students before pursuing higher education.

      Yeah... Good idea to be careful...

    25. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Listen+Up · · Score: 3, Insightful


      Um, dude? You do know that Soviet archives do show that McCarthy was correct in his assertions about Communists trying to control content in Hollywood? (You do also know that Richard Nixon proved Alger Hiss to be a Communist working for the Soviet Union? Soviet archives showed him to be correct also.)
      That was not my point.
      Just thought I would point these things out to your biggoted white liberal ass. Oh, sorry, did I make a wrong assumption there?
      Yes, you did.
      Perhaps you are just one of the decadant Americans which must be converted to Islam or killed. Whoops, that would just be another biggoted statement on my part.
      Yes, it was.
      You can also be pretty damn sure the FBI did investigate Einstein before bringing him into any research. Just as they did for all the people on the Manhatten Project.
      That was not my point.
      You do know that to get a security clearance, you need to get a background check, right?
      Yes, I used to have one.
      Or are you just professionally ignorant?
      I am professional, yes, ignorant, no. I am simply not blinded by our current nationalism and so-called patriotism because of 09/11/2001. What needs to happen is to judge each person's actions individually, not just because they are from outside the US. The solution lies in fixing the cause of terrorism, nothing else. I could full well support the fall of Israel myself, and I am a full (born in the US) citizen and an educated, self-thinking man (read: educated atheist). What makes me any less dangerous than someone who is here on an education grant studying at MIT and follows Islam? Nothing. I can kill you just as much as them. Therefore the logic being followed by our government is wrong. You solve problems by solving the source of the problem. Why do people hate the US? And then solve that problem. That problem does not have a race, a face, or a nationality. People both inside and outside the US hate the US. Why? That is what is important. Not racial, national, or religious discrimination in a futile attempt to solve a much larger problem.

    26. Re:Hey I'll take the money by Legion+XIII · · Score: 1

      Um, dude? You do know that Soviet archives do show that McCarthy was correct in his assertions about Communists trying to control content in Hollywood? (You do also know that Richard Nixon proved Alger Hiss to be a Communist working for the Soviet Union? Soviet archives showed him to be correct also.)

      So you are saying that in the name of "safety" we should instead let the NSA control our media content and educational institutions? First we can weed out those radical Islamic zealots, and when we are done we can move on to those damn liberal zealots too. How about Gays and Lesbians? It's only a matter of time before they resort to terrorism to gain the freedom to marry each other. Sounds like a great plan! Let's all jump on the bandwagon and start turning in our neighbors who are acting "Un-American" and maybe if I turn in one or two I just don't like no one will even notice. That makes me feel all warm and fuzzy. :-)

    27. Re:Hey I'll take the money by denisdekat · · Score: 1
      and the amazing thing is he won this election with 39% of eligible voters voting, %5 of those who voted voted for an alternative, and of the remaindign %95 of those votes he did not even win half.

      It is amazing poeple stand for that. Go vote.

    28. Re:Hey I'll take the money by garethx1 · · Score: 1

      What about screening for some american wackos http://www.creator.org/ ?

    29. Re:Hey I'll take the money by filekutter · · Score: 1

      and what exactly are you saying?

      --
      I call computer-illiteracy job security
  2. Foreign students by Uruk · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm glad MIT did the right thing and walked away from this study. It is although somewhat difficult to tell whether they did this out of a principled stand or if they did it simply because they have so many foreign students that they wouldn't be able to pull it off unless they used them. That quite possibly could be the case.

    There's no reason to believe that some college student from Hong Kong is a terrorist. Sure there are some terrorists out there, but I doubt they're sweating their midterms at some university. To deny foreigners the ability to work on some stuff isn't just slightly racist, it's outrageously stupid since there are some unbelievably bright people who come to the US from other places for school.

    In the financial services industry, most people have to be bonded - that is the FBI gets your fingerprints and they do some sort of rudimentary background check on you. Would that placate the "homeland security" wolves? At any rate, it would be more information on foreign students than they have on most Americans.

    Sometimes I think that homeland security is the process of a bunch of people staring at a collander and trying to decide which hole to patch first. Sure it's possible to keep the total morons from pullling off something big (or burning you in the same way they did before) but how many people out there really think that with anything less than a fascist state, it's possible to secure the country against someone whose well funded, clever, and out to get the US?

    --
    -- Truth goes out the door when rumor comes innuendo. -- Groucho Marx
    1. Re:Foreign students by Anne_Nonymous · · Score: 5, Informative

      >> It is although somewhat difficult to tell whether they did this out of a principled stand or if they did it simply because they have so many foreign students that they wouldn't be able to pull it off unless they used them.

      According to a nice inverview on NPR this morning, it was the principal of the thing.

      http://www.npr.org/programs/morning/index.html

      (I don't think there's a direct link yet this morning)

    2. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoops, that's "principle" and "interview". Sorry.

    3. Re:Foreign students by burNtchicken · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The trend is disturbing, and in one specific sense I think you're right. They're trying to patch holes, or alleviate symptons, instead of attacking the source of the problem. Is anyone in government asking what the source is?
      If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S., then why are they doing it? With all the anti-U.S. sentiment that I hear in some discussion groups, are we doing something wrong?
      It's not that we shouldn't patch holes in our security, because we should. It just seems to me that nobody is addressing the policies of our country which have made us a target. Maybe we're doing something wrong, and maybe we're not, but nobody in the government is bothering to ask.
      It's like we're the automatic moral authority.

    4. Re:Foreign students by Unordained · · Score: 1

      and it's not like, say, in the fifties ... we used foreign scientists to, say, help build up our military again in the name of safety. except back then, we'd just -finished- a war with the germans, and i guess we felt safe taking their scientists to defeat the russians? and we seem just fine with buying japan-made cars and equipment ... even though we had to nuke them to end the war quickly ... but we're afraid of -random- foreign students, because we have a problem with a few isolated terrorist groups? talk about killing the patient to cure him ...

      "Maybe their germans are better than our germans" (The Right Stuff)

    5. Re:Foreign students by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 4, Funny

      the position of the government is this:

      "We're right. Why? Because. Don't make me invade you! Nyah"

    6. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe we're doing something wrong, and maybe we're not, but nobody in the government is bothering to ask...
      Actually Americans are practising economic repression all over the world. Playing policeman to countries whose people, not the governmnet necessarily, do not want foreigh intervention of any kind.
      Remember, when you accept American help, it comes with a price. American government tries to gloss over that fact. Try living abroad and listening to other people. America is a ledgend in it's own mind.

    7. Re:Foreign students by plugger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Very insightful, but when you say 'Maybe we're doing something wrong', you make the same mistake as those who hate Americans. You, and most of your compatriots, are doing nothing wrong. It's your government's policies which are causing anger abroad.

      I'm at work at the moment, so I won't explore the idea that apathetic populations are responsible for their government's excesses. That isn't a dig at the USA btw, I live in the UK and we're quickly catching up with your country's low voter turnout and general disinterest in the things done in our name.

    8. Re:Foreign students by HeelToe · · Score: 1
      • In the financial services industry, most people have to be bonded - that is the FBI gets your fingerprints and they do some sort of rudimentary background check on you. Would that placate the "homeland security" wolves? At any rate, it would be more information on foreign students than they have on most Americans.
      Maybe this isn't done because with the FBI doing background checks, their information would be limited to the activities of those students while in the U.S. The FBI's charter is domestic investigation. They can probably do this quite well for U.S. Citizens, but not as easily for foreigners.
    9. Re:Foreign students by tetra103 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Not to start a flame war, but I do find some value in the actions the government is taking. In hind site, sure it looks bad and probably prejudice, but put yourself in power and tell me what you would do? The country is treatened mostly by terrorists from the Middle East. Their background indicates most took advantage of student visas. Where would you start plugging the holes. Yeah, it may be prejudice, but it's just common sense. To a certain degree, I don't think prejudism can be avoided. If a group of 100 aliens from PlanetX attacked PlanetY and you only had one week to secure PlanetY from another attack, would it not make sense to check ids for PlanetX folks. Oh yes, highly prejudice, but would this not make sense? Now, to launch a hate crime attack against all PlanetX aliens would most definitely be wrong, but I see nothing wrong with profiling your enemy.

    10. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You don't have to explore the idea. I know that populations are responsible for their government's policies. Unfortunately, while it can be attributed partially to apathy, there is a general feeling here that there is nothing we can do about our governments problems (ie. corruption, etc.) Like it's more or less too big and out of our control.

      I unfortunately, am just peeking out of my hole and beginning to educate myself on what I can do about the problems with my government. And I'd have to say it's rather intimidating, and I don't think most people are up to the task. Most of us feel free to bitch about our government, but not really do anything. Nobody really cares that much.

      I know personally that for most of my life I've been content to work to pay the bills, and screw off (Watch TV, play video games, go to a bar, whatever). Most people I know are the same. I've met a good amount of people in my life, and I don't know one person that does more than vote occasionally. Nobody even writes their representatives. I mean, I'm sure people do, but I've never met those people.

      In my, albiet limited, experience, the mindset of this country is not one of concern in how our country turns out, or what we can do to make sure that it stays a worthwhile place to live for ourselves, and future generations. The mindset is generally more selfish.

    11. Re:Foreign students by tetra103 · · Score: 1

      You also have to understand that sometimes people just hate other people out of envy. PersonA sits on his ass all day in their shack and hates PersonB because PersonB works hard and has a nice house. I know it's not that simple, but jealousy does play a role. I think the world looks at the USA like we're all rich and they(some) hate us for it. Truth is, the average American works their ass off to make a living.

    12. Re:Foreign students by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      --Maybe we're doing something wrong, and maybe we're not, but nobody in the government is bothering to ask.--

      No, we have taken over as world policeman, a job that was once held by the British Commonwealth because we happen to be the strongest nation at this point in time or since 1945. Also, policing the dispute in the Modest when 3 of the major religions lay claim to Jerusalem is probably going to make someone mad at you for taking sides.

      The trouble there is not about oil, but religion.

    13. Re:Foreign students by ErikZ · · Score: 5, Insightful


      What if it's because we're doing something RIGHT? What if by accepting the best and brightest from all over the world, we're leaving these heavily armed countries with the dregs of humanity?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    14. Re:Foreign students by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 1
      Truth is, the average American works their ass off to make a living.

      Not as much as the slaves^W people that make all those "made in $3RD_WORLD_COUNTRY" goods you buy, because no american worker will get out of bed to make $CHEAP_GENERIC_PRODUCT for 20 cents an hour. The american way of life (the one that's "not up for negotiation" according to GWB) is based on the economic exploitation of other countries.

    15. Re:Foreign students by CBravo · · Score: 1

      many countries have rich people, I think your argument does not hold.

      --
      nosig today
    16. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Translation:

      Zieg HEIL!

      Zieg HEIL!

      Zieg HEIL!

    17. Re:Foreign students by tetra103 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes, and we enslave other countries to do our work? If they didn't make our cheap crap, we'd somehow go to war with them? It's a global economy and work generally flows to the lowest bidder. How is that exploiting? If anything, it spreads the common wealth. Think of it this way: Say an American refuses to work for little pay. The job then goes over seas. This continues until all jobs leave the country. Great, we now have all this stuff imported from over seas but now that very American can't buy it because he has no job and no money to pay for it. Hmmm, things must equalize somehow...You seem to think that just because 3rd world countries make products for the USA that we're somehow exploiting them. Did you ever think that it's better then having no job at all?

    18. Re:Foreign students by tetra103 · · Score: 1

      Agreed, and my comment (right or wrong) was a generality. My impression (generality) from the foreigners I've met tend to think that way.

    19. Re:Foreign students by tassii · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S., then why are they doing it? With all the anti-U.S. sentiment that I hear in some discussion groups, are we doing something wrong?

      But what if we aren't? (We are going out of our way to piss people off btw, but the argument must go both ways.) Sometimes you just have to face up to the fact that some people need to hate. The Nazi's did it in WWII, the Taliban did it until we stepped in and most terrorist organizations are doing it as we speak. Yes, many of these organizations started with a principle and a goal, but too quickly those that thrived on hate rose in power and soon the message was tossed out the window and hate took over. Look at the Islamic Jihad in Palestine. If the Israelis split their country down the middle and created the Palestinian State, they would still find a reason for suicide bombers to go into Israel, even tho their proported purpose has been accomplished. The leaders thrive on the hate and see no reason to give up their personal power just because a little thing like peace tried to break out.

      It's not that we shouldn't patch holes in our security, because we should. It just seems to me that nobody is addressing the policies of our country which have made us a target. Maybe we're doing something wrong, and maybe we're not, but nobody in the government is bothering to ask.

      That's because the people in power here as well are thriving on conflict. Lets face it, if it wasn't for Sept 11 and the following "war on terrorism", GW's approval rating would be in the toilet. That's one of the reason's that the Iraq thing has 'suddenly' become so important. Those in power need something to distract us from the porblems at home. What politian said "Nothing like a nice little war to distract the people from the real problems"?

      --
      "I drank what?" - Socrates
    20. Re:Foreign students by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Great, we now have all this stuff imported from over seas but now that very American can't buy it because he has no job and no money to pay for it. Hmmm, things must equalize somehow...

      Execpt that's the point when the so-called "free market" government of the US suddenly forgets about free marketeering and becomes protectionist. Think steel import tariffs.

      You seem to think that just because 3rd world countries make products for the USA that we're somehow exploiting them. Did you ever think that it's better then having no job at all?

      Does the phrase "economic leverage" mean anything to you? US (or european, for that matter) importers of goods can dictate prices at will to 3rd world (sweatshop) manufacturers, because if the workers complain the sweatshop just gets moved somewhere else. It may be better than no job at all, but I'd still call that "exploitation", wouldn't you?

    21. Re:Foreign students by Spellbinder · · Score: 0

      they are responsible for counter espionage inside of the usa.. then they should probably can do a simple background check ...

      --


      stop supporting microsoft with pirating their software!!!!!
    22. Re:Foreign students by tetra103 · · Score: 1

      Yes, I'm sure the US does have the upper hand in trading with foreign counties, but do the actions surprize you? Say you were the employer of a company. You have a hard worker who has done good work for you for the past 5 years. You get this urge for a new car...you find another worker who'll do the same job for half the pay...do you make that buisness decision to let the high paid empoyee go in favor of the new cheap labor? It's not a black and white answer and depending on the person and circumstances, the outcome could go either way. Morally, you may do the right thing, but if your company was in major debt, you may have to make a cold handed buisness decision.

    23. Re:Foreign students by Melantha_Bacchae · · Score: 4, Insightful

      burNtchicken wrote:

      > They're trying to patch holes, or alleviate
      > symptons, instead of attacking the source of the
      > problem. Is anyone in government asking what the
      > source is?

      Nope. Our fearless leader listens to his political advisors, but not his policy advisors. So he, and the rest of the government, fixes perceived holes and symptoms, as the people stampede in panic (driven on by the media), and people like Ashcroft and Poindexter try to use the stampede to further their little power trip.

      Three women, wise, courageous, and loving, dared to speak out. If they had been listened to, part of 911 could have been averted, and Enron and Worldcom could have pulled out of their nose dives, lives and fortunes could have been saved. But no one listened, and now it is far too late.

      > If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S.,
      > then why are they doing it? With all the
      > anti-U.S. sentiment that I hear in some
      > discussion groups, are we doing something wrong?

      Al Qaeda is run by a madman, they don't need reasons to hate anybody. As for the rest, try reading some foreign newspapers (many have English versions on the web), and they will give you an earful. Everything from Iraq, to our position on Israel (and supplying the weapons they use to kill kids), to the misbehavior of our troups in the many places they are stationed (South Korea is furious over one of our vehicles running into two of their girls), to our general stance as the world's greatest bully (er, superpower). Our nation may be founded on great ideals, but we aren't exactly measuring up to them these days.

      > It's not that we shouldn't patch holes in our
      > security, because we should.

      We can't. Even if we became a totalitarian regime, the country is just too big, we don't have the money, and it would disrupt our infrastructure too badly. We could have fixed the existing communications problems and upgraded the FBI's computers, but that would have been too boring to get funding for.

      "Lola, kindness is not enough, look for the reason of hatred and anger.
      When you find and understand that, love becomes the strongest power."
      Belabera, "Mothra 3: King Ghidora Attacks"

    24. Re:Foreign students by irix · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S., then why are they doing it?

      The U.S. is the world's superpower. The only country with economic strength and the ability to project military power. People are going to hate you because:

      1. The U.S took the other side in some international dispute.
      2. They resent their culture being pushed aside by U.S. pop culture.
      3. They are jealous of the standard of living in the U.S.

      I think if you look you'll find that dislike of America boils down into one of those three categories. I am Canadian, and despite the fact that we have a theoretically higher standard of living, you'll find reason #2 is most likely why someone from Canada dislikes the U.S. - we know everything about American culture, they know nothing about ours.

      The problem is, when you are the world's superpower, it is hard to hide from these problems. Isolationisim was tried in the 1930s, but that didn't work out too well.

      Sure, the U.S. has made foreign policy mistakes - maybe even lots of them - but there aren't any magic solutions that will make this all go away.

      --

      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    25. Re:Foreign students by spakka · · Score: 2
      I live in the UK and we're quickly catching up with your country's low voter turnout and general disinterest in the things done in our name

      Not voting is the only means I have to express my dissatisfaction with all of the available candidates.

      Why is a low voter turnout always assumed to indicate that the population is apathetic?

    26. Re:Foreign students by devonbowen · · Score: 2
      If the Israelis split their country down the middle and created the Palestinian State, they would still find a reason for suicide bombers to go into Israel, even tho their proported purpose has been accomplished.

      What a great way to rationalize continued oppression. You have no idea what would happen if Israel withdrew from the areas they occupy in violation of UN resolutions (what you call "splitting their country") because it has never happened. The fact that there were no bombings during a two year period when Clinton was negotiating toward this withdrawl speaks against your statement.

      Devon

    27. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [quote]Very insightful, but when you say 'Maybe we're doing something wrong', you make the same mistake as those who hate Americans. You, and most of your compatriots, are doing nothing wrong. It's your government's policies which are causing anger abroad.[/quote]

      In part I agree with this. The government and business behaviour to other nations is the core of the cause. Using your economic and undoubted military might to interfere in the internal affairs of other nations will not make you loved. But this does not justify terrorism.

      But it also is in the attitude of too many Americans. Not all, not even a majority, but in a very visible minority.

      In a message group that I monitor the question keeps coming up "why do other countries hate the U.S.?" Americans keep saying the same WRONG answer. They keep saying it is "because they envy us". This whole attitude that the rest of the world wants to be like the U.S. permeates the way many individual Americans behave in other countries. Other nations may want to improve but they do not necessarily see the U.S. way as improvement.

      As an individual I have had trouble repeatedly with Americans who when things are done in my nation in my nations way they complain how we are doing it wrong because it is not done the American way. Our way is merely different not wrong. Just as the American way is different not wrong. Being that it is done in my nation my way is the right way. Just as I would expect to have to do things in the U.S. the American way.

      Then again there are the Americans who stand on their rights to behave as they want "HERE IN THE U.S.", when in fact they are not in the U.S., they are in my nation under my nations laws and customs.

      Consider this. How many times in an American movie do you see a character being arrested yelling "you can't do this to me, I'm an American citizen!" The character is typically being treated just the same as citizens of the country in the movie. But for some reason the character thinks they should be treated differently. This movie cliche attitude reflects the attitude many Americans have when visiting other countries. Too many think that being an American gives them the right to ignore the laws and customs of the nations they visit.

      I don't hate Americans or the U.S.. Neither do I think that the acts of terrorism against the U.S. are justified. These behaviours that I have mentioned are those of individuals and a minority. But sometimes when too many Americans in a row have done these things I understand why the U.S. is hated. Especially when for the millionth time I see "they hate us because they ENVY us posted".

    28. Re:Foreign students by burNtchicken · · Score: 1

      "We can't. Even if we became a totalitarian regime, the country is just too big, we don't have the money, and it would disrupt our infrastructure too badly."

      This statement is one of the things that is frustrating me. I totally agree with you in the sense that attacking the symptons is not going to help us if sources of our conflict continue without attention.

      However, I think tackling some of the problems at the source of our conflicts is just as daunting as patching the holes. I think the mental state of most of the population of our country needs to be changed. The government will not be accountable and responsible until we make it so, plain and simple, and that is a huge undertaking.

      Furthermore, I think some holes can be patched. If those in power exercised a little common sense, than certain things could be avoided without major rights violations. I think the idea of Homeland Security is a good one, in as much as it will allow our security organizations to share information and be more effective, but I just think the government goes too far in this pursuit (ie. TIA). And the task is not easy. As the article states, trying to balance openness and the release of potentially dangerous technology (A.I.) is a legitimate problem. Ugh, I wouldn't know where to begin.

    29. Re:Foreign students by octalc0de · · Score: 1

      The problem here is it PROBABLY IS NOT GOING TO HAPPEN AGAIN! About your analogy with planet X and planet Y, you DON'T ONLY HAVE ONE WEEK. You don't KNOW if there's going to be another attack! Checking the IDs of the planet X folks is FINE, but that's what we're already doing. Now DENYING THEM entry is something completely beyond it.

      See, in most other countries, the system of upper-level education is horrid. If these people don't get to the United States to study in a prestigious university and get a PhD, MD, or whatever, they DON'T HAVE A LIFE IN FRONT OF THEM. If they stay in their respective countries, they can't get the education they need.

      [just my 2c... slashdot. the only place where you can put in your 2c and get change back]

    30. Re:Foreign students by burNtchicken · · Score: 1

      You're right, there aren't any magic solutions, and I think much of the sentiment against our country can be attributed to the causes that you listed.

      I also think that it's obvious that some of our policies are misguided. Not that I could necessarily have made better decisions, were I the one in power, I'm only in my mid-20's and I really don't know anything.

      The question is where to begin. If everyone did simple things like purchase fuel efficient cars, the demand for petroleum would be lower, as would the prices and profit. That would in turn reduce our dependancy on other countries for it, and put less pressure on our representatives to act in our petroleum interests!

      But people here don't want to sacrifice such parts of their lifestyle for the greater good. "With great power comes great responsiblity." As a powerful nation, people are going to scrutinize us, and dislike us. All the more reason to be morally upright.

      As a "superpower" or whatever, it is our responsibility to guide the rest of the world, and to make sure that lunatics don't build nuclear bombs, or whatever. Like you said, isolationism didn't work. If we are going to take a leadership role, as we are trying to do, our policies have to follow good moral standards. I know we can't please everybody, but I don't think we're compromising enough.

    31. Re:Foreign students by dnoyeb · · Score: 1

      I agree with Rhubarb, its a cycle.

      customers demand cheaper products.
      company A sends its manufacturing overseas.
      Now sells produces cheaper than company B.
      Company B lays off employees.
      Said employees work elsewhere for less money.
      Since they have less money, they demand cheaper products.
      etc...

      This is where the government should put a stop to the endless cycle. But the WWII policies are designed to do just the opposite.

      Instead of rich nation poor nation, we have rich people and poor people. Since people don't make war and nations do, their is no nation against nation strife. Hence no Nation vs nation war.

      Enter Al-Queda.

    32. Re:Foreign students by tassii · · Score: 1

      If the Israelis split their country down the middle and created the Palestinian State, they would still find a reason for suicide bombers to go into Israel, even tho their proported purpose has been accomplished.

      What a great way to rationalize continued oppression. You have no idea what would happen if Israel withdrew from the areas they occupy in violation of UN resolutions (what you call "splitting their country") because it has never happened. The fact that there were no bombings during a two year period when Clinton was negotiating toward this withdrawl speaks against your statement.


      You misunderstand the comment. I wasn't justifing the Israelis actions. In my opinion, they brought most of this upon themselves, although the actions of the fundamentalists (on both sides!) hasn't helped the situtation. My point was that even if the right thing is done, there will still people who will hate and use whatever justification they can so they can to continue to hate... and derive 'power' from that hate. Look here in the US at the KKK and other white supremist groups. They hate not for any good reason except that skin color is different.

      --
      "I drank what?" - Socrates
    33. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Uh, Canadians may resent aspects of the U.S., but not enough to commit a 9/11: the most they do is poke fun at them in TV shows.

      And your "jealous of standard of living" jab doesn't make any sense at all. The UNHCR has consistently rated Canada (and other countries) as having higher standards of living than the U.S., although the differences are small. Really there's the entire West to be jealous of.

      Finally, in what way did Isolationism not work out in the 1930's? I think it worked marvellously well. They kept out of other people's affairs until there was VERY good reason to no longer do so.

    34. Re:Foreign students by Kitsune · · Score: 1

      Spoiling a ballot is usually considered a protest, however, not voting is like looking the other way when someone is being wronged. Does that mean that anyone that turns away doesn't condone what's happening? Maybe, but it doesn't mean that they're doing anything about it either.

    35. Re:Foreign students by adamp3 · · Score: 1
    36. Re:Foreign students by Casualposter · · Score: 1

      Was it not a Jewish, Israeli extremist that killed a prime minister deeply involved with bring the Palestinian-Israeli conflict to peace?

      Seems to me that there is an awful lot of hate on BOTH sides. I am not optimistic about any lingering peace in the middle east. Too much hatred.

      --
      Creative Spelling Copyright (2002). May use without Persimmons
    37. Re:Foreign students by Mac+Degger · · Score: 2

      But isn't it ironic that nearly all of the US' foreign problems have come out of sytems (dictatorships etc.) the US itself has funded and put into place?

      It does create a nice sense of irony over the whole thing.

      --
      -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
    38. Re:Foreign students by Pyrosophy · · Score: 1

      Don't forget:

      4. They hate freedom.

      Sheesh, as if such a thing is actually possible. I can't believe such words actually came out of a 20th century diplomat's mouth. Someone can hate your freedom (and prefer their own), but hating freedom in general might not even be philosophically possible.

    39. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That isn't a dig at the USA btw, I live in the UK and we're quickly catching up with your country's low voter turnout and general disinterest in the things done in our name.


      This isn't a dis towards the way your government works btw, I live in the US where the a person's right to high levels of politics is quickly catching up your country's laws of birthright and royalty.
    40. Re:Foreign students by John+Sullivan · · Score: 1

      In that case, it was possibly somewhat less than wise to sell or give them so many arms while they were doing it.

      --
      This is my World Wide Web of Whatever
    41. Re:Foreign students by kcbrown · · Score: 2
      but put yourself in power and tell me what you would do?

      Simple: fire the entire INS. All of them. And don't hire any of those morons back.

      It's because of the INS that the people who pulled off 9/11 got in to begin with, despite being known terrorists.

      The INS lets in terrorists and at the same time makes life difficult to impossible for legitimate people to enter and become U.S. citizens (they regularly "lose" paperwork, "forget" to issue green cards, renewals, etc.).

      They are our gatekeepers, but in reality they do no such thing. It's an organization that does nothing useful at all that I can see, and I think it's time for it to die.

      --
      Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
    42. Re:Foreign students by LazyDawg · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, I'm a canuck too, but you missed a valuable point in your list:

      4. The Yanks keep accusing us of providing an easy way-in to their country for terrorists and undesirables.

      Like, my God, when are they going to notice/remember that EVERY SINGLE ACT OF TERRORISM on the US has come from within their own borders? Remember Tim McVeigh? He was a Yank. Remember the crazy hijackers from November the Ninth 2001? They were living for quite some time in the States, if not full-blown Yanks themselves.

      And here's another point you missed:

      5. Yanks' economic domination of all of their neighbours and big trading partners.

      There's something very upsetting about having to well oil for the Yanks up here, then sell it to the States, then buy back processed oil products from the States again. Our fresh water is not our own, our trees and minerals aren't ours. I'd be a lot less upset at our neighbours to the south if they weren't so freaking colonial.

      Eventually, I hope, countries with some economic power over the States band together and say "fsck you, America!" and stop making losing trades with them, in spite of all the economic treaties we've signed.

      --
      "Look at me, I invented the stove!" -- Ben Franklin
    43. Re:Foreign students by program21 · · Score: 2
      If everyone did simple things like purchase fuel efficient cars, the demand for petroleum would be lower, as would the prices and profit. That would in turn reduce our dependancy on other countries for it, and put less pressure on our representatives to act in our petroleum interests!

      The problem there is that it would involve our representatives working against the current oil pressure. With Bush in office (a Texas oil man), I don't forsee this happenening during his term.

      --
      This has been a test. Had this been a real emergency, we would have fled in terror and you would not have been informed.
    44. Re:Foreign students by wass · · Score: 2
      You have no idea what would happen if Israel withdrew from the areas they occupy in violation of UN resolutions

      Well, there are LOTS of clues for those willing to examine history. Let's see, before 1967, Israel didn't occupy the West Bank or Gaza Strip. Yet Palestinian and Arab anger was still directed against Israel, including all-too-frequent attacks and skirmishes.

      In fact, Gaza was occupied by Egypt, but no Palestinians ever protested against Egyptian occupation. Similarly, West Bank was occupied by Jordan, but nobody protested against Jordanian occupation. Israel, while not occupying anything, was still the target of unified Arab agression. In fact, it was the creation of Israel itself that led to the formation of the Arab League.

      Also, interestingly enough, it was BEFORE the Six Day War when Arafat et al formed the Palestinian Liberation Organization, aimed at booting out the Israelis. Hmm, what part of Palestine were they really trying to liberate? (FWIW, Arafat has probably come a long way since his 1960's PLO philosophies).

      The fact that there were no bombings during a two year period when Clinton was negotiating toward this withdrawl speaks against your statement.

      And let's also examine the fact that Israel withdrew from Lebanon 3 years ago, as mandated by the UN, yet this has not reduced hezbollah attacks whatsoever. Actually, this further incensed them as they now rally that since the Israeli's retreated once, they'll retreat all the way into the sea.

      And before you or anyone else jumps down my throat, I do not support the occupation of West Bank and Gaza Strip, but blindly believing that Palestinian attacks will magically stop if Israel withdraws is history-deficient folly. A significant portion of the Palestinians support hamas, which publically states it's goal is the destruction of the "Jewish state". Other terrorist groups (but not all) have similar goals.

      --

      make world, not war

    45. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn right! I agree, We, the U.S. people, need to take a step back, and examine ourselves and why these people hate us and if they really have valid reasons.

      "Because we have more money and they are jealous"

      Is BS we''ve been told since day one and only idiots would believe it.

    46. Re:Foreign students by Jru+Hym · · Score: 1

      Sort of like we did in WWII. When Hitler forced all of the Jewish physicist out of Germany etc., they came to the US here and helped us build the bomb.

      --
      This lobster was alive when it hit the frothy, boiling water.
    47. Re:Foreign students by canadian_right · · Score: 2

      6. Hyprocrisy. Say you are for free-markets, but slap huge tarrifs on Canadian Softwood, everyone's steel, and all sorts of European goods because of BANANAS!

      7. Say you support democracy, but then prop up, or install murderous dictatorships all over the world. Any Americans notice that the Saudi's are NOT a democracy?

      The USA has made all sorts of blunders, but none of this excuses the criminal acts of terrorists. BUT, the USA should pull its head out of its righteous ass and spend some time examining why some parts of the world hate it, and most of the world is unhappy with the way it is acting.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    48. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Very insightful, but when you say 'Maybe we're doing something wrong', you make the same mistake as those who hate Americans. You, and most of your compatriots, are doing nothing wrong. It's your government's policies which are causing anger abroad.


      I have to jump on that... In a true democracy, citizens are responsible for the actions of their government. They have a right to vote, but there are some strings attached: make sure that the government you have elected plays nicely with people in other countries. Otherwise, they may hold you reponsible (quite rightly) for that.

    49. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      4. The Yanks keep accusing us of providing an easy way-in to their country for terrorists and undesirables.

      The funny thing about that is this: is it not the job of US Customs and Immigration to decide who does and does not get into the US?

      If "undesirables" get into the US, then it's 100% the fault of US Customs. It is not up to Canadian, German, French, British etc customs to decide who can get into the US.

    50. Re:Foreign students by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      I live in the UK and we're quickly catching up with your country's low voter turnout and general disinterest in the things done in our name.

      In Australia, Belgium, and Luxembourg there's compulsary voting. I think that's be a good idea in the US, but then big business would lose out once people started voting "none of the above" or picking random Green or Libertarians to vote for because you don't like the Republican/Democrats. As the Feederz once said, "When you're being sodomized who cares if it's from The Left or The Right".

      Mandatory voting article

    51. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how is the US "propping up" saudia arabia?
      If the Us intervened and demanded a democratic government then everyone would accuse the US of being a meddlesome bully.

      Fact is, half the world will always be pissed at the us.

      Hell, the EU has far more protection than the US

    52. Re:Foreign students by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      Look at the Islamic Jihad in Palestine. If the Israelis split their country down the middle and created the Palestinian State, they would still find a reason for suicide bombers to go into Israel, even tho their proported purpose has been accomplished.

      The purpose of Palestinian terrorists is simply the destruction of the Israeli state. Shrinking Israel by half would not satisfy their agenda and in fact would be a great morale booster to them and their cause. You'll note that the terrorist activities increase mostly when the creation of a Palentinian state edges closer to resolution. The Palestinian terrorists do not want a resolution, since resolution reduces their cause.

      The ultimate goal of Islamic terrorists in general is the creation of a world-wide Islamic state. After any lesser victory, they will not simply stop and go home; they'll celebrate and then plan even more ambitious strikes. Though I really have to wonder about their Sept. 11 strategy. I can't think of a better way for them to have brought the sky crashing in upon them. If there is another major strike on American soil, I'm sure that GW's kid gloves will come off.

      That's one of the reason's that the Iraq thing has 'suddenly' become so important.

      Iraq didn't suddenly become important. It has been a growing problem for a dozen years. It is merely that Sept. 11 handed GW a blank cheque to crack some skulls, and Iraq happened to appear as #2 on America's to-do list: 1. Afghanistan, 2. Iraq, 3. North Korea, 4. Iran, 5. Pakistan. (For #5, most of the Taliban & terrorists that left Afghanistan set up shop in Pakistan, the world's major exporter of terrorism. Eventually, American patience with Pakistan will run out.)

      What politian said "Nothing like a nice little war to distract the people from the real problems"?

      Didn't Bill Clinton say that during the Monica Lewinski scandal regarding bombing al Quaeda training camps in Afghanistan?

      Now, North-Korean nukes is a more pressing problem than Sadam, but North Korea is at position #3 and all of the pieces are in place for #2, so that will be delayed.

      Unless, of course, you like the idea of rogue states, WMD, and unchecked terrorist organizations. Then, America should unlaterally withdraw from the rest of the world. But, how many millions of dead civilians is okay with you? Millions will die if N. Korea uses WMD on Seoul. Wouldn't that be neat if America withdrew its 40,000 troops from the Korean DMZ like some S. Korean protestors want. N. Korea would invade in a matter of hours. With some luck, the protestors would be the first to die.

      Millions are also in the process of dying in Zimbabwe, though nobody seems to care, since the dictator in charge is only a mortal threat to his own people. (His election results are no more credible than Sadam's.) Pacifists have such a wonderfully selfish morality. In my world, bullshit dictatorships have no legitimate right to exist, and should be extinguished forthwith.

      --
      It's ironic that so many pacifists wish for world peace when they're the reason it's impossible.

    53. Re:Foreign students by canadian_right · · Score: 2
      What planet are you from? The USA has large numbers of troops, a big airbase, etc... in Saudi-Arabia. Its there to protect the Saudi's.

      The USA shouldn't have meddled at all. Communism was doomed to fail because it doesn't work.

      Sure, it easy to be pissed at the USA, but lately the USA seems to have been working very hard at pissing people off. Canadians are used to the elephant next door rolling over in its sleep and breaking things, but we don't like the elephant charging at us with its tusks (just economically speaking here).

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    54. Re:Foreign students by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      Three women, wise, courageous, and loving, dared to speak out. If they had been listened to, part of 911 could have been averted

      Which woman was it that warned us about 9/11?

      and Enron and Worldcom could have pulled out of their nose dives, lives and fortunes could have been saved.

      It seems to me that much the damage was done before the whistle-blowers came along. Perhaps the impact crater could have been shallower.

      If you're referring specifically to the Time's three Persons of the Year, you must realize that that was just a political stunt. The Man (newsmaker) of the Year should have been Pres. Bush. (Not even Sadam since he hasn't shown his face at all in months that I can recall; does anyone have any evidence that he is even still alive?)

      As for the rest, try reading some foreign newspapers (many have English versions on the web), and they will give you an earful.

      I've looked at some and they read like tabloids take to the nth degree.

      our position on Israel (and supplying the weapons they use to kill kids)

      Strangely, the Palestinian terrorists seem to be quite able to kill kids too, even without the aid of American weapons.

      our general stance as the world's greatest bully (er, superpower)

      I would fear for a world that didn't have an American superpower in it, especially in the age of WMD. I find it quite distressing that America isn't actually Imperialistic as its critics claim. There would be no bullshit dictatorships in the world if it were.

    55. Re:Foreign students by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      There's something very upsetting about having to well oil for the Yanks up here, then sell it to the States, then buy back processed oil products from the States again. [...] I'd be a lot less upset at our neighbours to the south if they weren't so freaking colonial.

      I might be a little upset too if Canadians weren't making out like bandits in trading with the U.S. The back-and-forth that you were describing is called 'Trade'. Forty percent of Canada's GDP comes from trade; I suppose that you would be happier to be 40% poorer.

      Eventually, I hope, countries with some economic power over the States band together and say "fsck you, America!" and stop making losing trades with them, in spite of all the economic treaties we've signed.

      Eventually, I hope that people might make some effort to understand the first things about macroeconomics or the world in which they live. International trade is a good thing; it's a hell of a lot better than war, which is the closest alternative. Global trade was born out of the ruins of WWII when the world's elite got together as said, "Never again."

      The "fsck you, America!" is a losing idea, because America has a comparitive advantage at producing certain goods and services, and you would lower your standard of living by excluding trade with them. Did you know that 80% of Canadians have a higher standard of living than 80% of Americans? I assume that you already knew that Canadians as a whole (and most of northern Europe) have a higher quality of life than Americans.

    56. Re:Foreign students by The+Grey+Mouser · · Score: 2


      I would fear for a world that didn't have an American superpower in it, especially in the age of WMD. I find it quite distressing that America isn't actually Imperialistic as its critics claim. There would be no bullshit dictatorships in the world if it were.


      Well, there would be precisely one, actually.

    57. Re:Foreign students by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      You get this urge for a new car...you find another worker who'll do the same job for half the pay

      Now suppose that you could replace the American worker with 20 (yes, 20) workers in India who are each 80% as productive as the American worker. The business case would seem to be a no-brainer, and the decision makers have a legal obligation to the company's shareholders to act in their interest, which usually means to increase shareprice and/or profits.

    58. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2
      With all the anti-U.S. sentiment that I hear in some discussion groups, are we doing something wrong?

      Yes. (I assume "you" to mean "you or your government acting on your behalf".)

      Principally, you seem to believe you are better than everyone else. People here make comments about your "economic strength" when your economy right now is one of the worst in the western world. You tell us about your wonderful standards of living, yet your techies work 80 hour weeks and get two weeks of annual leave if they're lucky. But let's cut to the chase.

      The single biggest reason that everyone else hates you (and even in "supporting" nations like the UK, a lot of people hate you) is that you throw your weight around. You accuse countries like Iraq of harbouring terrorists, whip up a political storm and try to get allies, yet so far, those of us watching haven't seen a single shred of evidence supporting Bush's "justifications" of a war on Iraq. Students of recent history will note that the US is, itself, guilty of more acts of terrorism (by pretty much any sensible definition of the word) than pretty much everyone else in the world put together.

      You want people to like you? Try dealing with others as if you were equals, instead of toppling governments because of a family feud, supporting regimes that torture and kill innocent people, imposing sanctions that kill innocent people but don't touch their governements, feeling you're above the same kind of judgement from abroad that you yourselves impose upon those you dislike, and generally abusing the power that you think you have because more of your population say "Sir yes sir!" with big guns than anyone else's.

      It's like we're the automatic moral authority.

      Nope, no-one really believes that. Except the US. That's kinda the problem...

      This isn't a personal attack on the poster to whom I'm replying, just an honest assessment of how you appear to people with rather less biased media and no self-interest clouding our honesty about US foreign policies and the like. If you're reading this and immediately think what I've said is somehow outrageous or unjustified, I invite you to Google your way to some supporting facts before flaming.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    59. Re:Foreign students by burNtchicken · · Score: 1

      When I said, "It's like we're the automatic moral authority," I was actually complaining about the fact that people seem to think that here. I wasn't making the statement myself. I am confused as to why people in my country feel that we are always the moral authority.

      In general, I feel that this mindset is due to the fact that people don't bother to educate themselves, and they believe whatever the media and popular culture feeds them. So, no, I don't feel attacked by your comment. You just supported what I was thinking.

      And yes, I do want people to like the U.S., and I want it them to like us for the correct reasons. I want my country to exercise good moral character when developing our foreign policy, which it doesn't do now.

      Now I don't fully understand the U.S. sentiment because I am fairly uneducated in U.S. history and foreign policy. I am attempting to rememdy the situation. My post here helped me do exactly that. I put out the question of why, and I got the answer. Thank you.

    60. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As a "superpower" or whatever, it is our responsibility to guide the rest of the world, and to make sure that lunatics don't build nuclear bombs, or whatever.

      That's the problems with the Americans. You believe you need to guide the world, protect it from lunatics who makes nuclear bombs (and yet the US possesses worlds' largest nuclear powers). The truth is, nobody needs nobody's guidence or protection. US became superpower for no more than 100 years. There were thousands of years before that and the world didn't collapse without the US's guidence.

      To backstep a little, IF the US truly want to protect and guide the world so that the world would be a better place, it may in fact be a good thing. But unfortunately it's simply not true. Whatever the US did was out of the interest for themselves, not the world. Whatever policy the US make, it is to ensure the US gets the best and most out of it. I'm not saying this is wrong, because every country does so. It's just that the US is not the world's moral leader as the Americans believe. And that's why the US got a lot of enemies, because it has the power to interfere with many world affairs that other countries couldn't afford to, and those who suffered because of the US's interference definitely wouldn't like it a lot. The US has done a lot of things to maintain or "improve" the structure of the world, only because the US need to make sure the world structure is the most beneficial to them.

      The average Americans, however, seems to truly believe they are always morally right, and most of what the US government has done is to fight the evil and save the world. Sorry, pals, you are just as (or more) brainwashed as you have accused of people from other countries especially the communism ones. The US people are the most self-centered people in the world (not selfish, but self-centered). They don't care much about what's going on in other parts of the world. They believe they have the most free media and don't bother or want to listen to other voices, because since the US media is the most free, anything different from that must have been twisted and untrue. This is unlike the rest of the world, because the US is so prominent that whatever happens you basically hear two versions about it, one is the US version and the other the local version. So in fact, most non-Americans usually see two sides of things, while the Americans only see their side. Whenever the US government finds something standing in its way, it will try to create an evil subject and release a whole suite of propaganda such as President's speeches, Hollywood movies, live interviews, talk shows, ceremonies, etc., etc. And the average Americans then believe evil is approaching and America must (once again) be on its quest to save the world.

      Personally, I have nothing against the Americans. It's just the state of this world and whoever posssesses the greatest power will inevitably want to obtain the most. Sooner or later the US will be superceded by some other new born powers and the cycle restarts.
    61. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 2

      I applaud your open mind and your attitude towards foreign policy. If the attitude the rest of us see the US adopt were more in line with your (as in "you personally") own, I think the world would be a much nicer place.

      I tend to agree with others here that the problem is not US citizens (several of whom I count amongst the nicest people I've ever met) but in the way your government is manipulating the American public for its own dubious ends, rather than representing the views of those who elected it.

      But hey, I live in the UK, where Tony Blair has a huge majority in parliament and can do what he likes even if the vast majority of our population disagree, so who am I to sound all high and wise? :-/

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    62. Re:Foreign students by tgrigsby · · Score: 1

      Remember the crazy hijackers from November the Ninth 2001? They were living for quite some time in the States, if not full-blown Yanks themselves.

      Is "canuck" Canadian for "idiot?" Full-blown Yanks themselves. Some friends of mine and I, stuck in Wisconsin during a snowstorm, came to the conclusion that the only reason that state was populated was because people wandered in when the weather was nice, and then BAM! Winter hit, and the cold made them too stupid to find their way out again. I would imagine that's what's going on in Canada right now. The full brunt of winter made you utter that tremendously uninformed, if not downright stupid, remark.

      Oh, and have a nice day.

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
    63. Re:Foreign students by Casualposter · · Score: 1

      "As an individual I have had trouble repeatedly with Americans who when things are done in my nation in my nations way they complain how we are doing it wrong because it is not done the American way. Our way is merely different not wrong. Just as the American way is different not wrong. Being that it is done in my nation my way is the right way. Just as I would expect to have to do things in the U.S. the American way."

      Examples of the "right way" in some countries...

      Christmas trees are illegal in Saudi Arabia. (BBC Dec 2002)

      Practicing a non moslim religion is illegal in Saudi Arabia. (BBC Dec 2002)

      Sentencing a college professor to death for criticizing the current religion/government. (Iran, BBC Jan 2003)

      Butchering thousands because they are not Serbian.

      Butchering thousands because they are Serbian.

      Organized rape of women as a form of military terrorism. (Various Balkan States, Japan during WWII)

      Reduction of legal rights of a citizen based strictly on their sex. (Various countries, but Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Libya, Sudan, come to mind)

      Just because you are doing something in your country does not make it right. If there is one thing that the founders of the United States taught the world is that there are certain inalieable rights that each person is granted simply by living. Violating those rights is never "Right" even if your country has been doing it for centuries.

      I don't know about the trivial details of the cultures of many countries, but those things have never offended me when I traveled abroad. I have been interested in learning the local customs and culture. I have been respectful of other cultures, and tried hard to let my host know that I am ignorant of their ways so I would not intentionally offend them. Violations of the basic human rights do offend me.

      It seems to me that the virulent hatred of America and all things "western" mirrors the rise in US military and economic power. The British were not very popular during their peak global power days. SO yes, I think that there is a great deal of truth to the concept that we are hated because we are sucessful.

      As to American arrogance, that is a part of our culture. We had to be arrogant just to think that we could beat the Britsh in 1776. Then we took on the Barbary Pirates, something that the rest of Europe was not willing to do. Seems like we've always been this way and the rest of the world is just now realizing it. I really don't think that it is arrogance, if you can back it up.

      I don't hate non-Americans, but I understand that we would all get along much better if we could learn to live with a common set of principles that respect our differences in religion and culture. The current set of American ideology, as practiced domestically, is slowly evolving into such an ideal system. This is often seen in less tolerant parts of the world as "anything goes immorallity," but that is a missunderstanding. Why should I tell you what to believe? Or how to dress? Or what music to listen to? Or what books to read? Why should any person dictate to any other person these things? I do not like the US policies that have encouraged despots and tyrany (US policies in Africa, Central, and South America during the cold war, for example). I have argued against these foolish and unprincipled policies in the past, and have not been heeded. But such is this republic.

      Americans are American, and those basic human rights, spelled out so eloquently in the US Constitution, are tightly ingrained into our way of thinking. We don't think that you are doing it wrong, because you're doing it differently, but because you're DOING it WRONG if you're violating those basic human rights.

      Of course, there are a lot of petty idiots in the US who act stupidly, but then, there are a lot of foreigners here who act stupidly. I'm not addressing common human stupidity in this comment.

      --
      Creative Spelling Copyright (2002). May use without Persimmons
    64. Re:Foreign students by devonbowen · · Score: 2
      Well, there are LOTS of clues for those willing to examine history. Let's see, before 1967...

      Before 1967? As in two generations ago? I guess the US should be occupying Germany considering how they behaved in 1945? How is this "LOTS of clues" to what would happen today? And how does the two years without bombings get ignored? How does the peace between Egypt and Israel or between Jordan and Israel get ignored? All your clues indicate equally well that these peace deals should have failed. And how many people did not die because someone ignored them?

      And let's also examine the fact that Israel withdrew from Lebanon 3 years ago, as mandated by the UN, yet this has not reduced hezbollah attacks whatsoever.

      What are you talking about? Israel was sending home body bags on a weekly basis during that occupation. I just did a CNN and BBC search and find only a few minor skirmishes mentioned since the withdrawl. Yes, there is still fighting in the Golan but Israel did not withdraw from there.

      Devon

    65. Re:Foreign students by burNtchicken · · Score: 1

      "There were thousands of years before that the world didn't collapse without the US's guidance."

      Correct. There were thousands of years of wars, and just general violence and bloodshed (Not to mention the previous lack of women's rights, among many other unacceptable situations). It just so happened that during most of history nobody waging war had the power to destroy massive amounts of humans with a single action (ie. Nuclear, chemical and biological weapons). If someone had that power in the past, we might not be here now. Previously, in world history, other factors contributed to the fact that no dictator or tyrant could commit irreversable destruction of life. Now, they can.

      Who's going to stop the next tyrant who obtains WMD from using them? Zimbabwe? Puerto Rico? No, either the U.S., France, Britain, Russia, China, or preferrably, the U.N. I just want somebody to ensure safety for the next generation of humanity.

      We live in a global society, and like I said, I'd prefer that the U.N. be the moral authority. It should be a place where nations collaborate and decide what should be right and wrong for the world, and what should be left up to a particular societies disgression. Until an organization like the U.N. takes that leadership role, different societies are going to hate each other, and more importantly, act on that hate.

      Now people keep mistaking me. I'm not saying that the United States is the moral authority. I'm saying that someone has to step up and take control of the chaos. Anybody who thinks there hasn't been a lot of chaos needs only read world history for the past century.

      I'm also not saying that the U.S. is doing a good job of trying to bring a bit of order. We ARE being too selfish and self-centered. I'm also not recommending or claiming that a particular course of action be taken. I don't know what needs to be done. I just know that I don't feel like the world is a very safe place in general, and I am hoping that my country can get itself straight, and help out like we should.

    66. Re:Foreign students by tconnors · · Score: 2

      The U.S. is the world's superpower. The only country with economic strength and the ability to project military power.


      Only?

      People are going to hate you because:

      1. The U.S took the other side in some international dispute.


      I hate them, because they always side with the country that will benefit them the most - usually to do with oil. Your wars are never ever over your "moral stance". Oh, and BTW, your morals are no superior to any other country's just in case you might be thinking that - Most people laugh at the existance of things such as your bible belt, and the fact that 95% of your country is brain-washed into thinking that the lord will save them.

      2. They resent their culture being pushed aside by U.S. pop culture.


      Whilst I resent culture here being pushed back by the Macdonalds pop culture, this is not the main reason I hate America.

      3. They are jealous of the standard of living in the U.S.

      Heh. No. No I am not. I very much like Australia. I would very much not want to go back to America ever again. I have been there once. I will probably have to go back again for conferences. But I sure as hell am going to avoid going when it comes time to do my postdoc. So no, I don't think I have any jeolousy towards America, but I still hate America, your government, your people's attitudes,

    67. Re:Foreign students by tconnors · · Score: 2

      What if it's because we're doing something RIGHT? What if by accepting the best and brightest from all over the world, we're leaving these heavily armed countries with the dregs of humanity?

      Score 5, insightful? Whoa!

      Because your universities import a few thousand people, the rest of the 5.9 billion are scum? I thought humans were unintelligent on the whole, but I didn't think that 99% of the population were "the dregs of humanity".

    68. Re:Foreign students by sjames · · Score: 2

      The last time I wrote my congressman (urging him to change his position on an issue), I recieved a form letter restating his current position and thanking me for my support! Kinda made the whole exercize pointless I'd say.

    69. Re:Foreign students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not that this trash deserves any kind of reply, but this has to be one of the most ignorant and imbecilic posts ever on slashdot.

      You can stay in Australia, and preach your biggotry there. While you might be the smallest-minded idiot ever, I'll remember not to tar all Australians with the same brush.

    70. Re:Foreign students by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      Though I really have to wonder about their Sept. 11 strategy. I can't think of a better way for them to have brought the sky crashing in upon them. If there is another major strike on American soil, I'm sure that GW's kid gloves will come off.

      Oh, and the Iraqis will manage to shoot down a manned American aircraft over the no-fly zone sometime this month. (This is likely, for whatever true cause, since this will be an important step toward war (on Feb. 1).) I'm sure the Iraqi leadership will be pleased, until the sky comes crashing in upon them. It kind of makes a person wonder why they are trying to hard to cause their own destruction.

  3. I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    MIT is mostly Foreign students.
    I actually happen to agree with the Government. I am tired of Foriegn students coming to America and taking up spots in good Universities and Colleges that could go to Americans. I think we should close our borders to people who only want to go to school here, and then leave the country when they finish their education!
    Foriegn students are a big security risk! Their loyalties are always in question. It's bad enough that countries like N. Korea are trying to get Nuclear capability, we don't need to educate their students in how to do it!

    1. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by TheOnlyCoolTim · · Score: 3, Informative

      MIT is something like eight per cent foreign.

      Tim

      --
      Omnia vestra castrorum habetur nobis.
    2. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by rovingeyes · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I am tired of Foriegn students coming to America and taking up spots in good Universities and Colleges that could go to Americans.

      You know why America still holds its place as a technological leader? Not becoz of just american researchers but a significant foreign nationals working in America, who wouldn't have that same oppurtunity in other countries. AFAIK, America's support for intelligence and research skills over nationality has let it remain supreme.

      I think we should close our borders to people who only want to go to school here, and then leave the country when they finish their education!

      Wrong again, most of the students who come here don't make plans to leave. They settle here. In my past 3.5 yrs in college I have seen 90% of foreign nationals do something or other to stay even overstay their visa time.

      Foriegn students are a big security risk! Their loyalties are always in question.

      Agreed, but solution is not to close borders. And again you cannot let people walk freely in and out just for the sake of technology or research. Its neither a one line solution nor can be found in a week. May be this is the risk we have to take for the sake of free economy otherwise we have to turn like those chinese closing down thousands of internet kiosks and putting restrictions on our citizens! Not good!

    3. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      I know you were trying to flamebait, but this is truly something I have believed for a long time. We have US citizens being denied admission to state run universities, and we are busy filling those slots up with foriegn exchange students instead.

      It's not a matter of racism, it is the idea that government assisted programs (like state universities) should benefit the citizens of that government FIRST.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    4. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by bivouac_2000 · · Score: 1

      OK, this is the kind of hate mongering that is simply sad if you ask me. The United States IS the United States because we are a nation of immigrants. It's unfortunate that some individuals are so short sighted as to forget the Japanese interment camps in the 1940s, and also unfortunate that this isolationist foreign policy still feeds itself.

    5. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      I think the feeling is more like this: we've had enough immigrants. It's time to take care of our own.

    6. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by QQ2 · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I am tired of Foriegn students coming to America and taking up spots in good Universities and Colleges that could go to Americans.
      And this is were your reasoning is flawed. As I remember the costs for MIT are steep. It's so expensive that american students come to holland to study at the university of Delft because they can afford this and they can't afford MIT. The places at MIT that are filled by foreign students are places that wouldn't be filled if it wasn't for them.
      Basically you prefer an empty MIT above one that is actually filled by (parially) foreign students. And don't forget the research MIT has great value for American companies who can use this knowlidge for far less then it would cost them to do the research them self

    7. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Interfacer · · Score: 2, Insightful

      foreign students are dangerous? a,ericans are more than capable of being dangerous. timoty mcveigh was good oll american boy.

      einstein, godel, bohr, von braun, ...

      all foreingers that you should be grateful for that they used their minds for the usa.

      Int

    8. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by bivouac_2000 · · Score: 1

      First, I never said I was cool, nor did I imply it in my post. Why you've made yourself flame bait puzzles me.

      At any rate, to stay on-topic - imagine what people were saying when everyone in Ireland came to the United States after the Potato famine. I'm sure, they were saying something to the effect of, "There goes the neighborhood" and "Isn't it time we simply dealt with our own nationals?" This has been going on for quite some time, but that doesn't make it right.

      And, this isolationist policy is the same thing ultra-conservatives in Europe are preaching. If you ask me, it's simply a higher-brow version of racism and segregation.

    9. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 1
      It's not a matter of racism, it is the idea that government assisted programs (like state universities) should benefit the citizens of that government FIRST.
      --
      All closed file formats should be illegal, they just aid monopolies.

      Oh, the sweet irony...

    10. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      ok, on the one hand you talk about america as the Great Melting Pot, but next you talk about how isolationism is racist - which means you believe in an "American Race"? Make up your mind.

      The sig is a sig, if you don't get the concept, shut the fuck up.

    11. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by KludgeGrrl · · Score: 1

      There has been a lot of muddiness concerning "university" admission in the US. As regards undergraduate institutions ("college" in the US) there is only a tiny proportion of foreign students, and the vast percentage of these are at *private* institutions, not public universities.

      I have worked in a US university and can state with assurance that since US schools (mine in particular) accept students with a horrific lack of preparation, I cannot believe that qualified US undergraduates are being turned away from State Schools when they apply.

      What prevents qualified students from going to college is usually funding, and for that foreign students are generally ineligible (they must pay their own way, hence bringing needed money to the school)

      The job of a top research university, however, is *not* to crank out BA or BS students, but rather to train graduate students and produce solid research by supporting the professors (in part by supplying them with good graduate students).

      Yes, US tax dollars go to State schools to support them so US students can obtain an education. But they also go to support the development of knowledge, which indirectly benefits the US citizens paying the taxes. These two goals do not need to compete given the tremendous range of educational institutions in the US.

    12. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      I fail to see how my statement and my sig are related. Looking at your web address (I cannot reach the site from here), I'd say you're prejudiced against my comment before you even think about it.

      If I was going to try to go to a government funded school in Korea, I'd certainly expect to only be admitted after all the Korean citizens who wanted to go were enrolled. Why should it be any different for Koreans coming here?

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    13. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by bivouac_2000 · · Score: 1

      I get the sig concept....but vulgarity...so immature, young one.

    14. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Foreign students can damn well jump through the hoops required to prove they are worthy of admission into my country. We owe them nothing. Allowing them or anyone else to enter the US is a great act of charity, for which they should be delighted to comply with any security programs. Our status is protected by excluding access to undesirables, and Muslims/Jihadists are the enemies of freedom. As such they deserve no access to a country I want to keep secular.

    15. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      You know why America still holds its place as a technological leader? Not becoz of just american researchers but a significant foreign nationals working in America, who wouldn't have that same oppurtunity in other countries. AFAIK, America's support for intelligence and research skills over nationality has let it remain supreme.


      Exactly. American HS students have for generations ranked at the bottom of the top 20 Industrial nations in math and science test scores. Except for the rare, selftaught genius, those that make it to graduate school do so only in the 'humanities', where PC reigns amoke.


      Even American students with top SAT and ACT scores demonstrated an inability to comprehend basic Physics, Calculus and Chemistry textbooks I used when teaching those courses.


      A foreign exchange HS student from France tested out of ALL of the local HS science and math classes so the HS principle suggested it test at the college where I taught. The student tested into my Physics class and my Calc III class, where he proceeded to rise to the top of both classes. He even had a much better command of English than my American students. During the Christmas season I invited him to spend a few days at my home. During our converstaions I asked him what he was going to major in when he returned to France. He astounded me by replying that he wasn't going to 'university' because he wasn't good enough to get in, he was going to a vocational tech school to study metal forming.


      Of course, not all foreign students are academically superior to Americans. Some are much worse. While those from India, Europe and Japan were generally outstanding, students from Saudia Arabia held the view that diplomas were 'negotiable' and all I had to do was quote a price. Foreign students from most other locations were unremarkable, but able to match American students.


      Also, every since the establishment of the NIS and and NIH research in American Colleges and Universities have been controlled by those government bureaucracies. Most projects which don't promise results complient with the prevailing views never get funded. Peer review is synomynous with censorship. Funding of Replication projects occurs only for high profile or politically hot topics. The NIS and NIH have probably done more damage to American scientific research than any other single factor.


      Someone commented about Soviet Science 'atrophying' under state control. Why should they have gone to all the time and expense of doing original research when they could buy it or steal it? There were enough greedy or disloyal American Turncoats in high places to bribe or extort. Clinton made that abundently clear to the Chinese with his quid quo pro exchange of US missle technology for campaign contributions to the DNC. Ditto with the Utah coal reserves fiasco. And, begun under Clinton and continuing with the current administration, a wholesale transer of constitutional rights to corporations is taking place, for the sake of 'their' so called 'Intellectual Property'. If those greedy robber barrons could find a way to meter sunlight or oxygen they would.

    16. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      There has been a lot of muddiness concerning "university" admission in the US. As regards undergraduate institutions ("college" in the US) there is only a tiny proportion of foreign students, and the vast percentage of these are at *private* institutions, not public universities.

      I too have worked at a state university in the midwest. During our "diversity training" the HR people seemed to think it was a good thing that the grad schools was 35% asian and the undergrad schools were only about 10%. Since the state funding the scholl has an asian population of MAYBE 1%, I could not agree with their assessment that 35% was ideal. Shouldn't it reflect the breakdown of the population of the state, ideally?

      I have worked in a US university and can state with assurance that since US schools (mine in particular) accept students with a horrific lack of preparation, I cannot believe that qualified US undergraduates are being turned away from State Schools when they apply.

      I know many people (myself included) who were denied access because there were not enough open slots. I may have been "unprepared", but I made the Dean's List for my academics so I was not behind the curve. I had to go to a satellite campus my first year, however, because there were not enough open slots at the main campus.

      What prevents qualified students from going to college is usually funding, and for that foreign students are generally ineligible (they must pay their own way, hence bringing needed money to the school)

      Funding is a big issue here, but student loans do a decent job to get people through school, and the school still gets their money.

      The job of a top research university, however, is *not* to crank out BA or BS students, but rather to train graduate students and produce solid research by supporting the professors (in part by supplying them with good graduate students).

      Yes, US tax dollars go to State schools to support them so US students can obtain an education. But they also go to support the development of knowledge, which indirectly benefits the US citizens paying the taxes. These two goals do not need to compete given the tremendous range of educational institutions in the US.

      The job of a state institution is to benefit the members of the state. A state university is there to ensure that the members of that state are competitive in the job market. Research is a great side benefit, but all the breakthroughs in the world are useless if the population is unemployed, don't you think?

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    17. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 2
      I fail to see how my statement and my sig are related.

      I'm not sure either, but the juxtaposition just struck me as funny. Maybe it's because you seem to be advocating "america first" isolationism in your post, and open (=open to everyone) standards in your sig.

      Looking at your web address (I cannot reach the site from here)

      Do try again, it's hilarious. Well I thought it was funny.

      (It's hosted in the US, BTW (at least according to ARIN). Funny how there are actually no .kp sites, and the DPRK "PR dept" operates through .jp and US-hosted .com sites, i.e. countries is threatens to nuke on a regular basis, isn't it?)

      If I was going to try to go to a government funded school in Korea, I'd certainly expect to only be admitted after all the Korean citizens who wanted to go were enrolled.

      This is OT, but you remember about the Japanese people who were abducted by north korea? One of them, it turns out, got married (in NK) to an american defector. Strange, or what?

    18. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by KludgeGrrl · · Score: 1

      I know many people (myself included) who were denied access because there were not enough open slots. I may have been "unprepared", but I made the Dean's List for my academics so I was not behind the curve. I had to go to a satellite campus my first year, however, because there were not enough open slots at the main campus.

      But did you apply to all the various State supported universities and colleges in your state? You note that you *did* get into the satelite campus. My point is not that every student can get into every school, but rather that there are a host of different schools and i would be surprised were a qualified student unable to enter any of them.

      If your State U was full up, I would hazard that the reason was because there were more students *from the state* who wanted to go than there were places... which is not a good thing, but is not the fault of foreign enrollment.

      Funding is a big issue here, but student loans do a decent job to get people through school, and the school still gets their money.

      Yes, but foreign students are not eligible for those loans. My point was not that US nationals did not pay (they do!) but that they were not "footing the bill" for foreign nationals.

      The job of a state institution is to benefit the members of the state. A state university is there to ensure that the members of that state are competitive in the job market. Research is a great side benefit, but all the breakthroughs in the world are useless if the population is unemployed, don't you think?

      Ah, and here we do differ. I believe that the role of education is not merely to provide job training, but to develop human understanding too. Graduate school, in particular, is usually ill suited for job-preparation. Yet I do believe it is an important thing that tax dollars should support.

      But here we enter into personal opinions, and heaven forbid I should try to proseltize my own views...

    19. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      I can admit that the views seem a bit odd. It's more like I'm advocating making an open file format that works better for the individual app. The workings of our universities and the breakthroughs they make needs to be open to the world, but our app is getting US citizens educated. :-)

      The blasted firewall here blocks it, I'll give it a peek when I get home.

      I honestly don't remember it at all.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    20. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Kunta+Kinte · · Score: 2
      Wrong again, most of the students who come here don't make plans to leave. They settle here. In my past 3.5 yrs in college I have seen 90% of foreign nationals do something or other to stay even overstay their visa time.

      I think you're wrong on this one.

      The vast majority of foreign students go home. Many are bonded by their governments or companies, have families back home, can't get an visa, or maybe just don't want to stay. Students know if they overstay their visa then they can't get a job anyway.

      I'd say the 90% figure is about right, but it's for students who leave not stay. I'd argue only 1 or 2 out of every 10 foreign students stay on for any period of time. And usually it's only the best ( >3.8 GPA holders, quite often ) that get sponsored to stay.

      This is just my observation from working/studying at a university with a very high foreign student population for the last 6.5 years.

      --
      Based on upvotes, Ageism is the only "-ism" Slashdotters care about and think isn't SJW
    21. Re:I can see why they'd walk away from it... by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      But did you apply to all the various State supported universities and colleges in your state? You note that you *did* get into the satelite campus. My point is not that every student can get into every school, but rather that there are a host of different schools and i would be surprised were a qualified student unable to enter any of them.

      There is only one state school in my state that was credible in my chosen field, the one where my aptitudes are.

      If your State U was full up, I would hazard that the reason was because there were more students *from the state* who wanted to go than there were places... which is not a good thing, but is not the fault of foreign enrollment.

      My state U is the one I ended up working for, where the enrollment breakdown was completely off WRT the state population. That tells me there may have been more students from the state who wanted to go, but those slots were filled by exchange students first. :-)

      Yes, but foreign students are not eligible for those loans. My point was not that US nationals did not pay (they do!) but that they were not "footing the bill" for foreign nationals.

      Yup. And my point was it's no longer money concerns keeping citizens out of college, it's a lack of open slots in the programs. And the exchange students paid apprx $10k a year more than the state students. That difference is equaled out when you consider the tax contribution of the extended family and community of the state student for many many years. I was the first generation to go, but you can bet that my parents, grandparents, and community helped fund the school with taxes for years.

      Ah, and here we do differ. I believe that the role of education is not merely to provide job training, but to develop human understanding too. Graduate school, in particular, is usually ill suited for job-preparation. Yet I do believe it is an important thing that tax dollars should support.

      I'd say that is _a_ role, not _the_ role of our wonderful U's. But you need to make sure that people have the basics they need to survive first: food, shelter, etc.. These are provided by the job training aspect, and without those none of the higher functions matter. I guarantee that someone freezing to death would burn books of great literature for heat, for example.

      But here we enter into personal opinions, and heaven forbid I should try to proseltize my own views...

      I thought that's what Slashdot is for? :-) Truly, voice your views and opinions. This is a friendly (and interesting!) debate, after all. Yes?

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
  4. and the problem is??? by burninginside · · Score: 0, Troll

    why should the US government pay for someone who is not a citizen's education?

    1. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why should the US government pay for someone who is not a citizen's education?

      because it is in the US's best interest to have as many really smart people as it can HERE.

    2. Re:and the problem is??? by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      To get educated people and not pay the
      education, nor the risk that they will not finnish it.

      But if you like the idea that you loose 50%
      of your greatest students, fine for me.

    3. Re:and the problem is??? by burninginside · · Score: 1

      under what conditions will the education be paid for? who says the person will not go through college and then split the US therefore not benefiting anyone but themselves and their home country?

    4. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you read the article? I guess not. It feels so good to bash foreigners every time you can...
      Also, learn english. It'll make you sound smarter next time.
      Good day.

    5. Re:and the problem is??? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1
      why should the US government pay for someone who is not a citizen's education?

      This is a research grant, not tuition. Foreign students generally pay far more than residents due to ineligibility for federal/state grants.

      Now then - what's that they say about knowing when to open one's mouth?

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    6. Re:and the problem is??? by gclef · · Score: 2

      The problem is this: the gov't is not proposing to pay for someone else's education, they're proposing to pay for a study of something they're interested in, and then also trying to dictate who can work on that study. Since the study is unclassified, and therefore public science anyway, MIT apparently feels that this is improper and pretty pointless.

    7. Re:and the problem is??? by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      The 20 first years of a students life will be paid for by a forign country, this is a great cost for the country. After this, the BEST students go to UNIVERSITY in USA fore some years,
      this cost is small (only university) but the 20
      years of cost for the foreign country is huge
      (food living medical things etc) do the math and you will se why it is sooo good to import educated students...

    8. Re:and the problem is??? by tmark · · Score: 2

      This is a research grant, not tuition. Foreign students generally pay far more than residents due to ineligibility for federal/state grants.

      Except that big grants enable the host institutions to offer fellowships and/or stipends to students - at MIT, many of them foreign - which enable them to study there.

    9. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, thats why we should no longer let in any foreigners period. America Uber Alles!!!

    10. Re:and the problem is??? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      The grant isn't paying for the admission (tuition) but the facilities and curriculum. Both are needed to educate someone; as such this grant would fund the education of non-citizens. I don't have a problem with denying government help to non-citizens.

    11. Re:and the problem is??? by 1u3hr · · Score: 3, Insightful
      under what conditions will the education be paid for? who says the person will not go through college and then split the US therefore not benefiting anyone but themselves and their home country?

      You have it backwards: the brain drain doesn't work like that -- smart people from poor countries study for advanced degrees in thhe US, then stay there to make 100 times the income they could back home, or have research opportunities impossible there.

      Those that do have their education paid for may often be obligated to return home to benefit their countries -- as a form of foreign aid (teach a man to fish, etc). But many find ways to dodge that to stay in the land of milk and honey.

    12. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To bad those asshole foriegners DON'T STAY HERE you stupid fucking moron! That's the problem. They COME OVER HERE TO GO TO SCHOOL AND TAKE UP SPOTS THAT COULD BE FOR AMERICANS. When they are done, they go back to their original country, and steal our technology and knowledge!!!!!!!!!

    13. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those spots could have gone to Americans. I don't care how much money some other coutry spent on the students. If they are not Americans, then they DON'T BELONG IN US COLLEGES and UNIVERSITIES.

    14. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You have it backwards. They take up spots that could go to AMERICAN students who DESERVE IT. They LEAVE THE UNITED STATES and take it back to there home countries, and sometimes that's places like China, North Korea, Middle Eastern Countries. Moron!!!! Universities and Colleges for AMERICANS ONLY!!!

    15. Re:and the problem is??? by Blkdeath · · Score: 1
      The grant isn't paying for the admission (tuition) but the facilities and curriculum. Both are needed to educate someone; as such this grant would fund the education of non-citizens. I don't have a problem with denying government help to non-citizens.

      That's probably the most flawed logic I've ever heard. By that logic, each and every resident American's tuition is also paying for facilities and curriculum and faculty and therefore is contributing to foreign students' education. Moreover, every penny put into the colleges / universities in America can be traced directly or indirectly to supporting the education of foreign students.

      So why not just get it over with and close your borders already? After all, these foreigners will obviously just be coming to America seeking welfare, right?

      --
      BD Phone Home!

      Shameless plug. Like you weren't expecting it.

    16. Re:and the problem is??? by tutal · · Score: 1

      Since the study is unclassified, and therefore public science anyway, MIT apparently feels that this is improper and pretty pointless.

      You miss the mark, just because something is not classified does not mean that it is wide open to forein scrutiny/review. Case and point encryption technologies. If you are an American citizen, you can use very strong encryption, however you may not use the same encryption techniques for non-domestic products.

      In the case of AI, there are serious security implications and advantages that the US would have. It only makes sense that they would want to protect their technology from being used against them. We have seen time and time again where foreigners have taken research secrets and technologies to their respective homelands. Does it not make sense for the government to check if they are a covert operative or terrorist?

      As a taxpayer, I think that the government should be able to use its discression as to whom it will fund and as to the kinds of people it will allow to work on certain projects.

    17. Re:and the problem is??? by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      So you think only indians have the right to studdy in the US? You are so stupid that if
      I was a US taxpayer I would think "you DON'T BELONG IN US COLLEGES and UNIVERSITIES".

    18. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The person raise good points. Why are you affraid to address them? Asshole!!!

    19. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Government is funding the money that will be used, and therefore have the right to decide who works on it. MIT wouldn't have this problem if they HAD MORE AMERICANS IN THERE SCHOOL. THEY TURN AWAY AMERICANS TO EDUCATE FORIEGN ASSHOLES.

    20. Re:and the problem is??? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      frankly, yes, it does come down to that, and I wish they would close the borders for a limited time, 6 months to a year maybe. Once the world sees what it's like without the USA to run to, perhaps they'll be a little more appreciative of what we offer to them.

    21. Re:and the problem is??? by nicsterrr · · Score: 1

      Or more likely we would heave a sigh of relief when the opressive behaviour of the US led multinationals stops for a while and allows us to exist with our own cultures.

    22. Re:and the problem is??? by adamruck · · Score: 0

      Do you understand that a couple hundred years ago we were all from other nations? That america is a nation of immagrants? Immagrants made are cities great(new york, pennsylvania, etc), immagrants helped build are nation(look at the railroads) If people like you ran the goverment of america a couple hundred years ago, america would not be such a great country that it is today. I think you need to look at the constitution a little closer, do you understand what discrimation is? And how do American students "deserve it", I respect people who worked hard and came to america to get a good education, alot more then people who had everything givin to them, and somehow thing that becuase you say the pledge of alliagence every day, that they are better then foriegn people. If you feel so strongly about this, then why post as a anon? Perhaps you know how stupid and discrimatory you sound. --pardon the bad spelling--

      --
      Selling software wont make you money, selling a service will.
    23. Re:and the problem is??? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      See? Either way, the world benefits. I'm in total agreement with you. I'm sick of our gov't and their corporate masters trying to conquer the world.

    24. Re:and the problem is??? by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 2
      Once the world sees what it's like without the USA to run to, perhaps they'll be a little more appreciative of what we offer to them.

      And once the USA sees what it's like without oil imports and cheap 3rd world labour, maybe it'll be a little more appreciative of what the world offers to it.

    25. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you that stupid?

      Research grants only pay for education as a side efffect. The grant is for RESEARCH. Useful work. That someone gets an MS or PhD out of it is the compensation that a student scientist takes in exchange for not earning a reasonable salary.

      The student scientist working for eight dollars an hour on grant research is doing work similar to that of the research professor earning $70,000 annually. When the research benefits the nation or world, who is really "giving" something to whom?

      J

    26. Re:and the problem is??? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      the only reason we import oil is because our politicians make a lot of money that way. If US politics wasn't directly intertwined with the oil industry, you can bet we wouldn't be importing any.

      a lack of cheap 3rd world labour would give americans a) jobs b) quality goods. People are so used to shittiness that (b) would be a major eye-opener.

      Like I said, this would be temporary, maybe a year at most.

    27. Re:and the problem is??? by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 2
      the only reason we import oil is because our politicians make a lot of money that way. If US politics wasn't directly intertwined with the oil industry, you can bet we wouldn't be importing any.

      Try selling electric-powered SUVs to the electorate.

      Not that I don't agree with your point - the US's achilles heel is its dependency on oil imports.

      a lack of cheap 3rd world labour would give americans a) jobs b) quality goods. People are so used to shittiness that (b) would be a major eye-opener.

      I don't even think I own ANYthing made in USA, so I can't comment. ;-)

    28. Re:and the problem is??? by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      I own quite a few things made in the USA. On the whole quality is much higher than made overseas - save Japan and western euro nations.

      For example - I'm a bassist, and I own 4 bass guitars. One made in the USA, one made in Germany, one made in China, and one made in Mexico. In order of quality, I'd put them like so (best to least)

      USA
      Germany
      China
      Mexico

      The USA bass is a bit simpler than the German one, but the German one has a part that shouldn't have broken that was broken by its previous owner, so I have to put it second.

    29. Re:and the problem is??? by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 2
      For example - I'm a bassist, and I own 4 bass guitars.

      Oh, in that case you might know whether this snippet is true (I was going to use it at you, but I wasn't sure ;-) ) - that Fender had to move their production of cheapo guitars from Japan to Malaysia because the Japanese ones were better than the (more expensive) USA-made ones. Is that true?

      (Of course, Japan is hardly a 3rd-world country, so this is a bit beside the point, but it's an interesting piece of trivia.)

    30. Re:and the problem is??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      a lack of cheap 3rd world labour would give americans a) jobs b) quality goods. People are so used to shittiness that (b) would be a major eye-opener.

      Yeah, sure, and products would cost so much more but hey, consumers would be glad to pay it because it was made in USA, right? God, you're in touch with today's consumers.

    31. Re:and the problem is??? by gclef · · Score: 2

      Nonsense.

      The math of the encryption systems that we (used to) limit export of was always open. You could always *talk* about the encryption. The only issue was with exporting binaries.

      To show just how insane that policy was, I offer this: I went into a bookstore in London in 1995, and found a huge book that was nothing more than the source code to PGP, with a preface on the best OCR scanners to scan the book & get it to compile. The book was perfectly legal, since talking or writing about encryption was legal...it was just a pre-compiled binary that was illegal.

      Trying to limit (like this) who works on something that's going to be published as research anyway is just stupid.

  5. In MIT by TimeReliesOnLadyLuck · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Federal funding controls the research, evidentally.

    1. Re:In MIT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Research controls the federal funding.

    2. Re:In MIT by rovingeyes · · Score: 2
      Federal funding controls the research, evidentally.

      I think America has reached a point where the private sector can fund a lot of research on its own. Except for may be military applications most of the research can be done private sector. So the only way I see feds controlling the research is through "regulations" and not funds.

    3. Re:In MIT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This must be a stealth SOVIET RUSSIA post ...

    4. Re:In MIT by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      Um, no. If by the private sector you mean "corporations", that's absolutely wrong- American corporations are (usually) not especially good at basic research (Bell Labs being the exception that proves the rule). Or if you mean "private funding", you're also wrong- there isn't much of it. Certainly for biomedical research the bulk of funding comes from government agencies, and the overwhelming majority of basic research is being done with this money. So federal funding continues to be the lifeblood of academia.

      Case in point: my employer (big university) was recently told that they had to let JAG recruit at our law school (despite the USAF's refusal to sign a non-discrimination pledge because of "don't ask, don't tell") or lose nearly $300 million per year in federal money, almost all of which goes to our med school, and virtually none of which goes to the law school. The administration caved- they didn't have a choice.

    5. Re:In MIT by ErikZ · · Score: 2

      What's that? Huge piles of cash comes with strings attached?

      Shock! Surprise!

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
  6. This is A Good Thing by Pave+Low · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't think it's unreasonable that foreign students be restricted from participating. After all, it's my tax dollars paying for this, and I would expect my government to provide for their own citizens before some foreigners who presumably will take their knowledge back to their home countries.

    Like it or not, their are things in this country we restrict non-U.S. citizens from doing, and that is a good thing. They can't work for many government agencies or contractors. They are our guests, and they shouldn't expect that we give them the keys and the kitchen sink.

    This summary is just trolling by the submitter and michael to stir some shit up.

    --
    SIG:Slashdot: indymedia for nerds.
    1. Re:This is A Good Thing by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      Mayby we go and study in a free country, like russia...

    2. Re:This is A Good Thing by spikexyz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      A saying, from whom I can't remember: "We're all immigrants, or from families there of, we just got here at different times."

      Without foreigners, the US would not exist, and without more foreigners, it can not grow, change, or have any right to call itself the land of the free.

    3. Re:This is A Good Thing by Interfacer · · Score: 2, Informative

      The students pay for their education by working long hours on the projects. the money doesn^t pay the students but the hardware.

    4. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ehh!? this is about research work. Foreign workers plays a big role in our economy. If it wasn't for foreign workers there'd be no America. The ability to attract bright people from all over the world and our ambitions to take relatively good care of them is what keeps our country flourishing.

    5. Re:This is A Good Thing by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      If I was a taxpayer in USA i would like my money
      to go to the best man for the job, not the next mail-bomber.

    6. Re:This is A Good Thing by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They are our guests, and they shouldn't expect that we give them the keys and the kitchen sink.

      No, it's more like "they're your guests, and you won't let them help you do the dishes because you're afraid they might steal the silverware, despite having no evidence at all to suggest they would". Yes, I'm stretching the metaphor but I feel it had to be said. "Foreign" does not equal "future terrorist" any more (or any less) than "U.S. citizen" does. We've forgotten McVeigh and Nichols *so* quickly. And the anthrax mailer remains mysteriously at large...

      --
      Freedom: "I won't!"
    7. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I don't think it's unreasonable that foreign students be restricted from participating. After all, it's my tax dollars paying for this, and I would expect my government to provide for their own citizens before some foreigners who presumably will take their knowledge back to their home countries.

      They are our guests, and they shouldn't expect that we give them the keys and the kitchen sink.

      Shame on you! Xenophobe.
    8. Re:This is A Good Thing by robbyjo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is that if all research funds require no foreign citizens at all, then there are consequences that will backfire very badly, such as:

      1. It will decimate the number of graduate students.

      Note that there is a significant portion of foreign graduate students, most of which are hanging about the funds for their TAs or RAs. Cutting their funds simply send them fleeing.

      2. This will in turn bring many research projects ground to halt.

      Since there are a lot less graduate students, researches will ultimately understaffed, and thus will bring it to halt. Of course this will recover as the animo from US students to continue to graduate studies grows.

      3. This makes other countries advance in their research.

      See #1. Lots of other countries like Germany, Australia, UK, and so on still use foreign grad students to do research. Not to mention if China will follow the same path.

      --

      --
      Error 500: Internal sig error
    9. Re:This is A Good Thing by SirTwitchALot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sure we're a country of immigrants, that's hard to disagree with. But there's a difference when you have people who do not claim citizenship in a country wishing to use government funds. I agree that naturalized foreigners should have every right as a citizen born here, however visitors should not expect to have all of the benefits of a naturalized citizen.

      --
      Go away, or I will replace you with a very small shell script.
    10. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why is it that dirty foreigner Spicks and Niggers can steal jobs right out from under the noses of hard-working white Americans?

    11. Re:This is A Good Thing by Ridcully · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of the line spoken by the racist Senator Rawkins in "Finian's Rainbow":

      "My family's been having trouble with immigrants ever since we CAME to this country!"

    12. Re:This is A Good Thing by parthasarathy · · Score: 1

      With public funding getting cut (atleast my university does'nt get the MIT kinda money), most American universities are targetting international students as a source of revenue. Placing restrictions on the quality of education besides being detrimental to science is also harmful to the economy. There is a system called SEVIS to track international students now. It seems to be a reasonably effective one. Why get paranoid ? If MIT operates similar to my University then the chances of getting any such project done without international student participation is difficult if not impossible.

    13. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with you, and here's the reason why:

      47: 1. In the name of ALLAH, the Gracious, the Merciful.
      47: 2. Those who disbelieve and hinder men from the way of ALLAH - HE renders their works vain.
      47: 3. But as for those who believe and do righteous deeds and believe in that which has been revealed to Muhammad - and it is the truth from their Lord - HE removes from them their sins and sets right their affairs.
      47: 4. That is because those who disbelieve follow falsehood while those who believe follow the truth from their Lord. Thus does ALLAH set forth for men their lessons by similitudes.
      47: 5. And when you meet in regular battle those who disbelieve, smite their necks; and, when you have overcome them, by causing great slaughter among them, bind fast the fetters - then afterwards either release them as a favour or by taking ransom - until the war lays down its burdens. That is the ordinance. And if ALLAH had so pleased, HE could have punished them Himself, but HE has willed that HE may try some of you by others. And those who are killed in the way of ALLAH - HE will never render their works vain.
      47: 6. HE will guide them to success and will improve their condition.
      47: 7. And will admit them into the Garden which HE has made known to them.
      47: 8. O ye who believe ! if you help the cause of ALLAH, HE will help you and will make your steps firm.
      47: 9. But those who disbelieve, perdition is their lot; and HE will make their works vain.
      47: 10. That is because they hate what ALLAH has revealed; so HE has made their works vain.
      47: 11. Have they not traveled in the earth and seen what was the end of those who were before them ? ALLAH utterly destroyed them, and for the disbelievers there will be the like thereof.
      47: 12. That is because ALLAH is the Protector of those who believe, and the disbelievers have no protector.
      47: 13. Verily, ALLAH will cause those who believe and do good works to enter the Gardens underneath which streams flow; While those who disbelieve enjoy themselves and eat even as the cattle eat, and the Fire will be their last resort.
      47: 14. And how many a township, mightier than thy town which has driven thee out, have WE destroyed, and they had no helper.
      47: 15. Then, is he who takes his stand upon a clear proof from his Lord like those to whom the evil of their deeds is made to look attractive and who follow their low desires ?
      47: 16. A description of the Garden promised to the righteous: Therein are streams of water which corrupts not; and streams of milk of which the taste changes not; and streams of wine, a delight to those who drink; and streams of clarified honey. And in it they will have all kinds of fruit, and forgiveness from their Lord. Can those who enjoy such bliss be like those who abide in the Fire and who are given boiling water to drink so that it tears their bowels ?
      47: 17. And among them are some who seems to listen to thee till, when they go forth from thy presence, they say to those who have been given knowledge, `What has he been talking about just now ?' These are they upon whose hearts ALLAH has set a seal, and who follow their own evil desires.
      47: 18. But as for those who follow guidance, HE adds to their guidance, and bestows on them righteousness suited to their condition.
      47: 19. The disbelievers wait not but for the Hour, that it should come upon them suddenly. The Signs thereof have already come. But of what avail will their admonition be to them when it has actually come upon them.
      47: 20. Know, therefore, that there is no god other than ALLAH, and ask protection for thy human frailties, and for believing men and believing women. And ALLAH knows the place where you move about and the place where you stay.
      47: 21. And those who believe say, `Why is not a Surah revealed ?' But when a decisive Surah is revealed and fighting is mentioned therein, thou seest those in whose hearts is a disease, looking towards thee like the look of one who is fainting on account of approaching death. So woe to them !
      47: 22. Their attitude should have been one of obedience and of calling people to good. And when the matter was determined upon, it was good for them if they were true to ALLAH.
      47: 23. Would you not then, if you are placed in authority, create disorder in the land and sever your ties of kinship ?
      47: 24. It is these whom ALLAH has cursed, so that HE has made them deaf and has made their eyes blind.
      47: 25. Will they not, then, ponder over the Qur'an, or, is it that there are locks on their hearts ?
      47: 26. Surely, those who turn their backs after guidance has become manifest to them, Satan has seduced them and holds out false hopes to them.
      47: 27. That is because they said to those who hate what ALLAH has revealed, `We will obey you in some matters, and ALLAH knows their secrets.
      47: 28. But how will they fare when the angels will cause them to die, smiting their faces and their backs ?
      47: 29. That is because they followed that which displeased ALLAH, and disliked the seeking of HIS pleasure. So HE rendered their works vain.
      47: 30. Do those in whose hearts is a disease suppose that ALLAH will not bring to light their malice ?
      47: 31. And if WE pleased, WE could show them to thee so that thou shouldst know them by their marks. And thou shalt, surely, recognize them by the tone of their speech. And ALLAH knows your deeds.
      47: 32. And WE will, surely, try you, until WE make manifest those among you who strive for the cause of ALLAH and those who are steadfast. And WE will make known the true facts about you.
      47: 33. Those, who disbelieve and hinder men from the way of ALLAH and oppose the Messenger after guidance has become manifest to them, shall not harm ALLAH in the least; and HE will make their works fruitless.
      47: 34. O ye who believe ! obey ALLAH and obey the Messenger and make not your works vain.
      47: 35. Verily, those who disbelieve and hinder people from the way of ALLAH, and then die while they are disbelievers - ALLAH certainly, will not forgive them.
      47: 36. So be not slack and sue not for peace, for you will, certainly, have the upper hand. And ALLAH is with you, and HE will not deprive you of the reward of your actions.
      47: 37. The life of this world is but a sport and a pastime, and if you believe and be righteous, HE will give you your rewards, and will not ask of you your wealth.
      47: 38. Were HE to ask it of you and press you, you would be niggardly, and HE would bring to light your malice.
      47: 39. Behold ! You are those who are called upon to spend in the way of ALLAH; but of you there are some who are niggardly. And whoso is niggardly, is niggardly only against his own soul. And ALLAH is Self-Sufficient, and it is you who are needy. And if you turn your backs, HE will bring in your place another people; then they will not be like you.

    14. Re:This is A Good Thing by Snake · · Score: 1
      I don't think it's unreasonable that foreign students be restricted from participating. After all, it's my tax dollars paying for this, and I would expect my government to provide for their own citizens before some foreigners who presumably will take their knowledge back to their home countries.

      Well, except for one teeny itty bit of fact: most of american brains come from abroad

      If the U.S. start barring foreign students from high profile/risk projects, they will go elsewhere and the brain drain will crawl to a stop.

      Then, maybe, we can count on the fine US school system to pick up the slack :)

    15. Re:This is A Good Thing by bob_dinosaur · · Score: 1

      Foreign scientists have been vital to the USA's economic and military development. For example, have you ever wondered about the nationality of most of the scientists involved in the USA's Manhattan project to build an atomic weapon?

      Here's a hint: many weren't American. German (Bethe), Italian (Fermi), Russian (Kistiakowsky), and Polish (Rotblat) scientists contributed at least as much, if not more than the American (Oppenheimer, Lawrence) scientists. Those are just off the top of my head, I've probably forgotten the names of loads more.

      You're free to be a xenophobe, but you could at least try to be a little less clueless about foreigner's role in your society.

    16. Re:This is A Good Thing by tetranz · · Score: 1

      Others have answered the specific question here but this sort of talk always brings up a broader, almost philosophical, question for me.

      It often sounds reasonable to say things like: (substitute your own country)

      "Americans should get jobs before foreigners."
      "I don't want my tax dollars helping foreigners before Americans."
      "Buy American!".

      Hard to argue there but ... people don't really complain so much about their tax dollars helping someone in another state or their state tax helping someone in another city or their local tax helping someone on the other side of town.

      What is so fundamentally different about a country border compared to state or city borders?

    17. Re:This is A Good Thing by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
      And your point is?

      If having violent bits in your religious texts, smiting unbelievers, etc. etc. is a reason to be discriminated against, then only Bhuddists and Confucianists should ever be allowed to work on government projects.

      Get a life, asshole.

      --
      oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
    18. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is so wrong headed it makes me want to throw things. It's already known we've trained terrorists in our schools. It's more like inviting a whole group of people into your house, and knowing that there's someone in the group that gathering information to take back to the people that want to rob you, rape you/your wife/your kids/your pet, and then knock your freaking house down around your ears.

      I don't invite a soul into my house without an element of trust. If I don't trust them I don't let them in. Why should a country be any different.

    19. Re:This is A Good Thing by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      WRONG, WRONG, WRONG. I am applying to grad school, and currently work with scientists from all over the world. Without the huge number of talented foreigners who come to the US to study science, our nation's system of basic research- probably the best in the world- would be fucked. Read through any issue of a top-ranking biomedical journal, find every article written at an American institution, and see how few of them lack any conspicuously foreign (usually Chinese) name.

      There is nothing wrong with reasonable security measures; the story doesn't tell enough for anyone to judge whether the NSA was being more paranoid than normal. However, to suggest that the US should look out for US students first is shortsighted and ignorant. The reason we have so many foreign students is because kids here don't want to go to grad school- they want to go to law school, med school, or simply get rich. I was a biology major at an Ivy League school, and very few of the other biology majors in my class intended to go to grad school.

      The NIH (and others) do not pay for fellowships for foreign students and postdocs, which is appropriate. What you're suggesting, however, seems to be that the NIH should give priority to projects that are led 100% by American citizens. That's, like, almost none of them.

    20. Re:This is A Good Thing by TarPitt · · Score: 1

      Or as once said, "Christopher Columbus was an illegal immigrant"

      --
      If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep
    21. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because its a catch 22. you can't trust them if you don't know them and you can't get to know them without putting the inital trust in them. Most people you trust are more likely to keep it than violate it, it is the principle on which most open societies are built. so the question is should a few bad apples let us change the fundamentals of how our society works.

    22. Re:This is A Good Thing by spikedvodka · · Score: 1

      foreign students, eh... Hrmmm... Let's see Most of the forign students I know end up living and working here in the US after college. Also, Technically you could say that I, while being a natural born American, am a forign student becuase I grew up oversees (I'm a UN Brat, okay?)

      If I wanted to join a project where I needed security clearance, odds are, I couldn't becuase I spent over 18 years abroad.

      Also some of the brightest brains, at least at my school, are the forign kids.

      The real irony is that, and correct me if I'm wrong in this, to get certain types of fedreal funding, the school has to accept X% forign students. And now the Government wants to prevent these students from working on certain research projects.

      Okay, I'm done ranting

      --
      I will not give in to the terrorists. I will not become fearful.
    23. Re:This is A Good Thing by hal9000 · · Score: 1

      Not to mention, even Oppenheimer was the son of German Jewish immigrants, and received his PhD at Göttingen, Germany in 1927 -- during the early rise of the Nazis. Not exactly home-bred.

      --
      Look out honey, 'cause I'm using technology; Ain't got time to make no apology
    24. Re:This is A Good Thing by prisoner-of-enigma · · Score: 2

      You mis-state the situation. To add further enhancement, it's more like "there are strangers asking for access to your home so they can do your dishes. You know absolutely nothing about these people. They could be saints, they could be rapists, you just don't know. Therefore, before anyone is allowed into your home, you must find out as much as you can about them and their intentions before letting them touch your china, silverware, etc."

      This is only common sense. It is not saying that no foreign nationals can be involved. It is saying that any that are involved must be screened. If the policy has a fault is that it should be screening anyone, foreign or domestic, who's involved in the project. However, the article doesn't address that issue, and it's quite possible that all domestic participants are already screened as a matter of course.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet and say to us, Make us your slaves, but feed us. - Fyodor Dostoyevsky
    25. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or how about this: The "Native" Americans were, if not illegal immigrants, at least immigrants. There were no humans that evolved in America. All of them came from other places.

    26. Re:This is A Good Thing by 5KVGhost · · Score: 2

      No, it's more like "They're your guests, but you won't give them your house keys and let them babysit the kids unless you know them really, really well." Which is pretty reasonable, actually.

      They weren't automatically excluding anyone. They're just inisting on screening foreign nationals (those guests) before giving them free run. You know, like people criticized the administration for not doing back in September 2001.

      You can be quite sure that no one in law enforcement has "forgotten" McVeigh and similar domestic terrorists, and you can bet that they won't be shy about screening anyone who they feel is suspicious (as they should). But the current major threat is from outside the country, and screening foreign nationals makes more sense right now, both politically and as the best way to utilize the resources available.

    27. Re:This is A Good Thing by bdlarkin · · Score: 1
      Accept they were all watched. Investigated, etc. Hell they were practically imprisoned at Los Alamos.

      Yes, the US government used foreign scientists in the development of the bomb. But they didn't just hand over the research project to them (and all the funds) without being able to investigate them.

    28. Re:This is A Good Thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly what I was thinking!

    29. Re:This is A Good Thing by tburkhol · · Score: 1
      it's more like "they're your guests, and you won't let them help you do the dishes because you're afraid they might steal the silverware

      You mis-state the situation. To add further enhancement, it's more like "there are strangers asking for access to your home so they can do your dishes. You know absolutely nothing about these people.

      The former is closer. In order to be a foreign student [at MIT], you must have at least a student visa, which means at least a rudimentary check. The students have also been accepted to a research university, which implies at least mediocre technical competence and education. Finally-they're not talking about preventing foreign nationals from doing classified/secret research (which is a whole other discussion), they're talking about prohibiting them from doing any research.

    30. Re:This is A Good Thing by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      After all, it's my tax dollars paying for this, and I would expect my government to provide for their own citizens before some foreigners who presumably will take their knowledge back to their home countries.

      Some citizens might also expect to get the most bang for the buck from their research dollars.

  7. 404k - Money not found? by nucal · · Score: 2, Funny

    Didn't matter, it wasn't even in the budget ...

    1. Re:404k - Money not found? by NecroPuppy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Heh...

      Actually, sums that small, and that is small, are in discretionary funds that many Government departments can access for "miscellaneous" projects.

      I don't recall the exact number, but I think it's in the neighborhood of half a million or so that triggers the entire government accounting process. These days, it's probably higher.

      --
      I like you, Stuart. You're not like everyone else, here, at Slashdot.
  8. Case in point: by slalderma · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I was a grad student at Texas Tech until a few months ago and one of my prof.s had funding from US DOD to study dispersion of chem./bio. warfare agents. The project was multi-year and for 90% of the project, no foreign national was allowed to work on it. That was finally overturned, however, mainly because there weren't enough Americans to work on it.

    The project was new just before Sept. 11th and I'm not sure I can blame them for their restrictions at the time. I think they finally figured out that, at least in this case, it didn't matter who worked on the project. It wasn't going to propogate information about how to make delivery agents more effective, just how they interact with urban, rural, etc. environments.

    That and Lubbock isn't a hotbed for terrorists if you know what I mean. Cow-tippers, yes. Foreign spies, no.

    1. Re:Case in point: by nucal · · Score: 2
      That was finally overturned, however, mainly because there weren't enough Americans to work on it.

      You make a great point. Graduate students actually represent a significant part of the labor pool in academic science - they are not just trainees, but they also do a large fraction of the actual work. As mentioned in the article, about half of the graduate students in the US working in physical sciences are not US citizens. In other words, without foreign students it'll take twice as long to get the work done. I'll bet that it's a similar fraction for biological sciences and for postdoctoral researchers (another class of "trainees") as well.

      By and large, US citizens are simply not as interested in getting into science. Most grad students get pretty jaded when they see that a career as an academic research investigator is frequently less about the science itself and more about politics and nonsense related to obtaining research funding. People who don't truly love the science and can put up with this kind of rat race usually wind up in more lucrative careers.

    2. Re:Case in point: by jmccay · · Score: 2

      That's exactly the point. 90% of graduate students should be Americans not 50/50!!!!!!!!

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    3. Re:Case in point: by extra88 · · Score: 2
      That and Lubbock isn't a hotbed for terrorists if you know what I mean. Cow-tippers, yes. Foreign spies, no.
      I guess you've never read The Cobweb by Stephen Bury (pen name for Neal Stephenson when he writes with his uncle). BTW, it's not a great book, definitely not as good as their previous book, Interface. Interface is a hoot.
    4. Re:Case in point: by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      That's a noble sentiment, but the reason the grad population isn't 90% American is because few Americans are interested in grad school, not because all those evil foreigners are taking spots away. Denying funding to projects with foreign nationals participating won't change the makeup of the grad student population, it'll just decimate it.

  9. Yeah, what's the big deal? by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "I mean, the government wants to just "check" research so that no one can use it as a weapon... as an upstanding American who loves his country AND science, I see nothing wrong with that. After all... America owns science that it creates... just look at all the patents."

    "Ya pinkos."

    (Quickly scurries into patented asbestos-lined flamewar bunker, and braces for incoming fire)

    1. Re:Yeah, what's the big deal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Science isn't created, it's discovered - unless you're a creationist :)

  10. Bravo!!!! by byron150 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I for one congratulate MIT!!! It was a bold move to stand up to something as blatantly wrong as what the government was trying to do. Security must not be gained at the sacrifice of our morals. What does that say about us as a society, our nation who claims to lead all others in progressive thought. We welcomed these people to our land when no other country would take them. France gave us a statue embodying the princple. Now we want to send them away because we think all people of a race would also wish us harm. Extremists come from all races, and someday a white female American will do something terribly destructive which will result in the loss of thousands of lives. What will happen then? The government steps in and calms us down and tells us that we can't trust each other and will therefore take away every personal freedom we have in the name of making us secure? I'll spend a cold day in hell before I allow that to happen to me. So yeah, GO MIT!!!!

    --
    -Never believe in the end of something great, send it to sub-committee for further study!!! - ME
    1. Re:Bravo!!!! by KludgeGrrl · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There is also a more pragmatic reason to applaud MIT's decision, namely that research universities (and please note, I'm not referring to *all* colleges and universities) ought to try to attract the very best minds in order to have the very best programmes.

      It is not merely the professors and texts that comprise an education, but the interaction of the students' minds. By limiting the students on the basis of geographic origins (this discussion of "race" that has slipped in seems sloppy) the university will limit the quality of education for all its students. Period. And that would be a bad thing.

    2. Re:Bravo!!!! by jmccay · · Score: 2

      There was NOTHING wrong with what the Government did. The UNITED STATES Government has a right to take care of it's own citizens first. MIT should be ashamed of itself for turning away Americans from the position it gave foriegn students! This has nothing to do with personal freedom. The US Government is funding the money, and they have a right to decide who works on it. If MIT doesn't like it, then they will lose MONEY and grants. They will change their tune when they start losing a lot of research money!
      I think the Government should make a law prohibiting Colleges and Universities from taking any foriegn students when there are American students who want the education--especially when financial aid is concerned! They need to be putting Americans first--not the other way around.
      It's a sad day when MIT doesn't have enough American students to do research. MIT should be ashamed of itself that they turn down Americans and take foriegn students, who leave the US, to be educated ahead of American students!!!!

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    3. Re:Bravo!!!! by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      The US should be ashamed that it can not produce
      students of good quality, NOTHING else.

    4. Re:Bravo!!!! by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      I think the Government should make a law prohibiting Colleges and Universities from taking any foriegn students when there are American students who want the education--especially when financial aid is concerned! They need to be putting Americans first--not the other way around.

      Financial aid to foreigners is not provided by the government anyway. You're calling for the equivalent of tariffs on American education. Should the government be allowed to dictate how many foreign students Harvard will admit next year? It's a private university, for Christ's sake.

      I've made this point too many times, but there are not enough interested American students to fill all the graduate spots in our universities. And the contributions of foreigners are what helps make America into a scientific superpower. I'd much rather work with a Chinese student who has a fucking clue than an American who got in because the university was desperate for warm bodies.

    5. Re:Bravo!!!! by kcelery · · Score: 1

      Post graduate education is no fun at all to ordinary US citizens. There are countless of avenues to a more relax living than years of cold hard research on academic materials, which US citizen had chosen NOT to go through the ordeal.

    6. Re:Bravo!!!! by gte910h · · Score: 2

      Why the hell would we want to let in an american student when there is a MUCH more highly qualified foriegn student who can take the spot and will more often than not BECOME an american after they get their degree? That is the case. American college's already have tougher requirements for out of state and out of country students. If you turn down TOP students all the time, you are making your institution less capable and prestigous. We DO take into account that they aren't "natives" but that's enough. Any more and the quality of education goes down.

      --
      Want to see every step I took to start my company? http://www.rowdylabs.com/blogs/pitchtothegods
    7. Re:Bravo!!!! by jmccay · · Score: 2

      The US does produce students of good quality, but their positions are given to foriegn students at the top schools like MIT. Quality has nothing to do with it. Schools like MIT discriminate against Americans.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    8. Re:Bravo!!!! by jmccay · · Score: 2

      Financial aid may not be provided by the government, but it is taken away from US Citizens!!!! I haven't gone on to get my Master because the lack of financial aid. I am usually for smaller government, but yes, the Government should dictate how many foriegn students Harvard, et. al. can except because these schools turn down willing and capable US Students!!!! Americans should come first at United States Schools--period!!!
      That Chinese student your working with will probably take his knowledge back to China where they will steal our ideas and technology. Remember China ignores patents and copyrights. China doesn't do much of it's own research anymore. Why should they when they can send over a few students to get the technology at American Universities where they can steal stuff before it hits the market!

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    9. Re:Bravo!!!! by jmccay · · Score: 2

      Bull, who says the foriegn student is more qualified? Nothign says they are more qualified. That is Most of the top Colleges and Universities discriminate against Americans. Americans should be given more preference than foriegners period. If their is an American student who wants to go there, they should get the spot.
      The idea that they stay here is a lot bull, there's no evidence to show most of them stay here in the US and become Citizens. A few good lawsuits will change the colleges and universities minds, and so will losing research money which drives a lot of schools!!!!

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    10. Re:Bravo!!!! by inburito · · Score: 2

      What a bunch of FUD!

      First of all you're talking about private universities! Even though they are u.s. government accreditated they are funded mostly from private funds. As an international undergrad at MIT I can tell you that not a penny of my financial aid is from the u.s. government. There are also severe restrictions on the amount of international undergraduate students allowed. I'm in a quota of 8% and my acceptance there is more of an anomality then a regularity. About 1000 students are admitted annually, of which about 80 are international.. Yup, americans do come first.

      MIT is research oriented and their primary interest is in their graduate student body, about half of which is international. It seems that unfortunately usa doesn't have enough bright enough people of their own but as they are a private institution it is within their right to be very specific about who they admit. Whoever gets the job done the best gets in, but also whoever gets in works their ass off to benefit the research that they're part of. Graduate students at MIT are practically slaves and if someone gets immediate benefit from their work it is primarily the professor they work for and quite likely the sponsor of the research.

      One interesting aspect of MIT is that no classified research of any sort is done on campus. Everything is completely open. It seems to be an institutewide principle that if a sponsor sets restrictions on disclosure of research their money will not be taken. Their recent decision seems to be an extension of this policy. MIT is not doing this just to protect it's international student body but everyone involved in research as they believe strongly that the scientific community should be as open as possible with as much peer collaboration as possible for that is the best way to advance our knowledge of science and engineering.

    11. Re:Bravo!!!! by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      I'm a native-born American citizen, and I'd far rather work with a bright, motivated foreign student who will return home when he's done than with someone like you. Obviously our system of government makes the hare-brained scheme you propose difficult or impossible to implement, but it's sad to see so such misinformation and bigotry spread here.

      You clearly have a huge chip on your shoulder, and I suspect that, not financial issues, is what's really holding you back.

    12. Re:Bravo!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You'd sing a different tune if you didn't get to go on to Graduate and Doctorial degrees. It's easy to say there's nothing wrong when you're privileged. As*hole

    13. Re:Bravo!!!! by gte910h · · Score: 2

      The answers on the standardized tests say they are more qualified. And there are no where near enough American students of quality applying. You should see some of the retards who get in under the CURRENT guidelines.

      --
      Want to see every step I took to start my company? http://www.rowdylabs.com/blogs/pitchtothegods
  11. This could be useful for tenure review by vaxer · · Score: 5, Funny
    I can see it now...

    The committee has noticed that you don't appear to have published any research in the last five years. Is that really so?

    Well, I could tell you, but then I'd have to kill you all.


    Yes, I've definitely got to get me one of them Real Genius grants.
    1. Re:This could be useful for tenure review by _xeno_ · · Score: 2
      Well, I could tell you, but then I'd have to kill you all.

      I find that line funny, because for those of us who do classified research, which I don't (although I'm beginning the process of starting to look at possibly getting the investigation started to permit me to obtain a clearance, so I've been looking into the legalese you agree to with one), it's more like:

      Well, I could tell you, but then I'd have to kill myself.

      Of course, that isn't even really true - you wouldn't be responsible for killing yourself, you leave that up to the Federal penitentiary system after you've been found guilty of treason based on the testimony from those you talked to. So I guess it's really:

      Well, I could tell, but then you'd have to kill me.

      Oh, and since Slashdot seems to have a lot of people who can't detect sarcasm, this is a joke. Don't try and take it seriously, because it won't take you anywhere useful. Although, if you do manage to take it far enough, you might meet big burly men with Colt carbines. Who will take you to meet other big burly men with a different interest in you.

      --
      You are in a maze of twisty little relative jumps, all alike.
  12. Really? by Izang · · Score: 5, Informative

    MSNBC says: "But the National Security Agency refused to budge from a requirement that any foreigners working on a planned project at MIT's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory be screened by the government in advance, forcing the school to turn down the money in September, Powell said." You say: "MSNBC is running an article that details how the MIT AI Lab, the birth place of the free software movement, walked away from a $404K study because the government wanted to restrict participation by foreign students." Sounds like they are just checking for ties to terrorists. Where does it say that foreign students are restricted from participating?

    1. Re:Really? by byron150 · · Score: 3, Informative

      He actually quoted the tagline for the article, when reading the article later you find out that they simply wanted to screen them. I don't like it much better then total restriction but if you want to blame someone, blame MSNBC for attempting to get your attention by misleading you initially.

      --
      -Never believe in the end of something great, send it to sub-committee for further study!!! - ME
    2. Re:Really? by Unordained · · Score: 1

      only foreign nationals being screened for security reasons -- like americans aren't ever a threat to themselves. if MIT wanted to say that they treat all their students alike, they couldn't accept this offer. either the foreigners wouldn't be screened, or they'd all be screened ...

      and considering how the foreign-national registration thing went in california (we promise we'll just take your info, but, oh wait, we'll arrest you instead without telling you why) ... i'd say MIT would be better off not risking putting their students through the screening just for a grant. MIT students are usually there because MIT wants them, not because they have to accept them.

    3. Re:Really? by Rogerborg · · Score: 5, Informative

      restrict: To keep or confine within limits.

      Limit, not absolutely prohibit.

      NSA screening would deny access to some people based on the probability of them being or becoming hostile. What criteria would the NSA use to determine whether to label each student "potential terrorist"? Would that be open to scrutiny or appeal?

      Seems pretty limiting to me, at least in principle, and that's the position under discussion.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    4. Re:Really? by jmccay · · Score: 2

      IF MIT DID treat all their students alike, they would have excepted this. To work on A LOT of government contracts you have to have security checks done--whether or not you are an American! The fact appears to be that MIT wants to treat it's foriegn students special. Everyone who works on Government contracts gets screened for security reasons. That's the way it has been for a while. In jobs for DOD, it's advertised that a security check is required.
      The only thing that this proves is that MIT has preferential treament for the Foriegn students over American students.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    5. Re:Really? by Skavookie · · Score: 1

      As far as I know, it is difficult if not impossible for foreigners to pass security checks. The research I've done on this isn't terribly clear but it does look to me like it's more difficult for foreigners to pass. I'm not sure this in itself is neccesarily wrong, but if a large portion of MIT's research projects require security checks then this would indirectly discriminate against foreign students.

      Furthermore, there is the question of whether or not the particular projects in question are actually sensitive enough to warrant security checks. Remember that agencies like the NSA, DOD, etc are notorious for just assuming everything should be kept secret and require clearance.

    6. Re:Really? by AeternitasXIII · · Score: 1

      So I guess because Top Secret clearance is "restricted" from unauthorized personal, I'm not absolutely prohibited from accessing it? It's just standard political double speak where the government says a much softened version of what they and everyone else knows they mean.

      Kind of like "material breach" meaning "we're launching a few hundred cruise missles at your cities and infrastructure if you're primarily of Persian descent and Islamic persuasion, and offering you free food and oil if you're primarily of Asian descent" in the scope of UN politics.

    7. Re:Really? by jmccay · · Score: 2

      It doesn't really matter, and to paraphrase another comment: he who pays the money tends to make the rules. I personally feel that foriegners who have no loyalty (or even Americans) to America and it provinces should not be doing research fund by the United States Government--an obvious exception would be when multiple governments are funding the research such as (but not limited to) the UK, Japan, and the United States.
      I don't think these foriegners should even be allowed to attend school (any school) here. A lot of them just take what they learned back to their home country, and eventually take jobs away from Americans (with exceptions like Doctors who take the their skills back to their countries to provide a helpful service). I don't think it's wrong to discriminate against foriegn students when they are taking places that could have gone to American students who are equally qualified.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    8. Re:Really? by The+Grey+Mouser · · Score: 2


      I don't think these foriegners should even be allowed to attend school (any school) here. A lot of them just take what they learned back to their home country, and eventually take jobs away from Americans (with exceptions like Doctors who take the their skills back to their countries to provide a helpful service). I don't think it's wrong to discriminate against foriegn students when they are taking places that could have gone to American students who are equally qualified.


      Well, that's a brilliant statement. I assume you believe it is similarly wrong for an American to study abroad, then? In fact, no university is turning away "equally qualified" Americans in place of foreign nationals. This is a patently ridiculous statement, given that American university enrollment is at an all-time high.

      As several posters have tried to tell you before, the reason so many foreign nationals can be found in the nation's graduate schools is because we can't find enough Americans, competent or not! My department has done all but beg American undergrads to sign up, to little avail. Unfortunately, it is unlikely that you will actually read this post, given that you have ignored what no less than three other people have tried to tell you already. I'm sorry this is at odds with your desperate belief that thousands of qualified American students are being turned away in favour of feral foreign barbarians, but it just ain't so.

      I should also point out that while many foreign nationals return to their home country after study in the US, a large number remain here to become resident aliens and even citizens. It should also be pointed out that, even after leaving this country, many of these researchers continue to advance American science by being heavily involved with collaborations in this country. You claim that these scientists are taking away jobs from Americans, but you neglect to consider the American jobs that are made possible by the research work done by foreign nationals. This is not a zero-sum game, in other words.

      But then listening doesn't appear to be your strong suit, so perhaps I am wasting my time.

      The Mouser

    9. Re:Really? by Unordained · · Score: 1

      perhaps we should keep foreigners from buying other american services? not only should they not buy our educational services ... but they shouldn't be allowed to use our hospitals, our grocery stores, our gasoline pumps ... you never know, they might live longer, take food back home, and feed a family. or worse!

      starting to get the picture? you're probably one of those gung-ho capitalist types, and that's fine. but one of the doctrines coming with that is that you can't discrimate as to who you're selling your services and products to. we make exceptions for things like weapons (no, i'm sorry, you can't have a nuke today) but generally, we don't.

      as to research, wouldn't you rather they screen everyone? it seems they were only requiring that -foreign- students be screened, assuming americans aren't a liability. but your comment about "have no loyalty (or even Americans) to America" would tend to make us think you don't trust americans any more than foreigners ... shouldn't we be fair?

    10. Re:Really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you know anything? Most of the world doesn't even allow American stuff in to there countries, and when they do there's huge taxes associated with them to protect local stuff--when we do the same the other coutries go crying to the World Trade Orginization crying like little babies. There is a huge difference in what we allow in for products and what other countries allow in to their countries that's American. They protect their products and services. Why should't we!

  13. Its research. Not an education. by El+Camino+SS · · Score: 1


    You know, research. The kind of things that might improve human life or knowledge. This is a job to people. HELLOOOOO!!!

  14. In a post September 11, 2001 world... by suman28 · · Score: 2

    We have to be more careful about who is using the information being worked on by scientists. Though it is critical that the study/data be released so that others can improve on that work, it is also critical that information not fall into the wrong hands. Imagine China/Pakistan/North Korea having satellite technology 20 yrs ago. It would have been a very different world. I think restrictions are necessary now-a-days.

    1. Re:In a post September 11, 2001 world... by mark_lybarger · · Score: 5, Insightful

      slow down there cowboy... when i grew up, i learned that people kill people. then somewhere along the way, that's been converted into guns kill people. and now you want us to believe that information kills people?

      i have got to get into a new line of work!

    2. Re:In a post September 11, 2001 world... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mercinaries will do anything for the right price. If a foreigner on the "restricted list" wanted to do some damage in the U.S., he wouldn't do it himself. He'd hire an *American* mercinary. By concentrating on foreigners, the U.S. is leaving itself exposed.

    3. Re:In a post September 11, 2001 world... by shepd · · Score: 4, Insightful

      >Imagine China/Pakistan/North Korea having satellite technology 20 yrs ago. It would have been a very different world.

      Yes, imagine it. Satellites would finally be cheap enough today that one of the many freedom groups in China could afford to put one up in the air and the PRC would finally get its eyes opened up. Wouldn't it be nice!

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    4. Re:In a post September 11, 2001 world... by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      Mayby US would be better off by not educating terrorist in foreign nations, then fucking them,
      with the result of burning scrapers.

    5. Re:In a post September 11, 2001 world... by Rhubarb+Crumble · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Though it is critical that the study/data be released so that others can improve on that work, it is also critical that information not fall into the wrong hands. Imagine China/Pakistan/North Korea having satellite technology 20 yrs ago.

      Yeah. Like, imagine if someone had gone to Afghanistan 20 years ago and taught a bunch of insane fanatics to build bombs.

      Or someone had sold poison gas-making technology to mad Iraqi dictators.

      But that would NEVER happen, would it?

  15. Golden rule at work by WoodstockJeff · · Score: 1
    "He who has the gold makes the rules."

    So long as institutions tie their financial well-being to the government, they must abide by government restrictions. Where is the controversy in this?

    1. Re:Golden rule at work by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      None...

      It's only an observation that the US government is
      realy, realy stupid. And i feel sorry for the people of USA.

    2. Re:Golden rule at work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We need a fuckin' regime Change in USA!!! Down with Bush!!!

      Anonymous for obvious reasons, but I'm sure the appropriate agencies are tracking me, considering I am a foreigner - but no I don't live in Dubya-Land, thank Allah for that.

    3. Re:Golden rule at work by WoodstockJeff · · Score: 1
      How is it stupid? I doubt that many other countries in the world pay for government research to be done by American students...

      The article didn't say non-citizens would be excluded from the project, only that they'd have to pass background checks.

  16. Mod this up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's an order of magnitude more articulate than the other comments posted so far.

  17. RTFA by MeanMF · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But the National Security Agency refused to budge from a requirement that any foreigners working on a planned project at MIT's Artificial Intelligence Laboratory be screened by the government in advance

    They didn't want to restrict anybody from working on anything - they just wanted to run backround checks on non-citizens working on the projects. Is that really such a big deal??

    1. Re:RTFA by byron150 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Hey buddy RFTL(Read The Fucking Tagline) MSNBC's catch line for the article said exactly what the poster did. True he should have read it first and then posted his story, but really I blame MSNBC for instigating it just to catch readers attention.

      --
      -Never believe in the end of something great, send it to sub-committee for further study!!! - ME
    2. Re:RTFA by kenthorvath · · Score: 2

      Yes it is a terribly big deal. The point is that it is discriminatory to foreign students. If it meant background checks for everyone involved, there would be no points of contention, but the idea that only foreigners pose a security threat is absurd. This is blatant racial discrimination (and yes, I am a white middle class american citizen...).

    3. Re:RTFA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      they just wanted to run backround checks on non-citizens working on the projects. Is that really such a big deal??

      Yeah. There are domestic terrorists, as well. Why not treat them with equal opportunity?

    4. Re:RTFA by danielobvt · · Score: 1

      "Racial" discrimination? Maybe "nationalistic" discrimination, but not racial. An African-American would not be investigated, but a white French student would.

    5. Re:RTFA by kenthorvath · · Score: 1

      It seems that these days it is the arab race that holds the most focus, though perhaps poorly disguised.

    6. Re:RTFA by Any+Web+Loco · · Score: 1

      Running background checks on non-citizens IS a restriction - the only non-citizens (if any) who'll get to work will be US Govt approved.

      And yes - it IS a big deal.

  18. The Golden Age is Over (so say our sages) by NullAndVoid · · Score: 1

    If you look at the most dynamic societies in history, up to and including the US, and a common factor has always been attracting the best and the brightest from other societies. September 11 2001 will be known forever as the day that marked the start of America's decline.

    Osama would be proud if he had the faintest clue about the correlation between tolerance and greatness in a civilization. Oh the irony.

    --


    -- Sigs are for losers
    1. Re:The Golden Age is Over (so say our sages) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What in the blue hell are you talking about with tolerance. Tolerance has nothing to do with reasonable security measures...the government is asking to check out foreigners to be assigned to such a project...nothing more.

      I took a contractor job where I have to work for the government....I am a US citizen and was born here. I had to go through a complete background check with references, fingerprintings, and the whole ball of wax. I REALLY don't see the problem here.

      Some security measures are a good thing...I'd be more concerned if there were none.

  19. Re:Good for MIT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, he and his wife murdered all six of their children before committing suicide.

    But I'm sure you'll be able to compare GWB to Hitler regardless. It's amazing what you can construct when you don't bother to include the truth.

  20. You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strings by Aaron+M.+Renn · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The bottom line is that if you take someone's money - the government's, a corporation's, a foundation's, etc - you are implicitly or explicitly agreeing to the strings attached. Seldom is there a "free lunch". If there is money being offered, there is usually a reason why. I'm not entitled to have free money come raining down on me. Why should a wealthy institution like MIT? They know the game.

    If I offer the FSF a $20,000 grant to develop a "Foo" software package for me, provided they design it how I want, the FSF is certainly free to turn that money down and do their own thing (or do without a Foo package). But that doesn't make me an evil man for asking the FSF to write a program that meets my needs if I give them a donation to do so. Similarly for the government.

  21. It's legit by Unregistered · · Score: 1

    Background checks are important. While i doubt there are any terrorists trying to work on the project, i'm sure there are at least some students at MIT who plan to take whatever they learn back home. The US gov should not be funding foreigh research with our tax dollars. In fact there is something to be said for not allowing any non-citizens to work on cutting edge research.

    1. Re:It's legit by smasherbob · · Score: 1

      Yes, god forbid that humanity benefit from scientific research. Why shouldn't the US help the world at large instead of hoarding information for itself? Greedy, greedy, greedy...

    2. Re:It's legit by Unregistered · · Score: 1

      Why shouldn't the US help the world at large instead of hoarding information for itself?
      Because we fund the research.

    3. Re:It's legit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and immigrants also pay taxes that fund the US goverment that funds the research.

      We? Since when are immigrants exempt from (sale, income tax, social security) taxes?

      Sorry, if you were trying to appeal to a sense of "fairness", you'll have to rethink your objection. :)

    4. Re:It's legit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "i'm sure there are at least some students at MIT who plan to take whatever they learn back home"

      Er... so when a student finishes his study term at MIT, you want him mind-wiped before returning to his own country? All memories of said research erased?

      Maybe you'd be happier if the foreign students stayed in their own countires and did their reserach there instead. Of course, then the US wouldn't have the results of the research in the first place - unless that other country was nice enough to share the information. (By publishing it in an international scientific journal or at international conferences, etc. I thought that was how most research was done.)

    5. Re:It's legit by smasherbob · · Score: 1

      Soooo....? Say we develop a cure for cancer. Should it only be for Americans?

  22. In a related story by Alien54 · · Score: 5, Informative
    Theodore Postel is also winning some points on his concerns about technology snafus under the guise of national security. Check out this story:

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,3-530647,0 0.html

    • The Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) is considering an investigation into accusations that fundamental flaws in the proposed "Son of Star Wars" system have been covered up.

      After months of demanding an inquiry into the affair, Ed Crawley, the chairman of MIT's aeronautics and astronautics department, has reversed previous refusals and recommended an investigation.

      The issue in question goes to the heart of missile defence technology, an article of faith among many Republicans and a key plank in Mr Bush's 2000 presidential manifesto.

      Dr Postol and fellow critics say the ability of an interceptor missile to distinguish between an incoming warhead and the decoys likely to accompany it is deeply suspect. Any such doubts would cripple the credibility of the system.

    Again, all as a matter of national security, and which did not make a splash stateside. The story at the link is much more detailed.

    So what is the government going to do about this outbreak of integrity in the halls of learning?

    --
    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
    1. Re:In a related story by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You remind me of something Kurt Vonnegut said back in the Reagan years. He was talking to some MIT grads, and he found that none of them believed the 'Star Wars' program would ever work, but all of them wanted to work on it...

    2. Re:In a related story by Sinical · · Score: 1

      Postol's problems are kinda moot now, anyway. His problems were with a version of an interceptor from TRW that was ultimately down-selected (er, not picked). The missile defense program went with Raytheon's interceptor, the EKV (exo-atmospheric kill vehicle) which had a string of 9 intercepts in a row broken in mid-December, when the kill vehicle failed to detach from the booster (probably the booster, and therefore Boeing's, fault).

      Basically, Postol is whining that the technology to discriminate decoys from real warheads will never be sufficient, to which basically every goddamn person in the universe who works on the stuff has replied, wait and see, weaknesses are being addressed.

  23. In related news by scruggs_style · · Score: 0, Troll

    The federal government cut off all wellfare payments to rednecks in Oklahoma, because that has been a spawning ground for domestic terrorists in the past.

    This is fukcing absurd, people.

    1. Re:In related news by scruggs_style · · Score: 1

      This should not be modded as troll. It was a point. People argue that we should send all muslims back to where they came from, but my point is what the hell are you going to do with the dangerous people that come from here? This moderation is not very good, or the moderator was too ignorant to understand the comment...
      I just love the inconsistency...

  24. Government should fund the US, not forn. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    If the government is "by the people, for the people" (with people referring to its citizens), shouldn't its funding be spent in support of its citizens? By giving research contracts to its citizens, it helps support them.

    BTW, it's kind of scary that the gov is forcing University researchers to have their papers reviewed for censorship. Research should be made public!

  25. Sounds familiar. by grub · · Score: 5, Insightful


    2003: You must use Americans for this important work.

    1941:You must use blonde haired, blue eyed Germans for this important work.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Sounds familiar. by Orne · · Score: 2, Offtopic

      1960s: You must use Union Labor for this important work

      Now that's a fascist system...

    2. Re:Sounds familiar. by Wolfier · · Score: 2

      You can BECOME an American but not a blonde haired, blue eyed German.

    3. Re:Sounds familiar. by jmccay · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You have no idea what you're talking about. This is about the Government doing background checks into who will be working on it's projects. This is something that will always happen. Background security checks are required for a lot of Government job and research. Get over it!

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    4. Re:Sounds familiar. by the+gnat · · Score: 2

      Blow me. Nationalism and racism are not the same, and the America/Nazi comparisons have been getting out of hand here. I think "Americans first" is pretty stupid in this context, but you're out of line.

    5. Re:Sounds familiar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George Bush == Hitler, John Ashcroft == Goebbels

    6. Re:Sounds familiar. by radish · · Score: 2


      Rubbish - they are exactly the same. It all boils down to making a judgement on someone based on something they ARE (black, white, american, russian, mets fan) rather than something they DO (heal sick children, blow up buildings).

      If you blindly judge someone's suitability for a job, task, or whatever based on some unrelated attribute, then you will get it wrong, and you will be treating people unfairly. If you're happy with that (and the US govt has shown itself to be very happy with that recently) then fine, but at least acknowledge you are doing it.

      Americans can be white, or black, or saints, or terrorists. Afghans can be white, or black, or saints, or terrorists.

      --

      ---- Den ene knappen er powerknapp, den andre er Bender voice knapp "Bite My Shiny Metal Ass"

    7. Re:Sounds familiar. by tumbaumba · · Score: 1

      Rubbish - they are exactly the same

      I completely agree nationalism and racism are the same . It is all matter of social acceptance, example: murder is bad but murder at war (hero) it good, one implies remorse another one pride, but both are the same. Human morality is very stretchable indeed.

    8. Re:Sounds familiar. by MKalus · · Score: 2

      Actually Nazi Germany wasn't all that choosy when it came to decide who can and cannot "further the weapson knowledge of the Grossdeutsche Reich". There was more than one jewish research working for the Nazis even while the Death Camps where in high production.

      --
      If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
    9. Re:Sounds familiar. by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

      Colored contacts and hair dye.

    10. Re:Sounds familiar. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citizens get benefits that foreigners do not. This has always been the case and always will.

      For this, citizens are getting trust, because a lot fewer US citizens hate the US than foreigners. (It's kinda hard to say "American citizens all deserve to die!" when you are one...)

      So perhaps they should have suggested doing background checks on everyone, would have been safer for sure.

    11. Re:Sounds familiar. by dabacon · · Score: 1

      This is about the Government doing background checks into who will be working on it's projects. This is something that will always happen.

      No. This is something entirely different that the previous standards used by the NSA (and DOD) as far as I can tell. It is definitely true that background checks are performed for classified work. Working for the NSA will also get you a background check. But traditionally these departments have funded *unclassified* research in which the agencies do not place restrictions on foreign students.

      Dabacon

    12. Re:Sounds familiar. by jmccay · · Score: 2

      Regardless, the government should have been doing background checks all along for any type of research. Inappropiate people need to be weeded out. Who is inappropiate would depend on the research.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
  26. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  27. Error by mccalli · · Score: 1
    Error $404k: Study not found

    Cheers,
    Ian

  28. Biology is where the threat lies by sam_handelman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    President Bush signed a law last summer prohibiting students from countries considered sponsors of terrorism from working with germs and toxins most likely to be used for bioterrorism.

    I'm a computational biologist, but not an expert on biological weapons, by any means. Let me say at the outset: the government has no business regulating scientific inquiry. I'm sure other people will argue this point eloquently and what they may say about AI research applies to biology as well.

    It's a good idea to keep something in mind - the history of the entire field of computer science is heavily intertwined with the rise of the modern intelligence apparatus here in the US. Likewise, nuclear technology. The same is NOT true of my field (biology.)

    However, while you can use your m4d sk1llz to annoy uncle Sam, they're not really dangerous. The danger is in NCB (non-conventional) weapons:

    1) Nuclear weapons technology is already restricted up the wazoo.

    2) Chemcial weapons technology requires a great deal of industrial infrastructure. The cat is out of the bag. All sorts of foreigners know chemistry. The oil industry is incredibly secretive anyway. Government intrusion into chemical engineering is unlikely.

    3) Biological weapons are extremely difficult to make. HOWEVER, my colleagues and I are doing our best to make molecular biology as easy as possible. There's a shortage of technicians; we train people without discriminating against Pakistanis. Advances in the field make molecular biology easier, quicker, cheaper and increase your yield.

    The point is that molecular biology technology, used only once in a successful terrorist context (the Anthrax, mailed by a former Marine who had no trouble getting clearance; you know he's guilty), is POTENTIALLY the most dangerous of all. The only reason I don't need security clearance to do molecular biology is because Uncle Sam failed to get in at the ground floor - molecular biology has always been very much an international effort. Of course, US military labs remain the exception.

    So, we (biologists) need to be ready and determined to resist the intrusion of security concerns into our laboratories; the pressure to do so will be fierce.

    --
    The good and new comes from no quarter where it is looked for, and is always something different from what is expected.
  29. America's rise as a superpower... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...was catalyzed by an influx of foreign-national brainpower from abroad during the thirties, forties, and fifties.

    Einstein was given a post at Princeton in 1930 but didn't become a citizen until 1935; Enrico Fermi didn't become a citizen until 1944, Werner von Braun didn't become a citizen until 1955...

    Meanwhile, Hitler's scientific efforts were hampered by the exclusion of Jews, doubtless for good security reasons.

    If the United States had been more cautious in monitoring the politics of scientists and more careful in security concerns, J. Robert Oppenheimer would probably not have been allowed to lead the Los Alamos project. It was certainly his personal leadership as much as Groves' that contributed to the ultimate success of that endeavor. Both Germany and Japan had scientists puttering around on atomic bombs, but only the U.S. had scientific leadership--determined to see the project culminate the production of a weapon.

    If the United States starts to discourage participation by foreign students and scientists, we abandon one of the historic sources of our leadership and risk falling behind.

    1. Re:America's rise as a superpower... by MKalus · · Score: 2

      Both Germany and Japan had scientists puttering around on atomic bombs, but only the U.S. had scientific leadership--determined to see the project culminate the production of a weapon.

      By my understanding the German scientists were VERY close of getting it working but they also had ethical questions about creating such a weapon (and if my mind serves me right so did Oppenheimer when he worked for the US).

      Also, there were quite some jewish researchers working for Nazi Germany, simply because Hitler wasn't so stupid to throw brain cells away if they could help him reach his ultimate goal.

      If the United States starts to discourage participation by foreign students and scientists, we abandon one of the historic sources of our leadership and risk falling behind

      Research I would guess is done where the researcher feel free enough to follow his ideas and ideologies (unless his sole motivation is "patriotism".

      In any regards, what makes the US a research heaven right now is that there is a lot of money, a lot of equipment and still the idea that the US is a free country in which someone can live without any repression. Actions like the one the US Government is proposing right now is activly hurting this image and the consequences (I would think) won't be seen for a couple of more years. But I wouldn't be surprised that in the future more and more foreign students choose either another country or return as soon as they have finished their studies instead of staying in the US.

      --
      If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
    2. Re:America's rise as a superpower... by michael_cain · · Score: 2

      While not taking the position that the homeland security people are right, and I certainly respect MIT for taking a position where they turn down federal dollars for projects when they disagree with the restrictions that come with the money, I feel obligated to point out that there is a substantial difference between pushing out many of your best, established citizen scientists because of their ethnic or religious heritage (Hitler's Germany) and putting relatively minor restrictions on foreign students working on government-funded research while they are temporarily in this country.

      I believe the general response would be quite different if the background checks were required for citizen students of particular ethnic groups. Or if the affected people were established scientists seeking asylum from a government that was persecuting them.

    3. Re:America's rise as a superpower... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      If the United States had been more cautious in monitoring the politics of scientists and more careful in security concerns, J. Robert Oppenheimer would probably not have been allowed to lead the Los Alamos project.

      If the United States had been more cautious in monitoring the politics of scientists and more careful in security concerns, Klaus Fuchs would not have been able to send every thing he got his hands on to Dzerzhinsky Street, and the USSR would not have developed the bomb in 1949.

  30. What? by Walson · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "The Justice Department demanded the right to approve before publication a study on physical abuse of college women," ~from the article

    What does this have anything to do with homeland security? I think they're getting a little paranoid if you ask me. This whole homeland security thing is based on fear. Isn't that what the terrorists want? To strike fear into the hearts of "non-belivers", make us panic and do stupid things like approving scientific studies before their released. that's censorship if you ask me. Everyone needs to calm down about all this "Osama's gonna get us" crap.

    --
    ~Common sense is the most evenly distubuted of all things, everyone thinks they have enough, and wants no more
    1. Re:What? by macgybor · · Score: 1

      Right on. I mean this idiot from texas is trying to pass everything under the rug as "homeland/national security matter". Good for MIT to walk away from stupid restrictions that have nothing to do with homeland/national security matter. I mean the notion that all these students at MIT or any other high ranked research universities are toiling thier time and sometimes their money for 4-5 years so they can help Osama better understand the fluid dynamics is just stupid. And as for the people who are saying "why should foreign student take my spot on these universities", it's like there's a quota system or some kind of foreign student affirmative action program running at these places. Prof's who are doing researches are picking these foreign students b/c despite their bad/no english they feel that the foreign students have better chance of coming up with stuff that prof's can then publish and get tenure.

  31. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Exactly, that's why MIT refused it dumb ass.

    What if you say you'll donate $20,000 to the FSF if they kill RMS? Debate those ethics mother fridgerator.

  32. Foriegn policy debate not so boring after all... by aphor · · Score: 2


    This is why you vote Democrat, and then write your senator with "I'll be keeping my gun, thank you." The change in "government" policy is simply the difference between the Clinton and GWBush administrations' respective foreign policy philosophies.

    The Clinton era policy was based on "engagement." I'm not sure where the GWBush people are coming from. The idea of engagement is that international politico-economy is improved, and so is the global politico-economic position of the US, when we get *more* involved with foreign economies. Macroeconomists talk about "growing the pie." Engagement is like growing the global pie so the US piece gets bigger too.

    GWBush policy people seem to think "we're doing just fine thank you, and we don't want you doing any better, so we're taking our ball and going home." Oh, and try to get all the arabs against Saddam Hussein (Iraq has no oil, just Mecca) because it's like destabilising islamic international relationships to destabilise OPEC strength, so that Texan and Alaskan oil barons can get invited to the price-of-energy (price-of-everything) control meetings. "If OPEC isn't about arabs, it's just about oil barons, and aren't we all in the same boat? So let's stop giving money to the blow-yourself-up mad-at-the-world poor muslim martyr-wannabes and get back to making ourselves rich and locking-in the status-quo! See: this is how WE maintain the status-quo..."
    </rant>

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  33. Supercomputers and damn non-americans by geoff+lane · · Score: 2

    Every time we bought and installed a US made supercomputer, part of the contract insisted that we prevent access by students from a list of countries provided by the DoD.

    1. Re:Supercomputers and damn non-americans by lederhosen · · Score: 0

      Yeah, and I have acces to one of those, and
      it is a slow ass. It is realy funny, i think
      its realy marketing! OOOh you can buy our computer
      that is so fast that you can not be from north-korea to run it.

  34. This is standard procedure for sensitive projects by sczimme · · Score: 2


    ... in the Department of Defense: US citizenship is a prerequisite for doing certain types of work. And this is not a post-9/11 (how Katzian) change. Foreign nationals have been restricted in this manner since (IIRC) the Cold War - possibly longer than that.

    Besides, if the gov't is sponsoring the research, the gov't is the customer. Doesn't the customer usually have some say over what happens with deliverables, e.g. publication/distribution?

    --
    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
  35. The Coming War... by Dan+the+Control+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    .. will not be over "weapons of mass destruction". It will be over oil, and then ideas. This administration WILL continue to erode rights until corporate America holds ALL the cards. We can all see this. It is time to do something about it.

    Put the chimp out the door in '04.

    --
    When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro- Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
    1. Re:The Coming War... by chrysaetos · · Score: 1

      Put the chimp out the door in '04 That's great. Would you mind if I used that? How should I cite it, if at all?

    2. Re:The Coming War... by Dan+the+Control+Guy · · Score: 1

      LOL. Be my guest, no cites required.

      --
      When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro- Dr. Hunter S. Thompson
  36. Re:Dear Slashdot readers: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ohhhkaaaay! Suuure, Clinton could have prevented 9/11. Roosevelt could have prevented Pearl Harbor. Chrlemagne could have prevented the Mongol hoardes. You're calling ME a moron?

    What would you have done in Clinton's place? Bomb a few more medicine factories and REALLY get Al Quaieda's blood flowing? You sure do see things in pretty stark contrast dontcha?

    The truly idiotic statement in this thread is that 'Plea to get shortsighted Orwellians out of office' == 'Clinton supporter'.

    I'm expecting a Federal DDT program to eradicate the West Nile Virus any day now...

    The current administration lacks imagination, foresight and intellectual facilities to concoct solutions to these problems that will be regarded as 'masterful policies' 20 years down the road.

    Believe me, if a liberal extremist was the Attorney General I'd be making the same fuss...

  37. I find myself torn on this issue by JimmyBigFish · · Score: 1

    On one hand, yes, projects being funded by my tax dollars should be worked on by citizens from my country. And yes, secret work should stay secret. However, on the other hand, requiring only Americans work on the project will severly limit your capability to get the project done. I will probably be preaching to the choir a bit here on Slashdot, but have you taken a look at the "general public" lately? They're not the brightest bunch in the world. Even at the universities, (of which I just recently graduated) the amount of stupid people amazes me. If it weren't for foreign students, I don't think some university programs would exist!! There wouldn't be enough interest from american students to keep them afloat. I am getting a bit off the point however. Students, both foreign and domestic, go to school to learn. By putting stupid requirements like "only american students can work on this project" will limit both the progress of the project and the beneficial results at the end.

    On one hand, the requirement is good. Get kids from this country using this country's money for the project. But on the other hand, restricting the education opportunities undermines the entire purpose of a university.

    What do I count anyway. I'm just a software guy.

    1. Re:I find myself torn on this issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, on the other hand, requiring only Americans work on the project will severly limit your capability to get the project done.

      Not a flame -- I agree with you completely. Our education system sucks and limiting research to Americans (of which I am proud to be one) will severly limit the quality and speed at which the goal is achieved.

  38. MIT is very concerned by The+Pim · · Score: 5, Informative
    I was at an informal dinner of 40 or so MIT professors a couple weeks ago. (My landlord caters the event, and I help him out sometimes because I'm interested in the restaurant business.) The theme of discussion was the difficulty foreign students are now having getting visas to come to MIT.

    In the company of only their peers and an eavesdropping busboy, the group was candid and unguarded. Almost everyone had a story of a student who had been hindered by the stricter immegration rules. One expressed doubt that MIT could "be MIT" under these circumstances. Jerry Sussman--co-author of "the only good book on computer programming" (quote from a Slashdot favorite I won't name) and all-around brilliant and creative guy--said he's "been depressed for the last year". Man, that made me want to cry.

    This convinced me that the problem is real, that it is hampering the advancement of learning--and that it could even lead to the unseating of the US as the center of the learned world.

    --

    The evaluation of an action as 'practical' . . . depends on what it is that one wishes to practice.
  39. Before you agree with the US govt on this... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...pay attention to who's saying the government is wrong: Sheila Widnall. From 1993-1997, she was secretary of the Air Force, arguably the most technologically advanced of the four branches of the US military. For those not up on US government, the Secretary of the Air Force is the civilian head of the US Air Force. All the generals answered to her; she answered only to the Secretary of Defense, who answers to POTUS. She would have had authority and responsiblity for all the research funded by the Air Force, so she's seen both sides of this (though I don't know to what extent she micromanaged it).

    She makes a VERY good point that what the government should do is to determine what's classified research and what's not. It's reasonable to restrict the participation of foreign nationals in classified research, but the concern with this grant was that it was for unclassified research.

    For you cynics, note that this grant wasn't for that much money (only half a million) and was probably chosen to send a message because they didn't much want to do it anyway and it wasn't enough money to worry about.

    1. Re:Before you agree with the US govt on this... by RealBeanDip · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      " ...pay attention to who's saying the government is wrong: Sheila Widnall. From 1993-1997, she was secretary of the Air Force, arguably the most technologically advanced of the four branches of the US military. For those not up on US government, the Secretary of the Air Force is the civilian head of the US Air Force. All the generals answered to her; she answered only to the Secretary of Defense, who answers to POTUS."

      And the POTUS was who at that time? Clinton - a liberal, sniveling, groveling, lieing scumbag of a Democrat. You should also note that while Clinton was president the WTC was bombed and plans were being hatched (and training taking place) to hijack planes and fly them into buildings. While he was POTUS he and his administration passed up an oppurtunity to capture Osama bin Laden.

      You might also have noticed that under him the morale of the military went to shit.

      So I not only agree with the US Govt on this, but wish people would recognize that the previous US administration was completely inept and a complete disaster.

      --

      You know you're a geek if you've ever replied to a tagline.

    2. Re:Before you agree with the US govt on this... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 1, Troll

      Excellent straw man, but you missed some points. On Bill Clinton's watch,

      - Al Qaeda bombed the WTC (but failed to collapse it as the wanted to)
      - Al Qaeda bombed the USS Cole
      - Al Qaeda bombed US embassies
      - Al Qaeda sent known terrorists into the US to train for 9/11

      This is pretty damning on both the domestic and foreign policy sides.

      As for military morale, I was in the Army during Clinton's presidency. He didn't appoint a secretary of the Army for over a year, and he couldn't salute. He apparently didn't care about the big picture or the little details - that didn't help morale.

      HOWEVER, this has little to do with Sheila Widnall. Let me know if you have any reason to suspect she's inept.

      A side note...have you ever worked for an idiot before? Do you believe it is possible to work for an idiot and still be competent?

    3. Re:Before you agree with the US govt on this... by f.money · · Score: 1
      You should also note that while Clinton was president the WTC was bombed and plans were being hatched (and training taking place) to hijack planes and fly them into buildings. While he was POTUS he and his administration passed up an oppurtunity to capture Osama bin Laden.

      You should also note that under Bush The Second, the WTC was destroyed. So is he more evil than the Son of Satan Clinton? I think you should also note many of the illegal activites Bush II is engaging in (suspending habeus corpus, ignoring judicial orders, etc).


      Jon
    4. Re:Before you agree with the US govt on this... by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I suspect the parent poster gets all his knowledge of military affairs from Rush Limbaugh, Tom Clancy, and FOX News.

      I was in the AF during Widnall's tenure. Morale was not shit; morale was pretty much as it had been under Reagan and Bush, actually, under whom I also served. The AF under Widnall and Clinton was consistently modernized, well-funded, and adapted to fight tomorrow's wars. The dirty little secret of the military after Desert Storm (in which I served) was that it was a wreck. We had basically used up most of our Cold War stockpiles and really didn't know where to go next. To the degree that the current US military performed brilliantly in Kosovo and Afghanistan, and will hopefully do so in Iraq (note: I'm not expressing a hope for war, just a hope that if we do go to war, we'll do it well) it's because of the steady, very effective rebuilding and modernization that took place during the Clinton years. And Widnall had a lot to do with that.

      Ahhh, fuck it, I'm wasting my time. The armchair warriors will believe what they want, no matter what the veterans say.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    5. Re:Before you agree with the US govt on this... by RealBeanDip · · Score: 1

      Do you think the training and planning for the second WTC attack took place under Bush II's watch? You're wrong. It was already in place while Clinton was ruling the country by taking polls.

      --

      You know you're a geek if you've ever replied to a tagline.

    6. Re:Before you agree with the US govt on this... by buss_error · · Score: 2
      was in the Army during Clinton's presidency. He didn't appoint a secretary of the Army for over a year, and he couldn't salute.

      Actually, I think a lot of consertives ripped Clinton up for saluting at all, even badly. And while I don't often agree with consertives, I agree that he shouldn't salute. A salute is a millitary recognition of rank. The President, while (s)he is the Commander in Cheif, is not in the millitary. That is the essance of civilan control of the millitary, and why the US isn't a banana republic.

      This is pretty damning on both the domestic and foreign policy sides.

      As for your points on Al Queda, I submit to you that Clinton could have done little more than he did. At the time, the public would not have supported millitary patrols in airports, FBI survalance & searches without a warrant, CIA spying on american citizens, and assissanations by presidental order. If they were such glaring errors, then GW Bush should have acted to tighten security on cockpit doors in the seven and a half months he had before 9-11.

      Here is the central idea, and what I beleive in: In this country, a person (Not just citizens, but people!) have rights (and duties too, but now is not the time for that speach). These rights are so precious to me that I will willingly lay down my life to preseve them. Even if it means that some terrorist can use those same rights to commit attacks against me.

      I fail to see how making our own government the instrument of terror will stop terrorism. It hasn't worked elsewhere, I suspect it won't work for the US.

      I may be wrong, but I feel that freedom is for everyone. Even if your last name is spelt funny, and your customs are not my customs. Even if you don't speak English well, or at all. Even if you are poor, uneducated, and hungry.

      Freedom is for everyone, or it isn't freedom, it's privilege.

      --
      Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
  40. I think... by CrazyDwarf · · Score: 1

    MIT's ideal would be that everyone be screened, regardless of country of origin. There is no reason I can see why MIT couldn't take the money, and then have everyone screened. That would satisfy the minimum requirements of the feds, and satisfy MIT's moral standing.

    --
    It's easy to stand out when the general level of competence is so low.
  41. NSA vs. Academia, round 2 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One would have hoped that the NSA had clued in back when they got tromped by Diffie and Hellman, and Rivest et. al. Three cheers for the USG's bastion of repression of intellectual freedom.

  42. Your missing an imortant point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am a graduate student in physics, an american. There are a lot of foreign students, but the admission standards for a foreign student is A LOT higher than that for american students. So in some sense the scales are already tipped in favor of the citizen student.

    1. Re:Your missing an imortant point by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      It doesn't matter how tilted the admission standards are. We have American citizens being turned away from universities that their tax dollars and the tax dollars of their families have helped to fund for YEARS. Yes, the foriegn students pay more, but that money is trivial compared to the long term tax dollars supporting the school.

      Denying a citizen to give a spot to a guest student is just not logical. Now, if there are openings after all citizens have slots, then I have no problem filling those with exchange students.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
    2. Re:Your missing an imortant point by RCO · · Score: 1

      That depends on the University that you are attending. What pissed me off was the fact that some of the foriegn students would fail the TOFL (I think that's right) on purpose the first time through so that they wouldn't be teaching in a classroom. They would either end up grading papers or immediately get an RA even though nobody was suposed to get an RA without being a TA first. This put their foot in the door for the long term RA positions, and those of us that spoke english well enough to teach never seemed to get the opportunity at them. And let's face it grad work in Physics is hard enough without having the added task of babysitting in addition to doing your own classwork, and your research on the side.

      Yes, I'm a little pissy about this subject. And yes I do know for a fact that some of them would fail the test on purpose, since I had quite a few of them tell me that was the reason they failed.

      --
      'And all the monkeys aren't in the zoo Every day you meet quite a few...'
  43. Good job US Govt by RealBeanDip · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I'm glad the Govt is waking up. You folks who happen to think that every foreign student in our Universities can't possibly be a terrorist need to wake up and smell the coffee.

    Nobody ever thought foreigneers taking flight school could be terrorists either. Look how that turned out.

    Sure, it would be nice to be politically correct all the time and stick our head in the sand. Technology loves to be free, but when it can be turned around and used to harm you, you need to think about to whom it is being given freely.

    --

    You know you're a geek if you've ever replied to a tagline.

    1. Re:Good job US Govt by buss_error · · Score: 5, Insightful
      McCarthy once told a person under investigation "This committy will decide what rights you have and what rights you do not have!"

      Personally, I think your views are shortsighted and, sorry to be so frank, wrong.

      It's true that 9-11 was a terrible thing to happen. It's also true that the US has done more damage to itself in the name of "Protecting the Homeland" than any terrorist could ever do. We have restricted the very freedoms that make this country great. We have violated the rights of people because they MIGHT be someone who knows someone who's dangerous. We have detained citizens without trial or charges and forbiden them to speak with anyone, even an attorney, even a government appointed attorney. We strip search grandmothers, and detain people that have funny last names. We listen to the quisling, reporting people that don't leave tips in greasy spoons.

      "Those that would trade liberity for security deserve [and will get] neither." - B. Franklin.

      As for your assertion that no one thought flight school students could be terrorists, you have your facts wrong. Remember the conflab at the FBI? That's what that's about. Someone DID think there might be terrorists being trained at flight schools.

      To protect ourselves from terrorist requires a scalpel, not the howtizer that's being used. The true cancer of a free society are those that would render freedom impossible. The true terrorists are they that wage war on the rights of the people. The real terror is the loosing of the dogs of a police state.

      --
      Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    2. Re:Good job US Govt by RealBeanDip · · Score: 2

      No need to be sorry, you're entitled to your opinion as am I.

      The flight training situation points out that even though someone DID THINK there could be terrorists taking flight training, the report was buried before it could see the light of day. Why was that?

      I disagree with you that we've done more damage then good in the name of "Protecting the Homeland." The fact of the matter is we haven't been attacked (on US soil) since 9-11-01, Afganistan is a FAR better place (and no long a free harbor to terrorists plotting to kill us) and we are actively pursuing a foreign policy that will result an a more secure and yes, free America and rest of the world.

      I don't find myself more restricted nor do I find my freedom reduced at all.

      I realize that's an unpopular opinion here. Too bad - it doesn't make it any less true.

      As for people being detained; we're at war and these people are war criminals suspected of plotting to or actually killing us. Again the govt is doing a good job in rooting out these people and putting the proverbial thumbscrews to them.
      What people need to get used to is the idea that there are people in the rest of the world that completely and utterly opposed to our existence.

      It's us or them and if you think you can negotiate with them, you're wrong - dead wrong.

      --

      You know you're a geek if you've ever replied to a tagline.

    3. Re:Good job US Govt by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The enemies of freedom, themselves being quite naive, are always quick to accuse others of naivete.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    4. Re:Good job US Govt by viperblades · · Score: 2, Insightful

      just ask the women in afganastan about how their situation has changed. go do a google news search on it. //yes my grammer / spelling is horrible but i've been up for about 40 hours now

    5. Re:Good job US Govt by EnglishTim · · Score: 2

      Technology loves to be free, but when it can be turned around and used to harm you, you need to think about to whom it is being given freely.

      Just a shame that the government didn't think something similar in 1979/80 when it trained and armed a mercenary army in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet Union once it had lured them into its 'Afghan Trap'...

    6. Re:Good job US Govt by that+_evil+_gleek · · Score: 1

      Let me counter one cliche with another:
      Don't lock the barn door after the horse has been stolen.

      These would have been good things to do /before/ 9-11, perhaps when the embassy was bombed or when the Cole was attacked, but given how much time they spend researching attacks before they implement them --we need to worry about plans they've already made.
      As I remember, in the summer of 2001, the Right was talking about war with China while also recommending downsizing carrier fleets... and ignoring the enemy that had already attacked us twice.

      And, you are wrong when you say 'Nobody ever thought' . People did think: the flight instructors thought it was odd... the fbi field agents wanted to investigate, but were ordered by higher-ups not to. One man in the fbi was watching Al Qaeda for years. His opinions that they could be a serious threat didn't jibe with the 'make no waves' culture, later made mistake and was forced out.
      http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/show s/knew /view/ for details.

      It isn't just the the PC crowd the implements the ostrich algorithm regularly, others do it too , but with more bloat.

    7. Re:Good job US Govt by Cyno · · Score: 2

      putting the proverbial thumbscrews to them

      You mean torture them.. I'm embarassed that my government can't even treat criminals like they are human. And people like you probably think a terrorist, because of the terror he commits, is no longer human. It doesn't matter whether you think a terrorist is human or not, the facts are that detaining and torturing a criminal suspected of terrorism to get a confession is an act of terrorism in itself.

      Are you human?

    8. Re:Good job US Govt by Cyno · · Score: 2

      Let me make this more simple for you. I oppose your very existence and I live right next door.

    9. Re:Good job US Govt by xchino · · Score: 2

      You're views are either naive or simply wrong.

      "The fact of the matter is we haven't been attacked (on US soil) since 9-11-01"

      Have you been living under a rock? We've been terrorized by Anthrax Mailers, Snipers, Mail Bombers, and a great many more attacks than are shown on the national news. We are and have been under CONTSTANT attack from terrorist activities. Perhaps you need to realize that foriegn != terrorist and US citizen != Good guy.

      As far as Afghanistan being a FAR better place.. Afghanistan is still a god forsaken impoverished shit hole, still churns out terrorists. The only difference is the new government is US Friendly, because we instituted it.

      "I don't find myself more restricted nor do I find my freedom reduced at all."

      Then you should be glad that your name isn't muhommad. Do you not know of the oriental concentration camps the U.S. had going on during WWII? We rounded people up, regardless if they were even really japanese, US Citizen or not, and imprisnoed them without reason. The US has no problems taking away minority rights, because people like you don't care enough to stand up for them.

      "It's us or them and if you think you can negotiate with them, you're wrong - dead wrong."

      Why don't you do us all a favor and tell us exactly who "Them" is referring to? You seem to know exactly who the terrorists are and aren't so maybe you should be heading up the HSD instead of Poindexter. The truth is we have no idea who "They" are, so we violate basic human rights of innocents in a McCarthyesque witchhunt for an invisible enemy.

      --
      Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
    10. Re:Good job US Govt by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      The US has no problems taking away minority rights

      I think you meant non-white minority rights. We whiteys can do whatever we want.

      Sure they check me at the airport, sure they go through my checked luggage and take jackets they like, but I have zero fear of being put in Manzinar.

      Speaking of US friendly governments, Hussein was put there by the CIA. Or should I say "heavily helped" by the CIA? And oil companies still buy tons of oil from Iran.

    11. Re:Good job US Govt by TechnoWitch · · Score: 1

      That's okay -- a growing number of us here in the U.S. are becoming increasingly ashamed of what is being done in our name.

      On behalf of all of those who do actually believe that human rights are inalienable, that our last Presidential election was stolen, and that our government is completely out of control -- we apologize, and hope to put matters to right, if we can.

      Some of us still remember that torture, in any form, is wrong. That due process, habeas corpus, free and open trials, rights to face once accusers, freedom from unreasonable search and seizure were so important -- so fundamental to the basic existence of civilized human beings -- we put them into the operating covenant of our nation. Some of us still remember that 'ferreted out and arrested' does not automatically equal "Guilty".

      And if we fail to prevail... well, it was nice knowing you. We hope you remember us in our better days, before we turned into a dangerous pack of rabid fear-mongering sheep.

  44. But the money was already in the budget... by rbrander · · Score: 1

    "Walking away from $404K" ?? The poor MIT accountants were probably already counting on it.

    They're just walking the halls in a daze today, muttering, "404 not found..."

    1. Re:But the money was already in the budget... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but this was damn funny, and should be at least Score:3

  45. Who's got the key to the vault? by krygny · · Score: 1

    This is only one way administrations institute policy without having to get congressional approval. I prefer to keep sensitive information secret, but this practice is part of a larger issue.

    The Federal Govt. collects taxes from all Americans, then uses grants, loans, and subsidies to institute policy. Well, who's policy? They tie subsidies to your local school district to certain courses or earmarks for the money; e.g., you have to implement a certain history or language program. Maybe what your local HS really needs is a new boiler or roof. Why send $ to D.C. to have it skimmed and returned with mandates?

    Whatever administration is in power, both political parties do this and it's a quick and easy way to instute a policy by doing an end-around to Congress.

    If MIT has the guts to tell the feds what they can do with our money, maybe we should too:

    "GIVE IT BACK!!"

    Sorry about the rant. I just got my W2s and 1099s. (GRRRR) No trolling or baiting intended.

    --
    Research shows that 67% of those who use the term "research shows", are just making shit up.
    1. Re:Who's got the key to the vault? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If MIT has the guts to tell the feds what they can do with our money, maybe we should too:

      "GIVE IT BACK!!"

      He is, just not to you. He has other people he'd like to give it to.

  46. The Golden Rule... by sheldon · · Score: 2

    Those who have the gold get to make the rules.

    If you don't like these restrictions, then get your own funding and do your own project where you get to make the rules. Frankly, I see nothing wrong with prohibiting non-US citizens from doing US research into defense initiatives.

  47. They went looking for the $404K... by CommieLib · · Score: 2

    and they couldn't find it for some reason...

    --
    If your bitterest enemies are people who hack the heads off civilians, then I would say you're doing something right.
    1. Re: They went looking for the $404K... by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1


      > and they couldn't find it for some reason...

      Error: $404 Not Found

      --
      Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  48. Re:Eff Pee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He isn't fat anymore; only fucking moron democrats like you would think he is.

  49. "Scientific Research"? by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

    If you're publishing, even if you're just verifying other's results, you're doing science. If you're keeping it to yourself, even if you're breaking new ground, you're doing research.

    It's a subtle distinction, but the two don't necessarily go hand in hand. And in the end, ten people doing published science benefits us more than a thousand doing independent - therefore probably redundant - research.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  50. everyone should remember history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    the line between patriotism and fascism is a slipery slope. Everyone needs to look at history closely and realize we're rapidly sliding down that slope unless we pull our collective heads out of our butts. A person's religion, color, language or nationality does not equal their allegiance. The best way to protect freedom isn't to kill all your enemies, but to learn from them. Violent expression doesn't happen overnight. People should realize we making the same mistake our ancestors made and learn from it, not do the same exact thing. I'm sure the founding fathers of America would be more proud if society collectively works to improve freedom democracy. Not colonize a country in the name of democracy. That just smacks of the holy crusades.

  51. all i can say by ironfroggy · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    is that this is illegal. not to mention complete bullshit.

  52. US Govenment helping develop science in the world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The United States should forbid all foreign (would-be) students not only from participating in some research, but from even entering any of their universities (or companies).

    They would stay in their countries of origin and conduct work and research there, so the results and gained knowledge of them would benefit their coutries rather than the US.

  53. They're going the wrong way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I think one of the most intelligent things a school like MIT can do is look for foreign students. This is mainly because one thing you want to do is achieve more and more scientific results and there are countries where very intelligent people do not have any chance to do something useful. Look at lots of countries in Asia. Local students tend to go to top universities (say MIT) mainly just to become good engineers and leave after receiving their B.S., while foreign students usually come as grads or Ph.D's. And I am sorry to say, but good research is good for US economy as well.

    If you are against this think for a while about some great things the US did in the past years that are mainly due to people coming from abroad. Think of space flight, think of Einstein (and this is just a little example).

    And I fear good old Europe is starting to smile.

  54. Bully for MIT by MacAndrew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If the gov't wants security checks, and in some cases that's reasonable (remember all the military work MIT has done, most famously during WWII), that should get them on EVERYONE. Stop this xenophobic insult now.

    Aside from the philosophical problem with accused foreign citizens mindlessly, need we remind the NSA of all the wonderful homegrown dangers we have managed to grow in the U.S., from Timothy McVeigh (& Nichols) to the Unabomber to the Columbine shooters to John Walker Lindh to this DC sniper bastard Muhammed, and that's just the last ten years. And and those are just the killers; don't forget double agents Aldrich Ames (CIA) and Robert Philip Hanssen (FBI). Even if you are sympathetic to some of these, consider the rest.

    My argument is that if you're going to be paranoid, do be equal opportunity about it out of respect for logic and fair play. Look in your own backyard.

    1. Re:Bully for MIT by TarPitt · · Score: 1
      Unfortunately, for the sake of this argument, the first thing done in a security check is investigate citizenship. Not a US citizen, you don't pass.


      National origins are heavily scrutinized too. Having a spouse that is a non-citizen will cause you trouble, as well as any sort of other direct family ties.


      BTW, I'm told that for a top secret clearance, one of the things you are expected to answer under polygraph is whether you or anyone you know are members of Greenpeace. AFAIK, no questions are asked about militia groups.


      And no, I'm not advocating any of this - just showing where it comes from (and where it might lead).

      --
      If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep
    2. Re:Bully for MIT by AeternitasXIII · · Score: 1

      You've misplaced Walker Lindh. The only mistake the guy made was not filling out the state department forms that would give him expatriate status, while thinking that his status as a soldier in a foreign military would do so, as stated on every US passport.

      Considering that the US government up until the last weeks of August 2001 was still holding open negotiations with the Taliban on a number of issues such as where to put a large, regional oil pipeline, it amazes me how stupid the American people were post-9/11 in sucking down Bush's stories without any evidence presented to the public at large. If the US government was treating the Taliban as the government of Afghanistan, to the point of holding economic negotiations with them, how is it that the Taliban's military didn't qualify as a foreign service that would result in Walker's immediate expatriation upon joining?

      As far as this government has shown, Lindh apparently made no effort to embark on terror missions against the US, and in some accounts even turned down such offers. The only intent he's been shown to have was the one to serve as a soldier in Afghanistan in the name of his religion. Whether or not his choice to serve his choice to work with the Taliban was misguided is an entirely different question from whether he was actively working against the US government. We'll likely never know any details of his time in Afghanistan, since El Dictator Bush forced a plea bargain down Walker's throat and thus avoided the entire mess a public trial would have brought. Say what you will about the Taliban, in the last year I've seen the Bush administration scarcely act any better than them, and Walker's choice between service to his religion versus service to a country he had no choice to be born in seems like a negligable one.

      Similar reasoning and patterns of reactions are behind this MIT situation. Bush singled out a bunch of otherwise intelligent people who aren't actively working against the US government simply because they were connected to a foreign power that he, personally, didn't rank very highly on his binary scale of black and white. He presented zero evidence of any of these individuals deserving their new status, and simply thinks the US populace will place blind faith in his decision in the name of the sacred homeland security. I'm glad the folks at MIT remembered this was the US and that tolerating such a policy, regardless of security concerns, is reprehensible.

    3. Re:Bully for MIT by MacAndrew · · Score: 2

      I am slightly sympathetic to Lindh, who is young and thought he was fighting for his principles. I don't know whether he realized he was an American citizen when Americans attacked the Taliban, or whether he intended to make war on the United States, etc. If he did, he made war on me, too, regardless of his nationality. He did make enough damaging admissions that I am convinced of his guilt, if not his guilty heart. I certainly wasn't with the conservative crowd jumping up and down yelling treason (which he was not charged with).

      Then there's that whole "unlawful combatant" thing I still don't understand.

      A funny wrinkle in American constitutional law -- from early on, we established the rule that we don't strip people of citizenship (almost) regardless of what they do, unless they renounce it. There is no exile.

      However, his intent to renounce can be inferred from his participation in a foreign army, if that's what the Taliban is -- this inference is what the state dept. writing on the passport probably refers to. a brief article So you can renounce it, but it's very hard to lose it. Lindh apparently hasn't lost it, and perhaps does not want to, and so will still be a citizen in and after prison. Some have subsequently suggested this should change, though it would be difficult to apply to him as an ex post facto punishment.

  55. How long before soldiers with "HS" appear? by Newer+Guy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I mean, it's only a matter of time before our version of Hitler's 'SS' show up here...with 'HS' (Homeland Security) on their lapels. Think it can't happen? I'll bet that the citizens of Germany in the 1930's thought that too. We have unchecked paranoia in this country..and that's very dangerous, especially when the Government is using it to control its citizens.

    1. Re:How long before soldiers with "HS" appear? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      While the government continues to enact repressive laws and further restrict the rights of citizens there is no need for the terrorists to attack again

      If you assume the goal was to cause the downfall of the US - things are progressing nicely. If they take a long view, how many more terrorist attacks are required over the next 20 - 50 years to keep the government turning inwards on its own people. At some point the goal will have been achieved and the US will self destruct.

  56. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But that doesn't make me an evil man for asking the FSF to write a program that meets my needs if I give them a donation to do so. Similarly for the government.

    There's is definitely nothing wrong with a private individual doing that. I can't get outraged really because it's your money offered out of the goodness of your heart (or whatever).

    But the difference here is that the government is offering the money. And that is OUR money. The government is supposed to encourage education because we've realized it is important to our future and told them to do so. But they take the money we allowed them to have in taxes and offer it up for research only if you do this or that. Restrictions that I don't agree with since they stifle the advancement of knowledge which was the whole point in the first place. And they do it with our money. So in this case we have a good reason to be a little ticked off.

  57. Key Points by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    • Is the research classified (previously or recently changed to classified)
    • Which Gov't agency or agencies are funding the grant?
    • Who is projected to receive the benefits of this research? (i.e. DoD only, Gov't only, some commercial, etc)
    As for arguments of "who's money is this? IT'S OURS!" that is a very valid statement but allow me to point out some other facts. First of all, ANY tax funded project, organization, or task force is actually ALL OUR money. I find that many cannot get past their partisanship way of thinking (whether that is is formal political party or left/right; conservative/liberal ideologies) and analyze these issues objectively. Of the three powers the Federal Government has, first and foremost of these (if only for logistical and coordination reasons) is that of providing for a common defense. What is NOT a power of the Federal government is to help protect us from ourselves, give us money, give us shelter, give us big screen TV's, etc. The key is prioritization: and if a defense project is seen as excessive, then you must then eliminate all social, foreign, and corporate fundings just as your body will shunt blood from extremities to vital internal organs in a crisis.

    If you do not agree with this then you are either foolish or ignorant. That is the way it is, to argue otherwise is to argue the sun is blue, the sky is always deep red and all dogs have 17 legs and 3 tails. There is a difference between what is and what you think should be. If you would like to change the way our government works, then that is one thing... but to argue that your proposed laws and policies are "the way our Founding Fathers intended" when in reality they are very much against everything they stood for then you are living in a state of dimensia.

    Personally I think the Fed's have no business restricting the research methods for this unless they classify it and by doing so name the intended purpose of the research. I am not for saying that simply because it is tax dollar funded that "anything should go" as there are indeed projects that the general public (and definitely not uncleared foreign nationals) have no business knowing about.

  58. and why stop there? by avi33 · · Score: 1

    After all, this is our hard-earned tax money, and why should any non-citizen be given access to knowledge funded by us? Why, any University that receives federal funding in some form (that'd be about all of them) continue to offer this service to anyone that hops on a boat and applies for a student visa!

    For that matter, we should probably restrict access to Cable TV as well, since that was largely financed by local municipalities...and yet, here we are, offering MTV, 12 versions of Nick, CNN, all paid for with our tax dollars!

    Why stop there? Our roads, power lines, and telecom infrastructure are all funded by us, yet we continue to allow non-Americans to use them daily. I bet a terrorist or two reads bugtraq to look for vulnerabilities. Don't they know the DoD invented the internet! We ought to do a background check on everyone that uses http! Seal up the borders! So what if MIT and every other engineering program has to lower its standards to fill their classes? I bet the folks that run the espresso machines at starbucks can be taught how to run our nuclear reactors and design our motherboards.

    We should also deport everyone back to their country of origin, or if they were born here, to their ancestors' countries of origin. If dismemberment is necessary to insure proper dispersion, so be it.

  59. not much money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in the entire scheme of things, 404k isnt that much money, especially for a research institute like MIT. would that even be a year of work?

  60. China? by John+Harrison · · Score: 2
    Not to mention if China will follow the same path.

    How likely do you think it is that China will become a mecca for foreign grad students in the way that the USA is? Maybe 20 years from now if there are massive changes, but it is not likely to happen in the near future.

    Out of curiosity, where are you from? Are you a foriegn student studying in the US?

    1. Re:China? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be mistaken. China is already "recruiting" grad students from South East Asia. Lots of people are heading that way mostly because the living cost is cheaper (thus if they don't get TA/RAs, they can still afford it). So, eventhough it's not as famous as US or other foreign contries, I agree with your parent post.

  61. IT'S NOT FLAMEBAIT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish mods would MOD on content, not whether or not they agree with the opinion of the poster.

    Sheesh.

  62. Could I say I agree with you by Epeeist · · Score: 2

    The original comment is what "foreigners" believe is a stereotypical American response. What are called here in Britain "Little Englanders".

    If I was to to take the same attitude then I would be shouting about having my daughter's boyfried repatriated. After all, what is someone from Arkansaw doing at Cambridge University, we should be saving the places for British students. He could be an undercover terrorist.

    It is noticeable that all your presidents who have travelled abroad believe in a policy of engagement. They seem to realise the world actually exists outside of your borders. The ones who haven't travelled seem to be almost xenophobic in their attitude to other nations.

    1. Re:Could I say I agree with you by TarPitt · · Score: 1
      It is noticeable that all your presidents who have travelled abroad believe in a policy of engagement.


      Interesting that a slander against Bill Clinton during his initial campaign revolved around him having the audacity to visit Eastern European countries as a student, while the Vietnam war was in full force. Seeing Prague as a 20-year old student was viewed as a sort of treason.

      --
      If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep
  63. Apparently... by BigBadBri · · Score: 1
    the AI project in question was intended to provide a 'thinking machine' to enable Dubya to understand foreign policy and to comment intelligibly and intelligently thereupon.

    It stands to reason that they didn't want no darned furriners messin up the works...

    --
    oh brave new world, that has such people in it!
  64. Scientific Research Encountering More Restrictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the research is sensitive to "national security" then the research should be conducted behind "high walls" and not in the public environment (e.i. computers connected to the internet). You can not protect the research if it can be accessed from any where in the world. sensitive information in a public environment is bad security policy and the restrictions with foreign nationals is a distraction from the real problem.

    It the internet stupid!

  65. A different view. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I think the problem has a lot more to do with the US government making themselves the policeman of the world, toppling governments in every corner of the world, killing others because of an interest in oil or control over a region or a people they think are different from them and disrespecting what those people consider to be their holy land, supporting Isreal no matter what evils the state does against the real owners of that land, ... There are just too many reasons why the US is losing the world's favor. (Heck, even moderate, peaceful people are beginning to see the US as a money-hungry, power-hungry Beast that cares only for itself and nothing about the rest of the world or even simple environmental issues. True, absolute power corrupts absolutely.) And the nationalistic cockiness of many Americans, these evils notwithstanding, does not help the situation.

    If you do not see the reasons why the US is hated by many, you either have an inability to reason, or live a very sheltered life of CNN propaganda.

    1. Re:A different view. by tetra103 · · Score: 1

      Agreed, some policies are very bad. I do not agree with the support of Isreal either. Isreal itself was nothing but a group of terroists before they got tanks. But other policies seem good. We supported a slave free South Africa. You can take most any policy and find good and bad in it. Just look at our support of Twain. I initially agreed with us supporting Twain's freedom, but if you look at it from a Chineese point of view, it's very different. You could argue that we should keep out of other peoples buisness or you could argue that we should help them strive for independence. I still don't know which to believe. That's our government. Every issue has good and bad. Hell, I support the Republicans, but look what they're doing to the clean air act. I'm so pissed, I may vote Demmocratic next. Why all the rambling? Just so you get the picture that US is not all about buisness. Believe it or not, world issues are about what's right and wrong and in general, I think we try to do the right thing. No body is perfect. One thing I don't believe, not even for a second, is that we're out to screw the world. Anyone who thinks that is just a fool.

    2. Re:A different view. by Zeinfeld · · Score: 2
      I think the problem has a lot more to do with the US government making themselves the policeman of the world, toppling governments in every corner of the world, killing others because of an interest in oil or control over a region

      When people say things like this there is always some idiot jumping up and down shouting 'anti-american'. The idea never seems to enter these people's empty heads that being globocop might be a bad thing for America.

      Rudyard Kippling wrote 'The White Man's Burden' about the US invasion of the Philapeans. Despite Kippling's reputation as an imperialist poet it is actually anti-imperialist 'go bind your son's in exile'.

      The failure in the Whitehouse made similar statements during his election campaign, he said America must be humble, meaning that it should not be throwing its weight arround. He was against 'nation building' and against international engagement. The problem being that they are only against negotiations and engagement when they fail to get what they want. As soon as that happens the first resort is unilateral demands.

      To address the point of the thread, this administration does not want scientific research. It is completely interested in any information that does not support their pre-determined agenda. They have suppressed all the information on the Federal agency web sites that call administration policy into question and they are busy stacking research panels to make sure none come out with the 'wrong views'.

      I have a simple rule for evaluating people, look at how often they listen and who they listen to. We know that this administration listened only to its campaign contributors, in particular big oil when it wrote its energy policy. The Siera club was called in for one meeting that lasted less than two hours, half of which was taken up by introductions.

      The problem with this administration playing globocop is that they treat every single issue in terms of the narrowest electoral advantage. It is driven by the Cubanistas in Miami, the Zionists in Broklyn and the Messianistic Christian Right in the Bible belt.

      I doubt that Castro would still be in power but for the US embargo giving an excuse for his failed economic policies. So do most in Congress but they don't want to loose the vote in Florida.

      The problem with US policy on Israel is that the US keeps trying to play the neutral intermediary while providing the military and economic support that allows Israel to continue to occupy the Palestinian territories and continue to attempt colonisation with settlements.

      The administrations declaration that from now on it intends to act unilateraly can only have one effect. Every country is going to have to build nuclear weapons since they have been empirically demonstrated to be the one thing that the neo-imperialist right respect.

      This is why we should all be very affraid of the attempts to build SDI. The risk is that sometime in the future another weak president trying to look tough may be tempted to call someone's nuclear bluff in the mistaken beleif the system works.

      --
      Looking for an Information Security student project suggestion?
      Try http://dotcrimeManifesto.com/
  66. You are not logical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You talk about tax dollars. OK. I'll bite.

    If you want the best possible return for your tax money you want to get the brightest possible people (foreign or US citizens, it shouldn't matter) in the university, have them graduate and stay in the US.

    Don't favor the foreign applicants, don't favor the US applicants. If you really insist, you could favor those foreign applicants who express a wish to become a US citizen over those who don't.

    Most foreign students like living in the USA so persuasing them to work here for a few years and then getting them a citizenship shouldn't be that hard.

    THAT would get the best return for your tax dollars: you get the most skilled people possible into the university and they will stay in the US.

    Giving the priority to US citizens will only lead to inferior graduate material -- unless all the US applicants are already superior to the foreign applicants. And if that were the case, then the whole point is moot because the applicants can be selected based on skill and not on nationality.

    1. Re:You are not logical by Fig,+formerly+A.C. · · Score: 2
      I'd agree that getting them to stay here instead of leaving after they have the degree is preferable. And I'd LOVE it if the US students were academically superior every time.

      We're not. Our high schools are failing, the primary education system in this country is in shambles. Like it or not, universities are the places where we have to catch up with the world. We really can't do that if our students can't get into them, can we?

      I'm 100% opposed to affirmative action in universities because it doesn't take applicants based solely on merits, but I am more against a government program that doesn't put it's own citizens first.

      I think the return on tax dollars has a greater impact if it enhances the lives of the taxpayers. Which is more valuable to the citizen: a degree from the university, or a job serving fries in the drive thru to an exchange student with a degree ?

      We need to benefit the citizens first.

      --
      Murphy was an optimist.
  67. more accurately... by g4dget · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "When the Soviet Union tried to keep its research secret during the Cold War, their whole scientific apparatus atrophied," said former Air Force Secretary Sheila Widnall, now an aeronautics professor at MIT.

    When the Soviet Union tried to keep its research secret, the research moved overseas. Restrictions on foreign nationals, visa restrictions, and secrecy are the best way for the US to ensure that research moves to Europe, Japan, and China. With secrecy, researchers won't generate the publications that advertise that a country and a lab is first rate. With visa restrictions, educated foreigners will increasingly look for jobs overseas, where they are more welcome than ever, or just stay at home and try to make things work there. Hiring restrictions on foreign nationals for "secret" projects further reduce available jobs and further drive them away.

  68. I'm curious about their thinking here ... by mustangdavis · · Score: 2

    Yes, foreign students could potentially represent a risk to national security, but get real! As posted above, (and from listening to the hundreds of foreign grad students I went to grad school with) most students that come from abroad, especiall those involved in any type of decent research (and that can get into MIT!!!) are going to stay here! They stand to lose more by going back to wher ethey came from. In the U.S., they know that they will get paid better wages and that they can provide a more stable future for their families.

    Now past the security issue ... why would they want to stop foreign students from working on a grant? From the mounths of several profs I have had in the past, I quote: foreign "students work harder than American most American students. They are not distracted by friends, family, and other extra curricular activities. They are taught to please those in authority, and are willing to work for the priviledge to sta in this (the U.S.) country. They will work harder because they have much more to lose!"

    That statement couldn't be spoken any better! I was an American grad student at one point, and although I worked pretty hard, I will admit that most of the foriegn students worked much harder than I did ... and they worked MANY more hours than I did! I couldn't keep up because of family obligations and obligations to my business that I was running while in school. Most American students have something else other than school going on in their life during their graduate career ... it is just a simple fact of life.

    So again, why wouldn't the gov't want to take advantage of people that are willing to give them more bang for their buck?

    I don't like what I have just stated, because I do believe that many Americans are being passed over for terrific opportunites because of what I just said, but it is the (sad) truth. The PhD.'s of this nation see that, so what can't the people running the gov't???

    Just my $0.02 cents ...



    (BTW: I didn't do any grad work in Language Arts, so please don't flame me for bad grammar or my mack of good keyboard skills)

    1. Re:I'm curious about their thinking here ... by nero_thefiddle_playe · · Score: 1

      It's all about cheap labor I applaud the NSA on their decision, foriegn nationals should not be given any jobs here in America. "They are taught to please those in authority, and are willing to work for the priviledge to stay in this (the U.S.) country. " This sums up the state of our educational institutions at this time. We want students who want to please those in authority ( ass kissers ). Essentially these students are indentured servants who work just to stay in the country. What the hell is this doing to our labour market in IT. What type of innovation can I expect from a corruped educational instutions that operate on these priciples. After 17 years in software development I spent most of last year being unemployed because 90% of new jobs are being given to foriegn nationals. My wife is now long-term unemployed with out even an interview in months. What about a stable life for me and my family. If this trend continues me and my family will be homeless and hungry in a few years. Dont' forget it was the citizens of this country that defeated the empire of their time. What it all comes down to is cheap labor. H1-B's work for starvation wages as well as graduate and PHD students. The reason foriegn nationals make up the bulk of the graduate students cheap labor for our corrupted educational system. Americans don't go on to get these advanced degrees because they can make more over their lifetime with an undergraduate degree. See Norm Matloff's Debunking the Myth of a Desperate Software Shortage Section 6.3.3 for more information http://heather.cs.ucdavis.edu/itaa.real.html

  69. lets remember immigration is what fuels america by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    for those who have forgotton, immigrants and immigration is the life blood of america. Look at the pace of innovation and it's relation to immigration laws. There is a direct link between openness of immigration and innovation. It's not that immigrants or american's are smarter, it's the fact that the sum is greater than the parts.

  70. In Russia no joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look Im from Russia and we had closed cities up until recently where top secret research was conducted and guess what it was the right thing to do because no American spy or agency ever managed to figure out what was going on in these cities. Communism was a terriblly repressive system, but lets face facts if we didnt spend a third of out GDP (NMP in th old days) fighting the cold war there would still be a sickle and hammer flying over the kremlin. I seriuosly see no problem with keeping foreign nationals away from research projects with national security repurcussions. What I would warn against is focusing to much on national security. In Russia we did and now we are paying for it. Though you cant blame us after, WW2 and what the Nazis did we said never again, but went bankrupt in the process.

    1. Re:In Russia no joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm not Russian so I can't say "we" or "I" thought this or that as a Russian, obviously. However, your comment of Though you cant blame us after, WW2 and what the Nazis did we said never again, but went bankrupt in the process. is misdirecting and out of context. The Soviet machine reared its head well before Hitler even started the Brown Shirts. As for conquest and tyranny, the very nature of Communism was very much in bed with those two so it is rather hypocritical from a political or historical perspective to throw stones at the Nazi's to justify a doomed military, political, social and economic method.

      As for your comment of spending so much on national security and defense, consider this analogy: A man is living peacefully in a neighborhood for decades when suddenly among the neighbors there is this "movement" to control everyone and "free" them (ironically, thus freeing them from choice, liberty, freedom, any hope of financial prosperity unless they join the party and that only giving the limited blood-stained gold to the top). It is a very violent conversion and people are not asked, they are told. Instead of logic, reasons and facts being used as the core of the movement it is instead propoganda, information misdirection, lies, deceit, confusion and flat out bullshit rhetoric (often referred to as FUD now). If the freedom loving neighbors arm themselves and move to stop the tyrants from A) taking over more innocent and freedom loving neighbors and B) taking themselves over are we to then label those gallant few as war mongers? Shall we then feel sorry (or for that matter take serious the accounts of those that say, "The US made us go broke")?

      Put another way, lets say a man falls from a plane to his death because he was drunk and opened up the plane door (obviously a small plane with a sliding door). When examining any cause/effect relationships what do we find? Well that depends on the scope: a pathologist will say that the cause of death was in fact pressure of blood compressing the brain, loss of proper circulation of blood thus starving neurons and heart tissue and perhaps direct tissue laceration from bone fragments and foreign objects such as rocks and sticks (on the ground). Those are all true, yet they do us no good in actually learning from the indident and avoiding the mistake in the future. The lesson here is to 1) not be an idiot 2) don't drink if you can't hold your liquir 3) don't drink if you are an idiot and 4) don't open up aircraft doors unless you are prepared to jump with a parashoot.

      Not to beat you to death or anything, but I just hope you realize that it was indeed the Soviets and their grind-everything-in-our-path machine that actually caused the situation of the arms race (or cold war, or war of economic attrition, etc) in the first place.

      As for your closed cities... I hate to disappoint you but we gained a LOT more than you might actually think.

    2. Re:In Russia no joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before WW2 the red army was a joke and recieved less than 3% of GDP. After WW2 it was between 1/4 and 1/3 of GDP. In 1945 several plans were developeed in Russia for the eventual demobilization of the Red Army since the party machine feared the Army. However, following the American success with th atom bomb those plans were summarily scrapped. In 1945 several months before the end of the war Soviet foreign minister Molotov filed for American loans to help rebuild Russia your state department "lost" the application (that was their response to Russian enquires). There would be no Marshall plan for Russia. This led Stalin to announce another five year plan and enforce more savings within the Soviet Union rather than seeking liberalization and foreign investment. Im not going to defend Stalin, but I think its clear he had no intention of conquering the world and any such rhetoric was soley to keep his support base in check. 9 out of 10 Germans killed during the war were killed by the Soviets and we defeated 3/4 of the German army plus the combined armies of germanies eastern allies. Krushchev drastically lowered military expenditures and while his rhetoric was harsher than Stalins the man clearly attempted to loosen Cold War tensions and to attempt to free up the Soviet economy. How was he rewarded? With the Cuban missile crisis. America could position missiles 50 miles from Russia in Turkey, but we couldnt position missiles 70 miles from Florida. Now thats hypocrisy. Barria, Stalins chief of intellegence attempted a coup that had it succedded would have meant a free and democratic Russia and Europe he got no support from the West and a bullet in the head. The Soviet system was flawed and had to go, but the Cold War was not our fault and without the Cold War the Soviet system would still be around today. So in a way the Cold War was a good thing since it gave us Russians our freedom though it bankrupted us. Reforming the Soviet system without bankrupting it was possible and under Andropov such political/economic reforms were attempted, but the man only lived for 18 months in office. Gorbachov arrived to late. As General Lebed said "only a heartless man does not mourn the passing of the Soviet Union, but only a fool would see to its return." This is probably the prevailing view amongest Russias educated middle class. Putin has proven to be an amazing leader and will probably one day be compared to Peter the great. Anyway, life in Russia is getting better we have had 4 years of positive economic growth and have grown faster then you! In Moscow average incomes are near 12,000 dollars a year. Not bad for a "starving nation". Moscow is also the most expensive city in the world to live in this year(not Hong Kong). If only the rest of the country was so well off, but in time it will be.

      Lets also be honest about Soviet military technology. The United States has never faced any top Soviet weapons platforms in acctual combat. In Iraq you faced aged T-72's, Mig-21's and useless SCUDS. If you were faced with T-90's, Su-30's or S-300's the war would have gone differently. Also all the recent talk about Soviet Strela missiles being used by terrorist to shoot down jets is a joke. The Strela is a stupid almost useless missile. The Russian Igla is the the real threat and almost none have left Russia and those that have have gone to nation states not terrorists. Russia does not supply its best systems to its client states. Neither does the United States that would be stupid.

  71. Nationalist idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Hey fuckface. It's not your technology or knowledge. Top science is always an exercise in international collaboration -- no nation can do it alone better than several nations together. Isolationist science just does not work!

    Check out the top research groups in the top American universities. All research groups are thoroughly international. Why? You can believe that the universities don't do that without a good reason. They do it because THOSE FOREIGN RESEARCHERS ARE THE BEST MEN/WOMEN FOR THE JOB! YOU COULD NOT FIND A BETTER CANDIDATE IN THE USA!

    If you want to build a laboratory that's a world leader in some field you hire The Best people regardless of the race, sexual orientation, political affiliations or nationality.

  72. homegrown terrorists by zogger · · Score: 3, Interesting

    --I'm more concerned over home grown terrorist like robert mcnamara, henry kissinger,both the clintons, george the elder, king george the present, rumsfield, cheney, the hierarchies in the democratic national committe and the republican national committee, the membership of the council on foreign relations, the members of the tri-lateral commission, and various criminal gangs and cartels inside the various combined workgroups of the military/industrial complex who profit from war and drug smuggling in the private sector, especially banking, and the spook, law and justice "communities".

    Hegelian dialectic is alive and working daily to bring a fascist reality to the US. It don't matter what label or name these gents go by, a dictatorship "system" that lies chronically, steals everything that ain't nailed down, and uses their positions for personal and secret profit are way more of a danger than anything else.

    Now this viewpoint doesn't negate the possibility and probability of various other foreigners being up to "no good". I take that as a gimme as well. It's reality, there ARE foreign bad guys here and also domestic low level independent nutjobs. We got a population of around 270 million or so, law of averages comes into play. I just think it's better to have th.. ..list to reflect more serious potential threats and dangers, to go down to slightly less serious,to less serious and so on. History has shown just over and over again that power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. And the history of the 20th century shows that citizens of various countries around this ole whirrled have a much higher odds-on probability of being exploited/murdered/enslaved by their own governments and "connected ones" then by "outsiders". For every person killed by a "foreign invader" in the 20th century, there's 5 to 10 killed by their own nation's power structure once they became absolute tyrants.

    IMO, having watched politics and "current events/news/history" as a major interest since the late 50's/early 60's, I'd say that the US has well more than it's "fair share" of power mad dictators or dictator wannabe's,from the very highest levels to local levels, very public to very private, governmental and business, and it's official pronouncements have been full of lies and misdirections.

    Just since I've been a teenager I've watched *someones* get away with whacking a president-JFK, to starting a decades long war-for-profit based on a total lie -nam war with the gulf of tonkin fairy tale, to shafting it's own vets -agent orange was a "myth" and "all in their heads", and gulf war syndrome was "in their heads", to experimenting on their own people by aerial and ground spreading of chemical, bioliogical and radiological agents-something they denied for years and finally admitted. And so forth and on and on, way too many examples to list. Heck just the federal reserve perpetual debt note scam is big enough to prove how much people get lied to and brainweashed into believing the lies.

    The gestalt is-the old cliche is true, for a basic rule of thumb, when a politician's lips are moving..well, take it with several large handfuls of salt. Right now, IMO again, we are being lead down the dictatorship path with lies much more deep and sinister than minor accounting lies at enron, and those were large enough. That's chump change to what's really going on now with this "war on terrorism".

    Anyone's MMV obviously, just fool me once, shame on you, fool me 4873 times, shame on me. Learn from history or repeat it, binary choice.

  73. CIA, FBI, what's next?!? by Deflagro · · Score: 1

    Homeland Security...i'm sorry but I find it all a joke. It's bad enough Americans get screwed paying for Government agencies that don't even work. Now they create another one to throw money at. I mean really, i'm from Canada and i clear the same off a paycheck here as i did there. Difference is if i got into an accident, i wouldn't be out 30 grand for hospital dues, we have unemployment insurance et al. Just had to vent, i hate seeing 400 bux come off my paycheck so government can tell me what i need.

    --
    Der Tod ist der einzige Weg hier raus!
  74. "steal our technology and knowledge!!!!!!!!!" by Herkules · · Score: 0

    I hope for all these foreigners that this is not knowledge level they "steal" =)

    Please Anonymous Coward (sir) the people who come to us are the some of the smartest and the brightest in the world! Why ? Well money! And what dose the US get ? Dam good research.

    --
    CIA Factbook 2002 (US):"Since 1975, practically all the gains in household income have gone to the top 20% of households
  75. Re:Scientific Research Encountering More Restricti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think this also means that foreign nationals should not be used as system and network admins
    at MIT or other institutions, if they are using information sensitive to the USA.

  76. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by LaissezFaire · · Score: 1
    The problem here is it's not our money, it's their money. If you think it's your money, try taking your part back, or not giving it to them in the first place. :-)

    I know someone has already mentioned Real Genius -- remember back in the 60s-80s when many, many grants had to have a Department of Defense component? This is no different; this is a big warm war on terror, instead of a big cold war on the Communists.

    The government was working for the advancement of knowledge, but not for general knowledge. It's for the advancement of knowledge the government wants, and to keep from the people it doesn't want to know.

  77. Re:Knowledge going elsewhere by WeeLad · · Score: 1
    This convinced me that the problem is real, that it is hampering the advancement of learning--and that it could even lead to the unseating of the US as the center of the learned world.

    Many submitters have posted similar comments about the possible shift of technilogical/scientific knowledge to somewhere other than the US. Anyone got any predictions on where the next big technology/science concentration will be? Will it shift to Canada, which still seems to embrace foreigners to its country? Does Europe have anything to offer? How about China? (Looks like they may put a man in space this year).

    Also, what do you think are the ingredients for a country to be a successful technology powerhouse? "Loose ethics" in their laws? (cloning-banned countries will probably not be at the forefront of cloning technology). How about diverse acceptance of individuals in scientific professions (Think of how many great foreign scientists might be turned away by the US, or how many great women scientists have not been allowed to contribute in certain fields in some Muslim-dominated countries). Others examples?

    --
    Seriously, Don't take anything I say seriously.
  78. Not that I'm a bigot, but... by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 2

    ...if this means less college classes run by Teaching Assistants with accents so think and English so poor that half that students can't understand what's being said, I support it.

    1. Re:Not that I'm a bigot, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe the US wont feel safe until they have killed off the rest of the world.. if you think about it many, if not all the points that have been addressed in this discussion also apply to other countries in the world.. because it seems that the US isnt the only country in the world that has Universities..

    2. Re:Not that I'm a bigot, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am a TA in a university (outside the US and non english-speaking) and I give classes in a language which is not my native language and my accent is maybe not perfect. But european students seem not to care that much, maybe because every 200km people speak a different language, and people are so smart to understand that collaborating with people speaking foreign languages is something very precious. And here we don't even have TOEFL.

      And *hey* isn't *English* a foreign language in the US as well?

  79. Hey, it's government money. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Goverment money should be targeted to help
    AMERICANS !!!

  80. Gotta have foriegn students by mtngrown · · Score: 2, Interesting


    Basically, MITs reason is much more prosaic than some sort of "intellectual freedom" (*snort*). If MIT was restricted from using foreign students on a research project, that project would very likely die for lack of interest. Let's face it: US students are for the most part smarter than wasting 4-7 years in a PhD program, given the financial risk involved. Thus we have the observation that the graduate student bodies at many (most?) large research schools are foreign.

    From the universities point of view, this is just good business sense: large pool of willing labor that works cheap. Also, don't be fooled by high tuition for foreign. That's just a numbers game to charge what is essentially more overhead for these same grants.

    MIT sees this as a dangerous precedent. If they accepted these restrictions, it would be more difficult to refuse them later, and could really dent the supply of indentured labor available to fuel university researh programs.

    The whole thing make sense in the context of an "education industry".

    1. Re:Gotta have foriegn students by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well said, but who pays the 'security tax'.
      Asking a foreign student to pay $6000 and wait 2 months for his 'clearance? This will louse up diversity, and make make many potential research programs 'non goers'.

  81. Re:Foriegn policy debate not so boring after all.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ummm...Mecca is in Saudi Arabia.

    Iraq has lots of oil.

    It's quite, quite obvious that you vote Democrat.

  82. If you take Caesar's money. . . by kfg · · Score: 4, Interesting

    you belong to Caesar. It's a concept simple enough that it was expressed by a simple bookshelf builder who grew up out in the sticks two thousand years ago.

    Once upon a time the great private universities were the bastions of independant thinking, but a funny thing happened on the way to the Forum. They started takeing Caesar's money. A little aid here, a little aid there, and then the big money, government contracts.

    This has created on odd state of affairs where a private institution has a public face presenting public knowledge, and at the same time a public face creating very, very, VERY private knowledge.

    Or worse, presenting as public knowledge that which it is payed to present as public by Ceasar. Do you really need it spelled out that some of that "knowledge" lacks a bit around the edges in the "truth" department?

    When a government contracts for science the government OWNS that science. I mean this quite literally.

    If you wish to do science, or engage in ANY free thought for that matter, the solution is obvious and simple. Don't take Caesar's coin.

    The poet laureate, by accepting the the coin and protection of the Lord is compelled by his very state to write only that which is pleasing and/or flattering to the Lord. If you don't think this happens in science you are naive. The poet who rejects the Lords money may say anything he wishes, although his life may otherwise be somewhat harsher.

    Which way to go is a choice. Choose wisely, if not well.

    KFG

    1. Re:If you take Caesar's money. . . by foylab · · Score: 1
      If you take Caesar's money, you belong to Caesar
      Actually, that's not at all the concept that he introduced. Jesus was talking about how one should give what belongs to Caesar to Caesar (taxes), which doesn't directly have anything to do with someone owning someone else because of who pays who. Now, the rest of the post I agree with; I just think it was necessary to point out that it often doesn't say what people say it says/want it to say.
  83. BS by jabbadeznuts · · Score: 0, Troll

    this is complete bull shit

  84. In a post September 11, 2001 world... by spikedvodka · · Score: 1

    ... It is even more important that we realize: We have changed the way we live, our day to day workings have changed WE HAVE LET "THEM" WIN!!!

    Terrorists don't always care about getting a specific message across, they care about changing the way their targets live and work. In short, They've won! we're now running scared, ready to believe anything "The Man" tells us, as long as it's about "terrists" (which damn-it has 3, count them 3, sylables), or has to do with "Homeland Security" It's McCarthyism all over again, and almost nobody seems to see it (s/[reds|communist]/terrorist/g)

    Also I think it's stupid to think that you can keep research under wraps forever. Think about it, The laws of physics/chemestry/etc work just the same at the univeristy of southern north dakota at hoople, as they do at the Yazd Insitute of technology (both fictional schools of course) or even the Baghdad Underground top secret "You talk about it, we shoot you first, then ask questions" research bunker.

    Also, Imageing China/Pakistan/North Korea... Try this, imagine the US without it, would we be a world super-power? probably not. What gives the US of A the right to police the world as it sees fit. What makes the US a better world super power than say, Poland would be? ABSOLUTELY NOTHING! something which most people around here seem to have forgotten... For crying out loud, FDR must be rolling over in his grave, The US doesn't even appear to give a flying rat's ass about the UN, which he helped start so many years ago. We don't even care enough to pay our dues, and we feel that it is our right to strong-arm it into going along with whatever we want.

    Once again. enough ranting for now. go back to your regularly scheduled madness

    --
    I will not give in to the terrorists. I will not become fearful.
  85. No, it's oil that fuels America, and in turn, MIT. by Genjurosan · · Score: 1

    refer to subject...

  86. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by devonbowen · · Score: 3, Funny
    You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strings

    That's what I keep telling the IRS.

    Devon

  87. Just to put it into a Real World perspective.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can anyone show me any other nation that allows classified scientific research that impacts their national security to be performed by foriegn nationals with no background checks?

    If the answer is yes, I would like to see some substantiation, not just an assertion by an anonymous poster on a notoriously unreliable web site.

    If the answer is no, then where is your righteous indignation at all the other nations of the world that dare to think that the security of their citizens trumps some hazy, ill-defined ideal? Could it be your anti-American racism (or self-hate) doesn't allow you accept the fact that some things that grownups do are prudent and right, no matter what your socialist roomates think?

  88. Please explain... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How this is modded as FLAMEBAIT?

    If you don't agree with something then post a reply. The mod system was not put in place to squash dissenting opinions.

    Yes, this is off-topic.

  89. Oh well, so much for getting into MIT now by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I had hopes that as an american they'd take me for grad school, but now that they'll continue to fill up with foreign students and reject americans, too bad.

  90. Just For The Record by RCO · · Score: 1

    I did my grad work in Physics, and had to deal with many foreign students. Our Dept. was more than 50% foreign. While I think some of these individuals were complete scum, my attitude has nothing to do with the fact that they were not Americans; it had everything to do with the fact that they were complete scum, and yes I felt that way about some of the Americans as well. I'm also sure that some of them felt the same about me.

    The fact of the matter is that MIT turned down the money. Whether they did it because they couldn't do the research without the foreign students, or because of principals, they did the right thing, as far as I'm concerned. Another fact is that there are a lot of low lives out there and if the government wants to start screening the individuals that are working on research projects in the world of academia they should by no means limit the screening to foreign students. If they are reading this and decide that I'm right, and they start screening everyone, how many people do you think they are going to have working on their pet projects? They will end up with very few foreign students working on these projects, and the American students that are working on the projects will be the ones that either don't have any better offers, or they will have the 'lamb to the slaughter' mentality that will allow them to be led anywhere. Anyway you look at it, these are generally not going to be the most innovative individuals in the world. Therefore these projects will end up with second-rate researchers giving second-rate results. Basically, the American government will end up cutting it's own throat.

    --
    'And all the monkeys aren't in the zoo Every day you meet quite a few...'
  91. Nail. Head. by PatientZero · · Score: 3, Interesting
    If a bunch of people are out to get the U.S., then why are they doing it? . . . are we doing something wrong?

    The short version is that with WW2 the US swapped places with the UK. The US provoked Japan into attacking it, as 80% of Americans didn't want to enter the war, because it saw that Japan was quickly building its own empire. Industrialization had been going strong in the US for a century, and the capitalists needed markets in which to sell products. The US came out of the war with a built-up industrial base, and an excuse to build military bases throughout the globe. Europe was decimated, leaving America the world's only superpower.

    Since that time, we've worked to expand our economic sphere, as empires are wont to do, throughout Asia and South America. Through the CIA, the US has sponsored and/or outright led several military coups: Chile, Indonesia, Guatemala, Panama, and many more. The latest -- failed! -- attempt was Venezuela this past April.

    Why would the US do this? Do Americans hate other people? Of course not. That assumes that Americans make choices which affect the US's foreign policy. I certainly wasn't asked about whether or not I wanted to overthrow the overwhelmingly democratically-elected president of Venezuela. But Venezuela controls a lot of oil, and capital needs oil (resources). So capital made that choice for me. Can you think of another country that controls a lot of oil? Hint: it starts with "I" and ends in "raq."

    The fairy tale that terrorists hate all of our freedoms is so amazingly idiotic, I'm shocked that anyone buys into it. Yes, that's a sad statement on our citizens. Do you really think bin Laden is sitting in a cave somewhere thinking, "Stupid Americans! Why can't I have my MTV?! I'm so jealous." No, he's pissed because the US has military bases in what he believes to be the holy land of all Muslim people (over a billion world-wide). Whether or not we stop supporting Israel (his other beef), I think we at the very least should pull out of Saudi Arabia just to appease one sixth of the world's population. That's just common sense if not common courtesy.

    It's easy to get cynical or give up when you look upon the world stage and see what the US does to other countries and peoples (1.5 million dead in Iraq due to economic sanctions). I just hope that by talking with others we can wake up enough people to take back control of the country. How? I wish I knew, but I'm convinced it's not going to happen through the ballot box.

    You can go read any number of political essays and books yourself, but I think you'd be hard pressed to argue that our touted two-party system is not really a one-party system: the capital party. No, I'm not socialist or communist, though those systems haven't really been tried in the real world. I've been reading more about anarchy* and know that, once we stop hating each other for silly reasons, it's the way to go. The only question is can we get there?

    Me? I'm actually hopeful.

    * If you think Anarchy means mob rule or no order, you don't understand anarchy. Neither did I. Start skimming the FAQ, but the basic tenant is that you are a sovereign individual and should not be giving up your power to anyone.

    P.S. For a good history of the US, I highly recommend A People's History of the United States: 1492 to Preset by Howard Zinn. I'm only up to the Civil War (and the other Civil War), but it's very good so far.

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    1. Re:Nail. Head. by burNtchicken · · Score: 1

      sigh...I am certainly not well educated in history, and you make interesting points. I will look into the book, but it will probably fall behind the other 20 books already on my list that I don't have time to read.

      I need to step off the planet for about 10 years, educate myself, and then come back to the discussion.

    2. Re:Nail. Head. by PatientZero · · Score: 2
      I know how you feel. It all comes down to priorities, and I've had to continually adjust mine. I'd really like to read Cryptonomicron, but that was put on the back burner. It's been there since it came out, too.

      I do highly recommend this book simply because it covers the full time range of US history. The chapters cover various logical periods, and you could skip those that don't interest you, I'm sure. It's not too big, and I've been blazing through it since I got it for Christmas.

      Good luck!

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    3. Re:Nail. Head. by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      The US provoked Japan into attacking it

      Just like France and Britain provoked Germany into attacking them and Kuwait provoked Iraq into invading it. Not. I'll assume that you some kind of a tortured justification for that statement that doesn't involve everyone putting on tinfoil hats.

      Pearl Harbour was just about the stupidest thing that Japan could have done. Yamamoto, the admiral in charge of the attack, said so himself (though dictatorships don't generally listen to non-self-glorifying ideas). If they hadn't attacked, America might have kept its head in the sand and the Axis could have won WWII and owned Europe and Asia-Pacific (well, if Hitler had of decided against invading Russia.)

    4. Re:Nail. Head. by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 2

      I've been reading more about anarchy [anarchy.org]* and know that, once we stop hating each other for silly reasons, it's the way to go.

      Bad news: there is no such thing as "anarchy". For a close simulation, go to Somalia. If any country were declared to be an anarchy, it would be replaced by a system of feuding warlords within hours. All weak states are like this.

      Of course, if there was no law, I would be busy killing anarchists in order to express my gratitude. And they would defend to the death my right to kill them.

      If you think Anarchy means mob rule or no order

      "Mob rule" would be the definition of "Democracy". This is why I tend to prefer "Constitutional Democracies". At least then the state is obligated to live up to some highfalutin idealogy.

  92. Not so uniqe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reading through the debates here I wonder if anybody takes in account that infact there are foreign students in Universities all over the world which makes the US no more different in that aspect.

    Also I wonder where all this paranoia comes from.. why have the US always been so paranoid.. where lies the difference between countries in Europe and US..

  93. What kind of project? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone have details on it? Why is the NSA interested in AI? Is it another semantic forest thingamajic?

  94. [way OT] Fender QC by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

    OK, here's the deal, as I understand it.

    Fender Musical Instruments has two Brands: Fender and Squier. Squier instruments are made in Indonesia now. They were formerly made in Korea and Mexico. They have never been anything above bargain-basement instruments.

    Fender brand instruments are made in Mexico, Japan, and the USA. For a time in the mid-80s, the Japanese Fenders WERE of superior quality to the american ones, but their QC has changed now. Fender only has a handful of guitars that are made in Japan now, mostly artist signature series instruments. The ones that are made there are equivalent in build quality to USA fenders but lack a bit in the finer touches. For example, USA fenders, starting in 2000, have rolled fingerboard edges, better quality hardware, and are just a lot more polished than the past 15 years worth of instruments.

    Fender lost a lot of market share in the 80s to Ibanez, ESP, Jackson, and other shred-guitar manufacturers because everyone wanted a locking tremolo and a ruler-thin neck and all that garbage. They had a great Ibanez clone (which is ironic since Ibanez made its name with clones of Fenders, Gibsons, Rickenbackers, etc.) called the Heartfield Talon but it came out too late; Nirvana came out about a year later.

    So in short, Japanese Fenders were better when they first started making guitars in Japan, but then the USA crew got its act together and overtook them now. As of today, the USA guitars are superior.

    1. Re:[way OT] Fender QC by nicsterrr · · Score: 1

      One of my basses is a fender squier precision which was made in Japan in the 80's and the quality is definitely much better than the more recent squires from whereeverland..

      One interesting thing I noticed is that my Japan made precision bass has the spelling "squier" whereas I believe the low quality ones from elsewhere are spelt "squire". So I guess that could be a way to tell them apart..

    2. Re:[way OT] Fender QC by kin_korn_karn · · Score: 2

      ok, I forgot that Fender made good Squiers in Japan before they made that name their budget plywood guitar line. My mistake.

  95. Racism definitions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only white folks can be racists. Anything white folks do that may, no matter how insignificantly or tangentially, impact on anyone who isn't of white European ancestry, is blatantly racist. Things like black student councils, or a black congressional caucus, or a United Negro College Fund, that exclude participants based on race, are *not* racist because white folks aren't doing them. But by God, a white student council or a white congressional caucus or a United White Folks College Fund would be blatantly racist organizations.

    Doing background checks on non-citizen students is also very racist because the students may be from non-white-European countries. Just like targetting Arabs in airports is racist... never mind Arabs between the ages of 15 and 45 match the description of the suspects in 80% of the world's terrorist attacks... Arabs are not white Europeans so anything that singles them out is obviously racist.

    And we won't even mention that Asian cultures routinely kill or sell "mixed blood" babies into slavery... that isn't racism because Asians aren't white Europeans. So it's okay for them to do that.

  96. Can we make up our minds? by smithmc · · Score: 1

    Yes it is a terribly big deal. The point is that it is discriminatory to foreign students. If it meant background checks for everyone involved, there would be no points of contention, but the idea that only foreigners pose a security threat is absurd.

    It seems to me that half of /. gets upset about the notion of the government running security investigations on American citizens. Meanwhile, the other half get upset about the government not running investigations on American citizens. Which is it to be, folks?

    --
    Downmodding is the refuge of the weak. Don't downmod, make a better argument!
    1. Re:Can we make up our minds? by kenthorvath · · Score: 2

      Government funded projects can impose all the restrictions (within the confines of the law) that it wants, while private endeavors should enjoy respective freedom from such regulations. However, I do not believe that the risk of "terrorism" goes up significantly between citizen and non-citizen; lest we forget Timothy McVeigh, the snipers, and other Americans? Obviously illegal aliens and other such persons that do not belong in this country should be prohibited from access to "sensitive" information, but the background checks on visitors should be done before they enter the country, not at every turn of the corner when they want to participate in something as simple as research.

  97. Is it or isn't it? by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

    There is always a tendenancy to support nationalist measures. Totally understandable! BUT and this is a big BUT. Is it a good idea?

    Look at Einstein. He was a German, who rennounced his citzenship, then became Swiss and finally American. However, he only became American once he lived in the US on a permament basis.

    So according to this logic Einstein should have been excluded. Really would that have been a smart move?

    Now before one raises the argument, but that was Einstein. Lets remember this is about scientific research where an Einstein may be found. And also lets remember the people who actually are loyal and the least to worry about are the scientists. They generally do not tend to be activists or dictators....

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  98. YOU ARE SO FIRED! by YOU+ARE+SO+FIRED! · · Score: 0

    Your performance review just came in. D-. Come on, get out. You're fired.

  99. It is happening.... by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

    Germany just sold one of the world's first production magnetic train to China. The train ran for the first time Jan 1, 2003 at 450 KPH. As a scientist and engineer I sure want to see what they did....

    What we forget is that scientists != activists.

    --

    "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
    "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
  100. Reverse Brain Drain by dprice · · Score: 4, Informative

    The January Wired magazine has an article about stem cell research and cloning in China. The combination of the US government restricting foreign students from participating in certain research and also restricting certain kinds of biological research has caused a brain drain of Chinese researchers from the US to China.


    During the 1980's and 1990's, many Chinese researchers would study in the US, and many would stay in the US after graduating. Now some of those researchers that have been living and working in the US have been moving back to China. New students are staying in China to study since they are developing their own labs backed by the Chinese government.


    As the US keeps adding restrictions, they (Congress, etc.) actually encourage foreign countries to develop their own research capabilities that the US cannot control, except by threats like in the case of Korea and Iraq. It will make those countries less dependent and more isolated from the US which will give the US less bargaining power in future diplomatic relations.


  101. "What soft-headed science enthusiasts don't like" by strateg0s · · Score: 1

    Hot button issues like this are really a test of how confused people are. If you are too uncomfortable at the thought of taking seriously the possibility that your own government is not evil, but has a valid concern with security, (which is not to say it should go unscrutinized), then instead of pretending to argue, why not just say "BOO!" and save us the rest. My favorite this time was, "security must not be gained at the sacrifice of our morals." (--our morals, right). When feminist peace protesters somehow got into the federal legislature to heckel Rumsfield with anti-war cries, he made the simple observation that, "What they don't realize is that they wouldn't be allowed to do that in Iraq." Without security, you could not have a government which is designed around *securing* rights for the people, to live as they see fit, so long as it does not jeopardize those 'rights'. Contradictions make for poor reasoning. Science is not harmless. "AI of military value? Nooooo, it couldn't possibly be." ... "But there are brilliant foreigners who want to learn about this and advance the state of the research." Of course there are, but does that somehow make them holy? It is probably very rare that the actual issue is the character of a given scientist. Most scientists only care about science, and otherwise they are politically disinterested, and likely for that reason naive--they don't have time to think about politics, but because they know they are smart in their field and politics is a 'value' field, they are likely to presume they know more about politics than they they do. Is it inconceivable that the advancement of learning ought to take into political circumstances under consideration? Try reading the book by that title, or the New Atlantis, that's a shorter one. The great thinkers who founded modern science (and created the conditions to subvert fanaticism) did not believe things out of convenience, but only as a result of rigorous thinking. I'm sure most /. readers are quite competent at this at their jobs, but it would be nice to see some of that cool-headed, sober and visionary reasoning spill over. At the same time, from a political standpoint (self-interested as it is) it should be recognized that the research of innocent and more or less patriotic scientists can be used to bring about results which are dangerous for enemies of that state. Most of the 'arguments' here are premised on that very fear, that the US government is dangerous, while presumably, say the Chinese government, is harmless, or at least that no research done by a foreign national could possibly fall into the wrong hands. To say that it is "just as likely" that the research done by an American national could fall into the wrong hands here misses the point. Americans still have enemies, within and without...

  102. Selfish Americans by twosider · · Score: 1

    Capitalism is an economic system based on selfishness. That is to say, the incentive for an individual to be productive is not loyalty to the state, nor fear of persecution. It is the desire to buy stuff like TV, video games, and beers at the bar. It works to separate those who want to play the game (business owners) from those who want to watch (employees).

    People will not be interested in the government until they can't afford a car, a house, or a chicken for the pot.

    Capitalism will always tend to make the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. America has found that using Third World countries as our poor people, we can have relatively well-off (meaning not starving, with a car and a shelter) Americans, even for the small farmers and the 40 hour/week sheep.

    It's only if the US allows foreigners to protect their poor in the same way will the global economy be strained enough for the average apathetic American to notice.

    1. Re:Selfish Americans by phutureboy · · Score: 1

      Capitalism will always tend to make the rich get richer and the poor get poorer.

      Bullshit. Capitalism makes the rich get richer and the poor get richer.

    2. Re:Selfish Americans by twosider · · Score: 1

      What makes you think so? CEO's salaries have skyrocketed compared to the average salaries of the employees at a company. It was about 30X in the 60s, and is now 500X in the 00s.

      If you've studied economics at all, it is well agreed upon. You must agree that no economic system can make everybody get richer, or else inflation would just rise to counteract it.

      Your misconception is because you are looking at the US as a closed system. It is not; right now, the average US worker is getting richer when compared to the world, but developing countries in Africa, Asia, and Central/South America are getting poorer.

  103. Mothra? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Lola, kindness is not enough, look for the reason of hatred and anger. When you find and understand that, love becomes the strongest power." Belabera, "Mothra 3: King Ghidora Attacks"

    I've seen people quote Gates, Obi Wan and Picard here on Slashdot but I think this is the first time I've seen the Mothra Twins quoted. Glad to see that slashdotters aren't sexist...

  104. Hallo, anyone awake over there in the US???? by theolein · · Score: 2

    If I remember correctly the following facts are true:

    1.The morons who highjacked planes on the 11th of september last year and flew them into various buildings highjacked those planes with fucking boxcutters. I'm not sure which high-tech university in the states is researching boxcutter warefare, but I doubt it would be classified as rocket science.
    2.All the embassy bombings and suicide bombings over the last few years have been done with explosives that were readily available on the black market. This too isn't rocket science.
    3.The Anthrax attacks in the US last year were carried out, in all probabability as mentioned by your own FBI, by an American. Possibly it was a pissed off or overly patriotic lunatic like a certain Dr.Stephan Hatfield, but what is fascinating is that nothing has ever come of this. No one has been prosecuted and there have never been any verified suspects. Christ, don't you people worry about stuff like this. Covering up after an internal biowarfare attack, in all likelyhood by an American, and you piss yourselves about foreigners.

    I think you Americans, as a nation, are being screwed over by your own government, an you are walking down that road that leads to Fascist Empire Buidling, with all the horrors that it contains.

    This is not to say that other governments don't do the same thing, but the US is the one that always had the claim to being a free society (even if those with certain experiences in the McCarthy years would claim otherwise)

  105. ARRGGGH Typo by bdlarkin · · Score: 1

    Of course I meant EXCEPT and not ACCEPT. Hit the submit button too quickly.

  106. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  107. Re:Domestic governments by MacAndrew · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So you're saying you're apathetic about apathy?

    Millions of us do vote, and almost exactly half of those who voted did not choose this President, nor were they apathetic about their choice.

    Voting is technically irrational, that is, the benefits do not outweigh the trouble of doing it. But as the last election demonstrated, sometimes it's a good thing to be irrational. (OK, Florida sort of showed that your vote does AND doesn't count, but do show up. :)

    BTW, an easy way to get involved is to simply donate some money to one of the many orgainzations that worry about watching gov't 24/7, or merely doing good things where gov't does not. They won't think you're apathetic.

    And even arguing here is political involvement...

  108. Not Exactly by PatientZero · · Score: 2
    [N]ot voting is like looking the other way when someone is being wronged.

    For me, not voting is saying, "Since giving my power to someone else to rule over me is at its very base unethical, I choose not to participate in choosing my ruler." If there was an option on the ballot for "Dissolve the government entirely," I'd choose that.

    Picture this. You're walking along when you come across a guy holding a gun. He's got two prisoners chained to a wall and says you get to pick which one he kills. You tell him to kill neither prisoner, but he insists that he must kill one or the other. So, which do you choose? Choosing one makes you partially complicit. Not choosing has no effect, but at least you aren't involved.

    It may seem like splitting hairs or apathy, but I see it differently. Going down to the polls and marking off "none of the above" will have zero effect. If 50 million people did it at the next election, whomever got the one actual vote would be elected. I take political action by speaking with people and educating them about their choices. It may not overturn the system tomorrow, but it will do it sooner than the other option.

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    1. Re:Not Exactly by squiggleslash · · Score: 2
      But the equivalent of spoiling your ballot in this case surely is to say "I don't want either killed", not to walk away. Most would consider just walking away from the gunman to be not caring about the fate of the prisoners either way.

      That's why you should turn up. Turning up says you care: spoiling the ballot says you consider the choice to be an outrage. Not turning up says you don't give a stuff either way.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    2. Re:Not Exactly by Kitsune · · Score: 1

      Going down to the polls and marking off "none of the above" will have zero effect.

      I don't see it that way, if enough people spoil their ballots it does send a message. Where I live, they had a referendum and one voice that quickly gained momentum was to spoil your ballot.

      Granted, not voting and spoiling your ballot results in the same election winner but enough people do spoil their ballot, it's a clear enough message. There is no way of not being complicit in this case, in your example, bascially, you've given the guy your gun.

      It's great that you go out and talk to people, but how many joes you know do that? I'll bet more people don't vote simply because they see themselves as uneducated in the matter, or worse yet, simply don't care.

    3. Re:Not Exactly by spakka · · Score: 2
      Choosing one makes you partially complicit. Not choosing has no effect, but at least you aren't involved.

      Exactly. When I tell voters that I don't vote, the Pavlovian response is "if you don't vote, you have no right to complain about the government". I say that this is completely wrong. It is precisely when you do vote that you can't complain - the implicit contract of voting is that you consent to be bound by the outcome, whether or not your party wins.

      As I have never voted, I have withheld this consent. I do not personally require a leader. (No, this is not to say that I advocate anarchy). For the same reason, I do not consider myself morally bound to obey the law (although I do acknowledge that hazards like police and courts do exist, and have my own reasons for behaving ethically).

    4. Re:Not Exactly by spakka · · Score: 2

      That's why you should turn up. Turning up says you care: spoiling the ballot says you consider the choice to be an outrage

      One practical objection is that if large numbers of spoiled ballots become routine, it is easier for dishonest election workers to rig the outcome.

      Not turning up says you don't give a stuff either way.

      It is this presumption which is the problem. Lower turnout detracts from the legitimacy of the government - it does not mean that the abstainers have given tacit approval for the government to do as it pleases.

    5. Re:Not Exactly by Yokaze · · Score: 2

      > the implicit contract of voting is that you consent to be bound by the outcome, whether or not your party wins.

      No, it is the implicit contract of living in a democratic society. You'll have to accept the majority decision. That doesn't mean you don't may complain about it.

      E.g: When there is a democratic decision of going in a certain film, I'll have to follow that decision and view the film. After the viewing the film against my decision my bitching about the film will be most surely tolerated (to a certain degree).
      In contrast, when I didn't participated in the vote, I guess it will be much less appreciated.

      So, what is the difference between rendering your vote invalid and not to vote?
      Rendering your vote invalid requires you to go to the ballot and do something. Not to vote, does not.

      Furthermore, it is not the case, that you can only vote or abstain from voting. In all democratic countries, you can actively take part in changing the society in other ways, like working in a party or a non-govermental-organisation, founding a new party, or candidating....

      What will not doing anything change? Nothing.

      The abstinence from even the easiest kind of democratic participation is only a sign of lack of discomfort with the current situation (and interest for that matter).

      So, if you don't even vote, you really have no right to complain about the goverment.
      When you are participate in a different kind of acitivity in changing the situation, I'll retract the statement.

      --
      "Between strong and weak, between rich and poor [...], it is freedom which oppresses and the law which sets free"
  109. Mod parent down by Guppy06 · · Score: 2

    Apples and oranges. Being an American has little if anything to do with genetics. Weren't born in the US? Take the oath. Poof, you're a citizen. You can do everything that a "natural-born" citizen can do except for the lone exception of running for US president. Hell, you can even be Secretary of State (ask Madeleine Albright).

    And the "born in the US" requirement means just that. No requirement that your family must have lived in the US for X number of generations (like so many other countries). Heck, it doesn't matter if your parents are illegal aliens. If you are born in the US, you're a citizen.

    Should the federal government be doing these kinds of background checks on foreign nationals? No. Does doing this mean the US government is looking for the genetic purity that the Nazis were looking for? Not by a long shot.

  110. Re:Foriegn policy debate not so boring after all.. by pod · · Score: 2
    Oh, and try to get all the arabs against Saddam Hussein (Iraq has no oil, just Mecca)

    Uh, Mecca is in Saudi Arabia, not Iraq. And Iraq is sitting on a shitload of oil. What do you think US was doing cozying up to Iraq 20 years ago? To get Iraqi oil of course. Only Saudi Arabia has more oil than Iraq, and that's just what we know, which, seeing as we haven't been there exploring in a while, is probably greatly understated.

    --
    "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
  111. Re:Foriegn policy debate not so boring after all.. by pod · · Score: 1

    Oops, sorry, missed the reply by AC. Still, I gave the links, so it's not redundant :)

    --
    "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
  112. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by dismal+scientist · · Score: 1

    You are exactly right. What right\priveledge does any school have to take money from the government for anything, and then complain about the conditions of getting the money? A korean saying goes something like, "Beggars can't complain of cold rice." I'd like to see MIT strut their "principles" and not accept any money from the government at all. If part of the conditions of the grant is that only american citizens can work on it, then fine. Noboby has to accept the money. The fact that this whole issue has gotten so much attention on Slashdot I think is sad. Everything seems to turning toward political issues rather than technological issues.

  113. Killing the golden goose softly... by edinho · · Score: 2, Insightful

    After reading through the posts so far, it seems like the discussion is more or less centered around nationalism, which is often confused/intermixed with racism. I suppose I'll throw in my $0.02 in that bin.

    I am a foreign student in the US from Malaysia, and I can only give you my personal perspective, but I think many foreigners from third world countries can find some agreement in my experiences.

    The golden goose is the US academic research. Here is the 10000ft view: People come to US to do research for three main reasons, very good economic standard of living, amazing varieties/opportunities in research, and in a lesser sense, some personal freedom. This is a great deal for the US. How? Well, the foreign countries pay (not just money wise!) for the education up to about 20 years old, then US reap the reward. Not only does US get to pick the best that those countries have to offer, she also gets them at the most productive age of 20-30. There can be no better deal than what the US is getting. Anyone who thinks that US is disadvantaged by admitting so many foreign students is mistaken.

    This is one of the main reasons USA can maintain her supremacy.

    Recently, things are changing for the worse for US. It will probably hurt US if this dumb nationalism continues for a long time. How are things changing? It is changing in the sense that it is getting harder for foreigners and students to come in. Things have been getting progressively worse over the years, usually after an attack on US like the Kenya US embassy bombing. However, it got a _lot_ worse after 9/11, _and_ after the INS had been creamed in the press for issuing a VISA to one of the dead 9/11 hijackers.

    What happened is that INS went into paranoia/PR overdrive. Before that, the attitude is just arrogance "you gonna stay illegally and steal a piece of our hard earned economic pie!!" Now, it is arrogance with paranoia "you freedom-hating terrorists gonna kill us freedom loving people!!!!!!"

    I must clarify that this arrogance I only detect at the US embassy in my country and at the LAX immigration line. I will give more specific examples.

    Going to the US embassy in my country to get a VISA pretty much means that you will have to swallow your pride completely (and pass it out through the rear orifice), lower yourself to the social level of a diseased pariah dog on the street, and prepare to beg for a VISA. The experience is completely humiliating. Does it make one angry? Hell, yes. This is not good. My sister is still peeved that she was denied a VISA to come to visit me (this was before 9/11). For those knee-jerks who are about to say "why come to US then? we don't need you": your wisdom and understanding is beyond reproach, so just can it.

    As for the LAX immigration check point experience that I had, this asshole was asking me for a certain piece of document that I did not need to have, I said I didn't have it and I didn't know at that time that I did not need to have it (my H1-B employer had it), and he kept asking me where it was! WTF? He let me through anyway (because I did not need to have that document, and he damn well knew it), but needless to say it was not a fun experience for me. WTF? WTF? Why generate this ill will? (This was before 9/11 also.)

    Not all people associated with INS is anal like that! Not at all! Remember that anthrax incident? Well, I happened to send in my passport for VISA renewal at that time, and lady luck hated me because my passport arrived at the huge government mail sorting center the day anthrax was discovered in one of the 10^6 letters. My passport, along with a lot of other letters, went nto a black hole and "should be considered lost." During this time, the INS peeple that contacted me were very, very courteous. Although they couldn't do much--I think they have no control over the documents anymore, probably something like FBI is doing the "disinfecting." But the INS people were surprisingly pleasant given the circumstances.

    Anyway, about the current state of affairs with INS... The numbers of rules that are being released from that tower is amazing. Every month there is a new rule. The problem is that the rules are pretty much useless. It is trying to treat the symptoms of terrorism, like shooting at anything that seem to move, in complete darkness. In fact, I would guess that it is excabating the situation by brewing ill-will. Last year, 150 returning students were denied VISAs, from my country alone. It used to be that getting a VISA, besides the humiliation, was just a three day wait (before that, it was a half-day wait). Now, it will take over a month. Few would want to return home for month long breaks because you might not return in time for the next semester, if at all. Is this helping anything in any sense? Besides, the airlines is losing your business. :-)

    After all that, guess what happened to me? I requested for a transfer of status from H1-B to F1 because I was going back to school to finish what I started 10 years ago, and the transfer was stalled with a request for more information. Even though I had given all the info that was normally requested, INS requested for more info. To show the level of intelligence that was behind my case, one of the questions I had to answer was "how do you plan to go to school 3000 miles away in state B when you are in state A (where I was working under H1-B then)." Dunno, I suppose I had to quit my job if I didn't want to commute and/or work illegally after the termination of my H1-B? 8^) Anyway, after screwing a few things up for me and giving me some heart warming reassurances that my future is up in the air, my request for transfer was just approved. One semester late. And they totally left out my surname (last name to you Americans) in the approving document. LOL. So they are "screening" with that level of competence? Good luck catching anything real, and try not to shotgun too many innocents in the process. :-)

    Completing the circle... It is getting harder for a foreigner to come here as student. Remember the golden goose? I suppose that means it is being harassed more and more. So what is happening now is probably not good for the USA. Will it affect US competitiveness in the future? Maybe, maybe not. Maybe if this gets much worse, or continues much longer (I think we are talking about decades time frame for any measurable effects), US will suffer. Maybe not. But I think it doesn't solve or help in the problem of terrorism. I think the problem lies else where and is much more complicated. So in conclusion I think this is just a lot of pain for hardly any gain, fueled by an INS with eggs in her face, and sustained by various factors (general paranoia, ignorance, and un-wisdom).

    As a side note:

    For those people who keep harping about the "Golden Rule: He who holds the gold makes the rule." This statement is only used to explain reality, don't mistake it as a moral justification (unless that's the level of your morality). Why? Just because a person has the upper hand and can make the rules, doesn't mean he will make a good rule. Also, you might have to go deeper to ask how did he get the upper hand in the first place? Is he making good rules? Are people squirming under him? Is he thinking for everyones best interest? Or is he just maintaining the status quo at the expense of general improvement? Don't be unwise.

    Cheers,
    e.

    1. Re:Killing the golden goose softly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the foreign countries pay (not just money wise!) for the education up to about 20 years old, then US reap the reward.

      I completely agree with this statement. As a former foreign student myself, I have seen it first hand. Many students get their education funded by their own countries and it comes time to serve the US allows them to stay. This is might be good for the individual, but a loss for that person's country. What is sad is that, most likely, these people took the place of others that perhaps would have returned.

      Statically, a relatively small percentage of the population ever achieve higher education. So those who do are highly prized people. One's education (elementary, high-school, college, etc) also costs a lot of money that is usually funded by governments.

      Countries invest money in education because it is good for their economies. I have known people that got their PhDs funded by their country with hard earned cash and instead of returning to *guaranteed* respectable jobs as a University professors they managed to stay in the US. That means that thousands of students lost a good professor and the US got a trained professional free of charge.

  114. The Point: Missed As Usual by apsociallife · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I admit to not reading the entire thread, but it seems to me that the basic point is being entirely missed: What is the federal government doing offering to spend 400 million dollars on a research project at a university. This is really my tax dollars at work? I'm appalled (though to be honest not surprised). This is why we have debt, taxes, and this is how the constitution gets trampled every day. Article I, Section 8 provides a list of the powers of the congress, and the 10th Amendment closes the door on anything else. The racism, nationalism, terrorism, blah blah blah issue would be not terribly relevant if the federal government stuck to its own business.

    1. Re:The Point: Missed As Usual by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      good point, but I should point out that thankfully it was 400 thousand not million

  115. Re:Not that I'm a bigot, but... I'm just stoopid! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hmmm... Let's see. Here is some mentally crippled frat-boy American who has trouble with their own native language skills, pissing about their pathetic inability to understand someone else's foreign accent (and probably regards G.W.Bush as an intellectual giant), when the best they can do is only butcher one language. HA HA HA!

  116. Almost by PatientZero · · Score: 2
    The trouble there is not about oil, but religion.

    The goal is cheap oil for America. The tool is religious competition. You see, the US couldn't care less who controls Jeruselam or Greater Israel or the entire Middle East, as long as it has access to cheap oil and the profits it generates. In order to control the access, it has to keep the locals from gaining control of it themselves. The easiest way to do that is to keep them fighting against each other.

    The US and UK chose Palestine as the new home for fleeing Jews (after closing their own borders during the war) for one reason: they knew it would start a conflict in the entire region. The added bonus is that it's basically a military outpost for the US. This was classic divide and conquer.

    If the Middle East nations were to set aside their differences over religion and power and work together, they could easily become leading economic powers. Of course, they'd have the US working against them at every turn to maintain control. Not towing the political line? Look for a coup attempt in a few months.

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
    1. Re:Almost by EvilBudMan · · Score: 1

      This is getting way off topic but... with a little karma still left, I have to slightly disagree.

      The tool of religious competition was in Jeruselam way before the U.S. was even a country. Study your history.

      1.) Wailing Wall #1 most important site for Judaism.

      2.) Church of the Nativity #1 most important site for Christianity.

      3.) The temple Mount #2 most improtant site for Islam. Also it is very important to Jews as well.

      The US and UK did not start anything that was not there already, but I do agree with your statement that the Arab world united could be a leading power. It happened in the past. It could in the future. As a matter of fact, I wish we would find an alternative to oil. There is only so much oil left in the MidEast anyhow. I can't see how keeping them fighting one another would ensure the oil supply either, because things like pipelines, oil wells, etc. can be damaged in war.

    2. Re:Almost by PatientZero · · Score: 2
      [R]eligious competition was in Jeruselam way before the U.S. was even a country.

      True indeed, however . . .

      The US and UK did not start anything that was not there already.

      There were several hundred thousand Jews and a similar number of Arabs living in Palestine (though there was no country by that name -- just a region). They certainly weren't best buddies, but they had an integrated political and economic society. For the most part, they were living peacably together due to the small population density.

      Then, WW2 exploded, and the US/UK closed their borders to Jews that wanted to flee the terror. This was a very cold, calculated move, sadly. Instead, millions of Jews were sent to the Middle East and told that their new homeland -- Greater Israel -- would be created from Palestine, Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon. This was the thanks the Arabs received for helping against Germany.

      But we're not arguing. :) My point was not that we created the tool of religious competition but merely that we have used it by fanning the flames for control of oil. Either way, it's pretty disgusting.

      I wish we would find an alternative to oil.

      Ah, but we already have! Unfortunately, hemp is kept illegal by the very same oil interests. The last thing they want is an alternative to oil. Hemp is not psychoactive. Hemp has been cultivated across the globe for 5,000 years. Not only can it be made into biodiesel but many other petroleum-based products as well.

      More importantly, we won't run out of hemp in 20, 50, or 100 years (pick one), and it doesn't increase CO2 in the atmosphere since the plant takes CO2 out while it grows.

      --
      Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
      I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
  117. s/Terrorists/Communists/g by CarlPatten · · Score: 1

    Absolutely. We have a new invisible enemy, and we're making the same insane self-defeating "prove we're doing something," "prove you're patriotic" mistakes we did back in the McCarthy era.

    It's a shame this comparison isn't being made more often in the media.

  118. Not so simple though... by Mochi · · Score: 1

    There are several differences between the immigrants of old, and the current situation.

    In the past, immigrants followed legal channels to get into this country. These immigrants were coming here to BE Americans. Not to USE America. If you were illegal in this country, you would get no benefits afforded to Americans.

    Unfortunately, this is not the case nowadays. In california this is is largely due to our two-faced government using laws affecting immigration as bargaining points both with foreign governments (Mexico) and corporations.

    We have a big problem here (southern california) with illegal mexican immigration coming accross the southern border. The problem is not just that people are coming here, but that they are not contributing anything. At the very least, I believe that immigrants must learn english. This is the only way one can even hope to become a productive member of this country. I love America as a "melting pot" and I love the different cultures and languages I hear daily as I walk the streets of Los Angeles. But I HATE it when I go to Koreatown and walk into a restaurant where no one speaks english at all. Well, I don't hate it, but it saddens me to see that the US supports people that have no desire to become Americans and whose loyalty resides with their country of origin. Come to the U.S. and embrace America: bring your traditions, your ideas, your culture, your language, your history, your art, and SHARE them with us. But we speak english here, so you have to learn english first.

    This may be particular to Los Angeles, but we have many large pockets that are effectively self contained countries. Where very few people speak english. It is not like New York, where in Little Italy, people speak italian, but also english, or likewise in China Town.

    All of this said, I have no disdain for immigrants. They are doing what is best for themselves. My anger is towards the government for acting selfishly with disregard for its citizens. Out of one corner of their mouth they say we must stop illegal immigration, and out of the other they are inhaling cash in return for legislation protecting it.

    Anyway...just my thoughts.

  119. SAFETY FIRST!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's it...

  120. What you Bleeding Hearts Fail to Realize by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... is that racism and/or nationalism are not objective evils. They are natural. And, in many cases, they are necessary - it is impossible to defend one's nation without a sense of nationalism.

    These concepts become evil in their practice. It is certainly racist for a police officer to pull over a man because he's black. That doesn't mean it's bad, or we shouldn't do it. Police stop a lot of crime by this practice - crime we would be screaming about if they didn't do it. There is a difference between a policeman asking you questions because you're black, and a policeman accusing or beating you because you're black. They are NOT equal. There is no guaranteed right in this nation to never be questioned, to never have your motives examined.

    We implicitly clamor for this type of behavior by insisting that our elected officials and regulatory forces "do something about terrorism!" or "do something about crime!". But then nobody wants to be associated with the results.

    This whole issue is so ridiculously overblown. Asking that foreign nationals be screened before participating in projects that could affect our national security is not a bad thing. It is a good thing. You bleeding hearts reveal your ignorance and naivete by your kneejerk reaction to everything that happens. "Ooh, I don't like that!" "I don't know, sounds kinda wrong". But everything sounds wrong to you. You never DO anything. You just complain. For all the hyperbole on this board, I have yet to see an effective alternate solution. Obviously a completely open society is asking to get screwed over. What, then, is your solution?

    Bush is an idiot; his government is an extension of that idiocy. But defending ourselves against future attacks is not stupid. It's basic human instinct.

  121. Re:"What soft-headed science enthusiasts don't lik by suchire · · Score: 1

    But regulating works on, say, the Abuse of College Women (from the MSNBC article)? That's getting a bit ridiculous, isn't it? Sure, some research is vital to keep regulated and secret, such as military designs, but the idea of scientific rigor is to keep science open. Take Wolfram, for instance. A lot of scientists dismiss his work, mainly because he didn't publish in the open. Peer-review, it's called. Sure, a lot of scientists think it's a pain (and it is), but it maintains the integrity of science. When things become secret, that's when progress halts. People want to keep politics out of science, because they would like to keep science as a sign of the possibility of human collaboration. Even if the Soviets and the Americans were hostile to each other, the space programs still had (more) friendly competition, and even collaboration. Science tries to maintain the idea that individuals can surpass factional disputes in order to holistically advance humanity. Some regulation is necessary, but there is a limit. There is a college graduate student I know, from China, who is having a lot of difficulty studying, because she must care for her son. Her husband studies at another university in another city. Her parents (in China) tried to obtain visas to come to the US, to care for her child while she could continue her research, but the visas were refused, without reason. The student is considering terminating her work for a Ph.D. What kind of regulation is this?

    --
    Such irE
  122. No, but Neville Chamberlain did by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bill "Peace in our time in [the Middle East | North Korea]" Clinton is nothing if not the son of the great appeaser.

  123. Re:Good for MIT by ackthpt · · Score: 2
    No, he and his wife murdered all six of their children before committing suicide.

    Ah, yeah, I forgot that. And I even read the book (Rise and Fall of the Third Reich) including the trials.

    But I'm sure you'll be able to compare GWB to Hitler regardless.

    Nope, wouldn't do that, both governments usurped rights from the people, but AH had no intention of holding any further elections. I seriously doubt Bush would ever entertain such a thought. Parallels are tenuous at best.

    It's amazing what you can construct when you don't bother to include the truth.

    And what truth would that be? Seems you, and the moderators all lept to the wrong conclusion.

    Goebels was the information officer, in charge of propaganda, glorifying a horrible man, party and government, while spinning about how necessary it was and how good it would be. I'm sure he'd enjoy depicting all this spying, routing all internet through government filters and rounding suspects up in the name of national security. I just hope another president quickly dismantles it all. Once these mechanisms are in place, even the most benevolent leader may be tempted to see how they work.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  124. "Learned Helplessness" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Psychologists have a name for the kind of behavior which has been increasing in US voters -- "learned helplessness." (http://216.239.39.100/search?q=cache:dcgvedup41EC :www.noogenesis.com/malama/discouragement/helpless ness.html+learned+helplessness&hl=en&ie=UTF-8) When people have seen for long enough that nothing they try stops the pain then they stop trying...

  125. Policies my ass by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    What was the reason a French tanker was attacked by Al Qaida?

    It isn't policies - we're under attack because of who we are. The ones with the most to fear from the radical Islamic types are the very ones who lead the attack against current US policies.

    Hell, Osama Bin Laden himself used Bill Clinton's inability to keep his pecker in his pants as one of the biggest examples of why we as a nation need to die.

  126. the mind of the liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    this is a textbook example of the mind of the liberal, notice the inability to look past knee-jerk reaction and groupthink to personally attack someone who has pointed out a barrier to communication (of which is obviously important for TEACHING) including the stereotyping and the groupthink/monkey speak statement about G.W. Bush who while might not be Einstein is unduly classified as dumb simply because he does not have snappy oratory skills... Oh wait! Look there, that was the missing element of liberal thought: Hypocrisy. Lets attack someone for what we have erroneously turned into a topic on not being able to look past communication issues... then fall into the groupthink of saying Bush is stupid because he trips over some words... I guess that means that people who stutter or cannot think are stupid! Yay! Thanks for your bigotry!

    Here is a clue: when you cannot understand an instructor then that instructor is incompetent for that role. It is not the students responsibility to already know a foreign language that corresponds to that teacher if that teacher is a foreigner. This is not to say that the actual teaching ability of said instructor is bad, nor that they are not very intelligent but what is intelligence in a classroom if it cannot be used to pass on knowledge?

    Now go back into your cage you mindless social parrot and fuck the other talking monkeys and throw poop. Fucking idiot.

    1. Re:the mind of the liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny as hell, but dont classify every liberal into the Bush bashing camp. I worked on the Gore campaign and I can tell you that nobody in a position of power ever underestimated the political skills of Bush. Rather you must admit that the man barely managed to pull a C average in a liberal arts major. While that doesnt make him "stupid," people like him have no business in the White House. Our president is supposed to represent the very best of what America can produce and Geore junior is not the very best American. Bill Clinton, had two degrees and was a Rhodes scholar. The Europeans and everyone else loved him and I dont care who he screwed in office. The worst the Republicans could accuse him of was telling a fib about gettting head from Monica, not much of an offense. Hell I respect any 50 year old man who can get some 20 year old pussy.

    2. Re:the mind of the liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      oh, I am not a fan of Bush really but that is beside the point. I think you are missing the point. Liberal = oppressive, hypocritical bigot. Liberal != caring, concerned freedom lover. There are many in the world that care for various issues but by using logic and reason and a knowledge of history and pattern recognition they have come to the conclusion that many efforts put forth in the name of progress are a path paved to hell. Degrees don't mean crap and you must remember that charisma like intelligence is a trait. It is NOT a virtue. Hitler had both and I doubt many will call him a virtuous man.

      You have fallen for (or have willfully mislead yourself) the old bag of misdirection tricks in even mentioning the sexual aspect of Lewinski and Clinton. That was not the issue... I believe character matters but I believe that people make mistakes... abuse of power, obstruction of justice and repeated offenses show a clear pattern. You see only in colors of Republicans and Democrats and I dearly pitty you. As for Europeans loving him... that just screams "irrelevant" and is very scary. I don't give a crap what those corrupt organizations known as Republicans and Democrats do. I am only interested in putting honest statesmen in office to secure our freedoms and liberties. Gore was a lout and has no business getting near powertools much less the Presidency. I also find it very sad that you use a academic grading system as the test for worth and qualification of leadership. I think that method of thinking is one of the largest pavers of that very road to hell. I have seen enough people who do poorly in school but in their vocation they are at the top just as I have seen an army of incompetents with numerous degrees and/or good grades. I see degrees as a means but never an end.

      Gore does not understand what the constitution is or what this country was founded upon. He is a career politician out for his own gain. I find statements like from Jefferson where he admits that his best days were at his home and not in Office to be a refreshing change to modern politicians.

      So please take your partisonship and go somewhere else.

    3. Re:the mind of the liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Hell I respect any 50 year old man who can get some 20 year old pussy.
      Oh, btw this says a lot about you and your "ideals"
  127. "Governmental scientific inquiry is ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reminds me of:
    "Governmental scientific inquiry is a contradiction in terms." from Atlas Shrugged.
    Kind of interesting link here:
    http://www.cycad.com/cgi-bin/pinc/apr2000/b ooks/ff _govscience.html

  128. yes, but as the NRA loves to point out... by caveat · · Score: 2

    ...the first thing Hitler did was prohibit private firearms ownership in the name of 'public safety'. i'm not terribly fond of the direction the political leadership of this country is heading, but at least this particular face of the coin (the Repubs) are rabidly protective of my Right To Keep And Bear Arms - so if there actually are 'HS' soliders around, and they start to get offensively Nazi-istic, we can always start plinking at them...my .270's zeroed at 100m, it was a good whitetail season...

    --

    Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
  129. i'm an american in grad school... by gimpboy · · Score: 1

    and i can tell you that until the recession hit, not many americans wanted to go to grad school. people were mostly interested in the fast money and had no interest in research. now that the economy sucks, we are getting more applicants than ever from the us.

    the schools policy is to take americans over foreigners, so that should make you happy. i personally dont agree with this policy. there are many people from foreign countries that are more qualified and will do better research than an american student who is hanging out for a couple years while the job market gets better.

    i hate to tell you this, but you probably are not a native american. if you are then ignore what follows. most of what made this country a success is a result of hard working peoples from other countries. most of the people here are not natives any more than a recently nationalized indian. it is the diversity immigration brought that made us strong and successful. if you want to send them home then you should be willing to return to your homeland.

    --
    -- john
    1. Re:i'm an american in grad school... by jmccay · · Score: 2

      That last argument is stupid. All of human history is made up of migration. Truely, no group of people can be said to be native to any one area. The only place humans say they are native to is Earth, but even that is subject to debate depending on which cult you are a member. When I say American, I am saying someone born in the United States who supports their country (not those who like a certain California born person take up arms against the USA). You cannot become President of the United States of America unless you were born in the US, US citizen's should be given preference to any foriegner because in some way even private schools are dependant on the US Government.

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    2. Re:i'm an american in grad school... by gimpboy · · Score: 1

      say my parents comes here from the mexico and give birth to me. what exactly makes me more special than my parents?

      the fact that you were born here means you've led a fairly privileged life. people in this country grow up with many more opportunities that most of the people coming here for grad school. the fact that those bourn into privilege didnt take advantage of it and are less qualified than their foreign counterparts is enough evidence to give the foreigners the positions. rewards should be
      given based on merit and not birthright. you know thats why we left the kings on the other side of the pond.

      --
      -- john
    3. Re:i'm an american in grad school... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your missing the point. It's not that they are not taking advantage of it, but they don't have the chance because a foriegner bumped them out of the position only because the person was a foriegner (and not because they were more qualified). The middle class doesn't get any break, especially white male middle class, most of the finacial aide goes to minority students while middle class white people can't get a break. They pay more taxes than the poor and rich. The rich have tax sheltters and the poor don't make enough. We don't need American students further discriminating against white males.
      Hell, you can't go anywhere where a white male isn't discriminated against. Colleges take a small amount of white athletes because they can fulfill their minority quoto with minority athletes who don't give a damn about actually learning--they just want to play the game. Since there is mostly minority players in colleges then professional sports like NBA and NFL have a majority of minority players.
      One day, colleges will be sued for their discimination agains Americans and White males. I hope that druggie haven MIT, the assholes at Harvard, and liberals scum at Dartmouth lose all there funding!!!

  130. Re:Foriegn policy debate not so boring after all.. by rmohr02 · · Score: 2

    Cool sig.

  131. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bzzzzzt.

    1. There are laws about what the government can require.

    Ex "By accepting this money your organization agrees not to hire any blackies to work on the project.

    2. Regardless of whether there are laws, that does not mean the government is behaving ethically. It is up to every citizen and organization to police the government.

    Ex "By accepting this money, my organiztion agrees not to donate any money to charities.

  132. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You are exactly right. What right\priveledge does any school have to take money from the government for anything, and then complain about the conditions of getting the money?"

    LMAO! It's known as free speech. Need a reference?

  133. Re:Eff Pee by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, sorry loser... only "fucking moron" Republicans like YOU would think that he's NOT fat! It wouldn't matter if he weighed three ounces, he's still be funcking FAT!!!! He's a loser of the greatest magnitude, and I GUARANTEE you that he won't be with me at the gates of Heaven when he dies. Nobody as deeply entrenched in the politics of Satan will be singing myns from on high. So, DOWN with you, Rush! Down into the fiery pits of stinking, oozing pus! Oh yeah, you'll be losing weight on the treadmill of HELL!!!! AHAHAHAHAAHA!

  134. Re:Eff Pee by Trolling4Dollars · · Score: 1

    No he isn't really physically fat. More like, mentally thick. Either way, he's still a total corporate loving bastard. A complete jerk and a liar. To him "I believe" = "It is so". Stupid idiot was always going on about Clinton not serving. Well what about Rush??? He didn't serve either! Any you WANNA KNOW WHY!??? Because he got a 4F rating. What for you ask? A boil on his rotund ass. "Owww.. daddy, I have a pimple on my butt. I can't serve in the armed forces! Wahh wahhh!!!" Stupid asshat.

  135. Like that will help by Xenophon+Fenderson, · · Score: 1

    And just who should we vote for instead? The ones that aren't corrupt are inept!

    --
    I'm proud of my Northern Tibetian Heritage
  136. We are going to disappear up our own ass. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Thanks to GW Bush and his back to the Ford Administration pals.


    Enjoy the field of Computer Science, India. Have Fun!

  137. Not Political by Bob+Vila's+Hammer · · Score: 1

    First off, MSNBC servers suck. They're never available - even without the /. effect.

    This action does not represent the resolve of an American moral stand, the majority of the students involved are foreign. When it came to a vote, the foreign students either refused to participate in the 404k plan resulting in it being dropped, or voted against it. Its probably simple democratic fairness.

    --


    --"The perfect example of the man of action is the suicide." - William Carlos Williams
  138. Better late than never by budalite · · Score: 2

    I would just like to see the Govt only approving funding for research that can produce even-remotely-helpful results. Figuring out the latest temperature of a Bose-Einstein Condensate (or any damn thing that only exists or works at 0-50 degrees K) is not gonna help anyone for the forseeable future. And I can @#$%^&*$ forsee a fairly long way into the future. More bang for our buck, please. Thank you very much.

  139. Classifying AI research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    She makes a VERY good point that what the government should do is to determine what's classified research and what's not.

    Of course this research would be classified. The government is concerned that this new fangled Artificial Intelligence could outsmart the current administration.

  140. And why do you owe . . . by kfg · · Score: 1

    Caesar taxes at all?

    Because of who's picture is on the coin.

    KFG

  141. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by dismal+scientist · · Score: 1

    Whoever this genius and anonymous coward is, I wasn't refering to the legal right to complain. It is not ethnical, it is not common courtesy, it is not moral to receive something from someone and then complain about the gift. Just don't take the gift.

    MIT is not making this a legal argument, so why are you?

  142. Re:Foriegn policy debate not so boring after all.. by aphor · · Score: 2

    Thanks man.

    I was a raving lunatic. I needed a little water splashed on me. I've got some bitrot in my database, and that makes for some pretty stupid ranting.

    Good reply. "I don't care what they say. You're one of the good ones..."

    Still: you have to wonder exactly why the f*ck it is in our National Interest to wage war on Iraq.

    --
    --- Nothing clever here: move along now...
  143. Such pedestrian attitudes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I find it interesting that you go to such great lengths to call "Muslims...enemies of freedom". Maybe its time for you to go to a big University in a big city and see how many Muslims are there. Many traditional Western European background people in the U.S. who have been here for generations are converting to Islam. One of them came and talked to me about his religion and you know what? He is the decendant of one of the forefathers of our great nation for which he has pride. Is he an "enem[y] of freedom"? Maybe someday you will get your head out of the sand and realize that you fear Muslims because you do not know or understand who they are. My honest advice: grow up.

  144. Why even argue with an idiot like you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Between your p0rn collection and reruns of "married with children", boy genious here couldn't compete for the college he wanted. Instead, he thinks that idiot fuckfaces like him should be pitied upon and allowed into big name universities. The truth is that boy genious here can't cut it. He failed. Now he takes his anger out on foreign students rather than taking responsibility for his FAILUES! Idiot... now go follow in your fathers footsteps and breed with your sister.

  145. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know that. My point is that you have no point. There is nothing wrong with complaining about clauses in a contract after you have rejected or accepted it. There is nothing moral/immoral about it.

  146. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And BTW, you're :

    1. Factually incorrect about it being a gift. If it were a gift it would not be a contract, BY DEFINITION (see business law 101 for details).

    2. They did NOT accept the terms of the contract, so your point is mute, in any case.

    HTH

  147. Now this is getting tiring.... by Ian-K · · Score: 1

    Quote from the article:
    "The Bush administration and scientists alike are struggling with how to balance openness against the fear that all sorts of research could help terrorists..."

    I don't know about you guys, but I'm sick and tired of hearing "...(not) doing this and that because it may help terrorists". How about closing the libraries down too? Terrorists might find information there too.

    This is the lamest excuse I've heard in many years (and I bet you anything we're be hearing this all over from now on). The US govt plainly wants control over information and touts terrorism as an excuse. I don't think it's unreasonable to claim that since the 9/11 the US govt is using terrorism as an excuse to do things that it otherwise would not be allowed to do in the face of the public

    Mod me down as Troll or whatever you want. But isn't this true?

    'Nuff said.

    Trian

    --
    I'm no longer fed up with MS Windows: I go rid of them :)
  148. Two Quotes by justine_avalanche · · Score: 1


    Theory:
    • "All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights."
      Human Right Declaration

    Practice:
    • "All animals are equal but some animals are more equal than others."
      Animal Farm/G.Orwell

    G. Orwell...you know, the author of 1984...
    Maybe we all should read those two books again.

    ja
    1. Re:Two Quotes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>All human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights."
      Human Right Declaration

      Unless you happen to be rich and then it is ok to discriminate against them.

  149. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by dismal+scientist · · Score: 1

    It doesn't make much sense to complain about something you agreed to. If you have a problem with it beforehand, take it up with the other party. Afterwards, what are you going to do?

    If the other party tries to change the conditions after you both agreed to the initial conditions, then you have a legitimate issue (although it may just be that you did't fully understand the original terms, or you were hoping they wouldn't change into something you didn't like, even after you agreed to them).

    I never was trying to establish fact that this was a gift from the gov to MIT. I was giving an example to prove a point. And if MIT didn't accept the conditions, then fine, what is the big deal? They don't have to. But I don't understand the outrage that some slashdotters are expressing against the gov.

    By the way, it's spelled "moot." Go back to school (although you are probably some high school kid in Europe, looking at your arguments).

  150. Now that's a nice strawman! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very nice...he'll burn well!

  151. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. There are laws about what the government can require.


    This is not about anything against any one race. It's about foreigners in general. They are not citizens of the U.S....which is WHY they are reguarded differently. Because they ARE in a different situation.

    What the government did was common sense.

    Everyone on slashdot is so quick to play the devils advocate, but almost none of them have the good fucking sense to go one step further and play devil's advocate to the devil's advocates. So I ask you this - what the fuck do you think should be done to keep such a thing secure whilest allowing reasonable freedoms?

  152. as opposed to... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    any other socialist tyranny like under the imperialist Klinton? Seems like once again that term 'Fascist' is thrown around in a very dangerous way. Boy who cried wolf and all that...

  153. nationalistic pride by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    pretend that an alien race that had observed the last several centuries read these comments... Now think about how there are those silly overtones of nationilsm (or my team is better than your team). The Soviet machine did not work because of design flaws. As for military might, it is sad that you bought into the propoganda about the military being planned to be scrapped out of fear by the party. What really happened was that another "party army" was seen as necessary but was more difficult to maintain. Then when you factor Stalin and his psychopathic method of "leadership" you are left with an equation where nothing would work. Remember this... regardless of nukes, the fact remains that from day one the Soviets acted much like Microsoft in that instead of "competing" they wished to eliminate the competition. Like a virus the plan was to spoil the planet with their politics, yet unlike granting of freedom through democracy it was crushing all under a iron boot ironically named "the People's Boot." When I have nothing to fear then I will not make my self fearful to others eyes. Had the soviets not acted much like Hitler (although thankfully a much less effective one) then the cold war would not have happened. As for the Cuban missle crisis you need to remember the facts as written by your own KGB. It was a move aimed to gain ground but escalated into something that was unliked yet fully planned for. The Soviets wanted to start a fight. Notice here I say "Soviets" and not "Russian"... your nationalism is scary indeed. You act much like any stooge of tyrants falling prey to rhetoric and herd mentality... that shows that you have not learned from your country's history. There are those around who cherish the idea of peace and freedom first and then see that it is the duty of government to provide it. Nationilistic pride is the bane of this, so do not be so quick to jump into that mob mentality against "Americans."

    I am glad that your economy is doing so good and I sincerely hope it continues to improve, but your tone makes it clear you have a bone up your ass like a football fan does after loosing a game... WTF? You didn't play the game, and if you did you should be focusing on WHY you lost. I am glad the Soviets killed so many Nazi's... but then again I was never interested in a childish pissing contest... I leave that to monkey's who can talk and type. I prefer to use logic and reason.

    1. Re:nationalistic pride by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whar rhetoric? The Soviet Union was a one party state, but it was not a one man dictatorship. It is a sad American view. Stalin and his elk had to tred carefully even Joseph Stalin. The man paranoia had some base in reality. The party never planned on abolishing the red army simply demobilizing it from a war footing the West started the cold war (most historians like Stephen Ambrose agree with me) forcing a paranoid and weak Russia to continue to maintain a three million man army. What prevented us from marching into France in 1945 the two nukes we knew you had? I think not. Im not much of a nationalist since Im a Russian living in America, but the Soviet system wasnt all bad. Many well meaning and good people sacrificed much in the twentieth century to build a modern Russia unfortunately their leadership failed them. The only reason Lenin is allowed to remain in his tomb is as Putin said and Im paraphrasing "we dont want to make millions of our countrymen feel like they wasted their lives so as long as that generation lives lenin will stay" The Soviet system was flawed but to accuse it of trying to bash the rest of the world into servitude is ridiculous. We were never Nazi Germany and to assert that we were is to sum up Soviet history with Joseph Stalin. The Communist empire was always a fractured web of competing interest with our eastern european "satelites" selling weapons to our Chinese "friends" and even to the Afghan rebels and the United States throughout the cold war. They had considerable freedom in how they ran their nations and did so with varying success. Even regions like Chechnya had varying degrees of autonomy throughout most of Soviet times. Yugoslavia was the richest communist state with a living standard near most Western European states until its sad civil war. Few people/Westerners realize how developed Soviet culture became and even how much of it is missed in todays Russia. From Soviet film to Soviet music many in Russia still define themselves by media and music from Soviet times. We had our own rolling stone Machina Vremine or Time Machine

      We dont have to simply flex the military mucsle the Soviet Union was a super power with all that entails. From the Soviet space program to the Soviet computer sector there was a time when Russia was but a step behind or even ahead of the West in varying sectors. The entire Soviet/Russian thing is an American creation in Russia today both words are used interchangeably as they were even in Soviet times. So please dont correct me I speak the language comrad. Comrad in fact is a greeting that is centuries old in Russia and has nothing to do with communism it was always used tovarisht = comrad.

  154. All right, then, how about this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My sister has just recently started at an American university. At the end of her first term, a letter was sent around to all International Students. The letter required any student who came from a country on a little list (and you can guess which countries were on the list) to make an appointment with a university Councellor in the Interntional Students Office. My sister isn't from one of those countries, so I don't know what the meetings were about (it wasn't mentioned in the letter). Is this some kind of screening like that mentioned in the article? If so, I have 2 questions:
    1) If they're worried that students from their list of countries might be terrorists, then what will this mysterious meeting reveal that didn't come up in the immigration procedures students had to go through to attend the university in the first place?
    2) Are they worried about foreign countries obtaining some kind of restricted information? These letters are going around to first-year students! What are they afraid of - that my sister is going to take her knowledge of first-year algebra back to a terrorist camp, enabling the terrorists to ... um ... count something?!

  155. Of course they are worried!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think what the concern really is about is that graduate school requires large numbers of graduate assistants to run research groups. Where can they find enough people? They can't find enough american students for the folowing since they can't pay as much as industry.

    Of course they are worried, they can't afford to pay what their graduate assistants are actually worth, and still pay themselves, and still pay the department/University (they skim off 10% of the grant before the prof gets to spend it), and still do research.

  156. Attitudes like this... by TechnoWitch · · Score: 1

    ...will relegate the grand old empire known as the Unites States of America to the dustbin of history.

    I'm far more fearful of those calling themselves "patriots" these days than I am of any terrorist or shadowy terrorist organization.

    Sure, you're right: It is no guarantee that every foreign student isn't a terrorist wannabe, sympathizer, or future bomber. So for the sake of what?-- one out of ten thousand, we'd deny the remaining 9,999 the right to read books free of censorship, the right to pursue research free of crypto-fascist religiously-motivated dogma, and the basic human rights of life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness -- not to mention privacy?

    Yeah, sure -- I might get killed in any one of a hundred horrible ways. But y'know what? We're all gonna die someday, and I'd rather have one day of freedom and liberty than eighty years of fascist repression.

    Or, as dear old Ben Franklin put it, "Those that can give up essential liberty for the sake of a little temporary safety deserve neither."

    I'd rather take my chances with the terrorists, thank you very much. They're far less hypocritical.

    -Technowitch

  157. Aye, but you forget... by TechnoWitch · · Score: 1

    ...that upon the last cry of 'wolf', the boy was telling the truth.

    True enough -- there have been those who've been throwing around the terms 'nazi' and 'fascist' quite loosely over the years, often in a paroxism of hyperbole.

    Thing is, though, we here in the U.S. didn't used to lock up citizens and foreigners by the thousands, bereft of the rights guaranteed them by the Constitution. We didn't used to put civil rights, Green party, and antiwar activists on "no fly" lists. We didn't used to threaten first-strike nuclear weapons' policies. And even if it was usually ignored, our Presidents used to at least give a wink and nod towards the notion that it's supposed to be Congress that passes laws and declares wars, and that the Judiciary passes judgment.

    Time to call it what it is, even if to the ears of some, it is crying 'wolf' -- because wolf it is, this time.

  158. Re:the mind of the Fucking Idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DO WHAT THOU WHILT SHALL BE THE WHOLE OF THE LAW.

    Boy, you must be from TEXAS yourself. Never have I seen such total ignorance express itself so poetically. Count Korzybski would not be very proud of you, Boy... "mindless social parrot" - now what the God In Holy Fucking Hell is THAT supposed to mean? "Fuck other talking monkeys"??? "Throw POOP"??? POOP!!! Damn it Boy, stop being so emotionally... "sensitive". And pull yourself out the Cold War era, too. The terms "Liberal" and "Conservative" are so archaic and meaningless in today's complex consumer money-worshipping world. Once we get those poor Third World bastards set up with Walmarts and Christian missions, they'll be speaking better American (NOT English!) than us.

    LOVE IS THE LAW, LOVE UNDER WILL

  159. Re: the mind of the liberal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You sound very troubled and distraught. Scientology can help someone like yourself become free of consuming negative emotional patterns. We often find ourselves in a feedback loop, repeating the same self destructive internal verbalizations to ourselves over and over. That is why the Church Of Scientology is here... to help people like you become more productive, and clear citizens. We can help you learn to love yourself the way that you want others, especially extremely muscular men in lingerie and high heels, to love you. Stop the pattern of self hatred and abuse... stop the incessant masturbation... call for help today.

  160. Re:If you take Sid Caesar's money. . . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    This is 2003.. we are FREE men. There is no "lord" to whom we must grovel before on bended knee, like some shit-kicking slave serf of your Dark Age mind-set.

  161. What's the research about by jesterzog · · Score: 2

    Can anyone please describe what the group was intending to research? I've read through the article, but it's not very specific at all, apart from that it's an AI laboratory.

    Were they planning to work on research that could be applied to something like missile guidance, for example?

  162. You sir, are an idiot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do you think only the USA have schools? Or even the best ones in everything for that matter? Wake up and smell the coffee: USA isnt the center of the world, there are research labs everywhere out there , and each country has its own universities / schools / whatever. Check the physic breakthroughts and tell me how many of those were USA-exclusive. Keep going like that, and well see stuff like encryption being developed faster and better everywhere but within your borders. After all, it wasnt long ago that redhat had to place its security patches on foreign servers regarding encryption. Sorry, but it seems that your downfall is imminent. Osama may have triggered those events, but you are sinking under the weight of your people fear and your government paranoia.

    But dont worry: here in Europe, we also are going through a major phase of political dumbness. Your not alone.

  163. Try again by PatientZero · · Score: 2
    [T]here is no such thing as "anarchy".

    No, there is no such thing as the Easter Bunny, but anarchy does indeed exist. And no, Somalia has nothing like anarchy right now -- chaos perhaps, but not anarchy. The feudal system is not anarchy either, for that entails giving up your power to a ruler. Like I said, if you don't know what anarchy means, go read up on it.

    Of course, if there was no law,

    No state. No laws. Yet this does not mean there are not cultural codes of conduct. There's no law against picking your nose, but most people are polite enough to avoid doing it in public. Why aren't there nose-picking epidemics across the country without a law?

    I would be busy killing anarchists

    You'd be busy being dead, as people would be well prepared to protect themselves from people like you. Are you saying that the threat of prison is the only thing keeping you from killing people right now? If so, your parents failed and should not have attempted raising children.

    And they would defend to the death my right to kill them.

    Again, no. You have the right to free will. I have the right to life. If you try to kill me, I will not summon a state power to prosecute you after I am dead. Instead, I will use self defense to protect myself, my family, and my community.

    "Mob rule" would be the definition of "Democracy". This is why I tend to prefer "Constitutional Democracies".

    Maybe on your planet, but on Earth democracy means "rule by the people as a whole" while mob rule means "rule by mobs." You should note that there exist no state democracies in the world. The US is a constitutional republic. The capitaled class have always ensured that only an elite few hold the power to legislate and execute.

    Take for example the Hollings bill. Do you believe that that bill in any way represents the "will of the people"? Did your mom one day call her representative and say, "We really need some way to protect movies from the internet"? No, instead a few people with a lot of capital wrote up some legislation for Hollings to push through Congress to protect their narrow interests.

    --
    Freedom to fear. Freedom from thought. Freedom to kill.
    I guess the War on Terror really is about freedom!
  164. Re:You Take Someone's Money - You Take Their Strin by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, you are wrong. A gift is ****by definition**** not a contract. Sorry you are ignorant of contract law. Post in any alt.legal newsgroup if you think that you are not 100% incorrect.

    Thanks for the spelling tip, BTW. Whenver someone is losing an argument badly, this is exactly what they resort to...

  165. First "Go Away, Troll" Post! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Go away, troll.

  166. Bill Clinton is your daughter's boyfriend? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The skin crawls, the mind boggles....


    Actually, US establishment propagandists use the term "isolationist" to refer to everybody who doesn't want the US military kicking around everybody in the world. While there are some notable politicians who actually are isolationist paranoid xenophonic goons like Pat Buchanan, there are lots of us in the US who like free trade and unrestricted travel and immigration who nonetheless feel that the "engagement" that too many of the US's presidents want is hegemony, not interaction, and think we'd be much better without it and without them.

  167. I was one of those students by billstewart · · Score: 2
    In my case, I was an American attending grad school the University of California at Berkeley. My usual rant about immigration is that if some guy from Ensenada moves 500 miles to San Francisco, people get all huffy because he's a foreigner, but when I moved 2500 miles to get there from New Jersey, nobody complains, even though it's five times as far and they speak different languages there, and the only reason I needed to show citizenship documents the second time I moved here was because the governor at the time thought it was unsafe for people to drive while speaking Spanish.

    In case you've never been an out-of-state college student, it costs a *lot* more than being an in-state student. State universities make a profit on this. At the time, California students didn't pay tuition at all, just a couple hundred dollars in "fees", while out-of-state tuition was close to Ivy League prices, and in New York State, out-of-state tuition at the state colleges was about twice in-state tuition, though probably about 2/3 the price of Ivy League schools. In my case, the cost wasn't a problem, because it was the late 70s high-tech boom and my employer was paying for my degree, under a program where they kicked in extra money beyond the tuition so the school would let them send people after the normal admission dates and short-cut the admissions paperwork for qualified students. (Sadly, those days are gone... They were The Phone Company, and without their scholarship program they could have easily hired about 90% of the electrical engineering masters' degree students in those years, as could several other high-tech companies.)

    --

    Bill Stewart
    New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks