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Exporting Knowledge Via Students

brainhum writes "SF Weekly reports that proposed Department of Commerce regulations will require foreign students at US universities to apply for export licenses to use dual purpose technologies in the classroom. From the article: 'Inherent in the new rules is a discriminatory contradiction: Students from India, which has cordial relations with the U.S., will need licenses to study, but students from Saudi Arabia -- home country for most of the participants in the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, and much of the financing and ideology behind Islamist terrorism -- will not.' The proposed regulations point out that current export license requirements are based on the person's most recent citizenship, which they believe, could allow a person born in Iran to avoid licensing if they held Canadian citizenship. More information is available in the SF Weekly story "Student of Concern"."

28 of 397 comments (clear)

  1. Wrong idea! by AKAImBatman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They've got it backwards! We don't want to restrict American information, we want to export as much of it as possible! We have to make the world a safer place by ensuring that every street corner in the world has a McDonalds and Starbucks! Not to mention Plasma TVs and DVD players so that our current enemies are too busy drooling in front of the television to be worried about such a thing as killing Americans! (Don't laugh, I'm halfway serious.)

    To sober up a bit, this is a silly restriction. Nearly all the information you can obtain in higher education can be now found on the Internet. Why bother even trying to restrict it? Besides, competition keeps the world healty. Without it, what desire is there to continue developing new and better technologies? Not to mention the matter of helping our fellow man. India has improved a lot, but my understanding is that there are still plenty of poverty-ridden areas. Many African countries are another good example of this. Why stop them from developing their country? If you want to be effective, close the legal holes in our own country that effectively allow for the import/out-sourcing of slave labor. (e.g. We should open our borders and allow people to legally immigrate in order to work, and then start prosecuting the abuses of the H1-B system.)

    There's probably not too much that can be done about out-sourcing (other than ensuring working conditions are required to be to american code), but that doesn't matter quite as much. In a short period of time, the out-sourcing bubble is likely to collapse as companies find that they aren't saving money. Alternatively, foreign wages will rise to a sufficient degree to make such out-sourcing impractical.

    Sorry about the American-centered post, but the original story is all about us and our laws. Europeans and other world residents may feel free to chime in with their anecdotes and feelings on the issue. :-)

    1. Re:Wrong idea! by metlin · · Score: 5, Insightful


      Most students would simply go to another country without these restrictions, such as United Kingdom, Germany or other countries with good educational opportunities.

      This is the US shooting itself in the foot - the international intelligentsia who come to the US contribute significantly to the American society. By restricting what they have access to, you're restricting their contributions.

      Consequently, they'll simply go elsewhere, where there are similar opportunities without such draconic laws. The result? The US will lose out on a lot of very smart people who until now saw the US as a good destination for education and research.

      And you must also keep in mind that a lot of these folks do stay back in the US after higher education and become permanent residents or citizens - discouraging them from studying and you've lost a lot of talent preemptively.

    2. Re:Wrong idea! by AKAImBatman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, competition in the realms of nuclear testing and missiles will give it that healthy, glowing complexion free of humans it's wanted for years.

      Or it could lead to better nuclear technology, including nuclear engines and space travel.

      Truth be told, the cold war was the last vestige of a long age of war. Remember, WWI was primarily about nobility attempting to maintain power in a modern world, while WWII was about Eugenics and superiority through control of genetics. (Since proven to be absolute garbage.)

      The cold war was the same issue: Governments trying to hold onto personal power over others. They got away with it because the system was touted as a modern form of government that was for the people and by the people. And like all such governments, it collapsed in the face of the true ideals of individual freedom. Anyone remember the television show "Dallas"? Who would have thought that it could lead to the fall of communism in Romania?

    3. Re:Wrong idea! by brontus3927 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Besides, competition keeps the world healty. Without it, what desire is there to continue developing new and better technologies? Not to mention the matter of helping our fellow man.

      Not that I'm condoning it, but the article does mention that it would be needed for dual-use technologies, which means things that could be used to advance another country's military technology. There are alerady licensing issues when exporting the technologies themselves (Want to launch a satelite from Brazil? Expect a lot of paperwork). THis is the realization that students could easily learn this in the US and then simply take their textbook, notebook, or even just memory back home to advance military science of their home country.

      That said, I find the inherent racism of brainhum appaling. What makes an Iranian or Saudi inherently more dangerous than a Mexican, Indian, Russian, German, etc? And an Iranian-born Canadian citizen? jeez!

    4. Re:Wrong idea! by metlin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My favourite quote from the article:

      "When the Third Reich was emerging, they said that only Germans of pure Aryan descent could attend German universities. Significant numbers of German scholars departed," she says. "That was detrimental for Germany, but was glorious for the U.S.

      "We got Einstein."


      Ah, well.

    5. Re:Wrong idea! by bman08 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      A lot of folks (to use a Bushism to cover being too lazy to research exactly who) refer to the twentieth century as one long world war that just cooled off in a few places. The injustices of Versailles led two WW2 when led to the splitting of Europe between Western and Soviet influences.

      Back on topic, this is a fucking retarded move. Another in a series of steps toward the end of America's golden age. Fellow Americans, our government is failing us in every conceivable way. Very few of our problems have their roots in the evils of furriners. Isolation serves only to cut us out of the equation. It's a bad play any way you slice it, and to see the ridiculous way it's being weilded WRT Indians vs. Saudis... ugh.

    6. Re:Wrong idea! by s20451 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm always suspicious when somebody calls attention to the "real" reason. Is it too hard to understand that simple events have complex motivations?

      Why did the attacks happen?

      - Was it because US troops are on Muslim soil? The US has more foreign bases than any other nation, sometimes on seriously unfreindly territory (e.g., Cuba), almost all of which have provoked no suicide attacks.

      - Was it because of cultural dominance? Then why aren't Canadians and Europeans bombing the hell out of the United States? They bear the worst of it.

      - Was it because of the poverty of the Arab world? But most of the attackers were middle-class and well educated. This is also true of many Palestinian bombers. Furthermore, many Arab countries are well off.

      - Was it for reasons that takes more than five seconds to describe? Most likely.

      --
      Toronto-area transit rider? Rate your ride.
    7. Re:Wrong idea! by schemanista · · Score: 5, Funny

      Was it because of cultural dominance? Then why aren't Canadians and Europeans bombing the hell out of the United States? They bear the worst of it.

      We've launched Bryan Adams, Nelly Furtado and Celine Dion at you. Damn you Americans for being impervious to our mind-control rays.
      --
      I saw that shot more than a few times back when Starbuck was a man. ~ lucabrasi999
    8. Re:Wrong idea! by MasterOfUniverse · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Was it because US troops are on Muslim soil? The US has more foreign bases than any other nation, sometimes on seriously unfreindly territory (e.g., Cuba), almost all of which have provoked no suicide attacks.

      cuba does not regard guantanamo as holy place. Muslims regard saudi arabia as holy place.

      - Was it because of cultural dominance? Then why aren't Canadians and Europeans bombing the hell out of the United States? They bear the worst of it.

      If you would know, canada,europe and US are all part of Western Civilization. There are differences, but not as great as a difference between US and middle east

      - Was it because of the poverty of the Arab world? But most of the attackers were middle-class and well educated. This is also true of many Palestinian bombers. Furthermore, many Arab countries are well off.

      Right, and the attackers understood that it is thier duty to standup for the weak, since they are well educated in the land of illitrate (ofcourse the form (suicide bombing) is wrong imho.) Many middle east countries are indeed well off. But only thier dictators (with US support). The general polulation lives in poverty (except UAE).

      - Was it for reasons that takes more than five seconds to describe? Most likely.

      Yes, but you covered the main reasons already. When you see that the only very few people are getting rich in the land of oil and you still don't have money to eat 3 times, I think you would question why.

      --
      "There is no flag large enough to cover the shame of killing innocent people."--Howard Zinn
    9. Re:Wrong idea! by Vicissidude · · Score: 3, Insightful

      While your thesis with reguards to China is accurate, you over simplify things.

      HELLO! This is Slashdot.

      The Soviet Command Economy wasn't terribly interested in a spending war with the US nor is there a great deal of evidance to suggest that increased military spending was responsible for the Soviet Collapse.

      Excuse me? Remember the nuclear arms race? When one side had enough nukes to destroy the world five times over, the other side had to get enough nukes to destroy the world ten times over. Then the other side had to get enough to destroy the world twenty times over. This outrageous behavior went on for decades.

      Remember all the tanks and planes and conventional weapons that were ready to roll into Europe at a moment's notice? The Soviet Union had numerical superiority in these systems, so the US had to spend $$$ for developing advanced fighters and helicopters in order to take out these Soviet weapons. In the meantime, the Soviets made improvements and churned out more tanks and planes and weapons. And again, this behavior went on for decades.

      Remember all the minor wars that we entered in? North Korea and Vietnam both came out of cold war fears. The Soviet Union had Afganistan.

      Finally, remember Star Wars? We spent huge sums of money on this, regardless of whether it actually worked or not. Do you honestly believe that the Soviets did not spent gobs of money on something similar?

      ALL of these events took massive amounts of money. Given our economy, we were better able to afford these expenditures while the Soviet Union bankrupted itself attempting to compete. Gorbi didn't stand a chance by the time he got into office.

      Contrary to popular belife, the construction and development of nuclear weapons technology isn't terribly difficult - just hugely expensive.

      Maybe for a uranium nuclear warhead. But, if you want to get into the big leagues with a plutoninum warhead, then the design is considerably more complex.

      If you've got access to the materials the actual know how isn't too far off.

      We shouldn't make it any easier than you say it already is by also training their personnel.

      Its generaly considered a good thing when you've got more than one major power.

      Considered a good thing by who? Certainly not the single, major power.

      China is a Maoist Oligarchy, not a Communist Dictatorship (such a thing is a contradiction in terms).

      And therefore, it's more excusable if we teach Chinese citizens weapons knowledge? The nitpicky details of just how evil China is misses the point. Getting into an argument of the structure of China's government misses the point. China was merely an example of a country where we SHOULDN'T be shipping this information. There is also Cuba, India, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Libya, North Korea, Pakistan, Russia, Sudan, and Syria. Stick to the topic.

      Taiwan isn't a country... at least it's not internationaly recognised as such.

      Again, by who? There are countries that recognize Taiwan. Even so, China has recently made threatening statements to Japan as well because of what Japan puts in its textbooks. Again, stick to the topic.

      Sure, Chinese students can go back over to China. But it's not as if what they're studying is classified. US Students can post that same material to the web. US Students can be hired by a Chinese firm. Are we going to start restricting the travel of anyone with a masters in Electrical, Mechanical, Computer, or Nuclear engineering now?

      No, it's not classified. However, what they are studying is sensitive information that CAN be used to make weapons. There is no reason whatsoever that we should be training Chinese nuclear engineers. While they MIGHT not go back and make nuclear weapons, they certainly COULD.

      As for US students, I'm not worried about them, their loyalties generally lie with the US. They're not likely to go make nuclear weapons for China, Iran, North Korea, etc.

  2. Ummm? by Shky · · Score: 4, Interesting

    How much oil is the US getting from India?


    (Note, I haven't read TFA, so I really don't have an informed opinion of what's going on, it was just a thought that struck me.)

    --
    CC Licensed Serialized Story and Podcast: Ingenioustries
  3. And always remember... by BandwidthHog · · Score: 3, Funny

    It is vitally important to get a receipt when using the lavatory!

    --

    Quantum materiae materietur marmota monax si marmota monax materiam possit materiari?
  4. My Take by mfh · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This is not about terrorism, this export tax. It's about people going to the US to study and work in America, who are from India, and then taking the knowledge back to India, along with all the business.

    My opinion is that it's a free country, but does that make it a free world? Should people be able to move all the business out of one country to simply make a buck? Maybe that's not ethical if you're gaining the knowledge from the country in question. But maybe there is a better twist to it...

    I'm Canadian and I have tried outsourcing to the US before with my LAMP knowledge (PHP). The pay simply sucks. I can get more money doing local work for charities than working for someone abroad. The pay is that bad. So if Joe American wants to pay that to India to get better positioning for their company's budget -- I'm all for it. Why? Because now I can compete directly against the Indian firm on QUALITY -- something they can't compete on because they just don't have the time with all this new business coming in, IMHO.

    I take more time to be sure the job is well done, and that reinforces the expression that you get what you pay for.

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
  5. Decline by El+Cabri · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is another nail in the coffin of the US education industry. Universities in Canada and Australia probably celebrated the news with champagne.

  6. Hardest workers by kaamos · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Granted, I'm from canada, but work as an undergraduate student on a civil engineering project, with the brains being an Iranian post-doctorate student. The foreign students always seem to be the hardest workers around the University, it's incredible. Even if I consider myself generous of my time, most of these people never look at the time, and pull incredible shifts, coming in during the weekends and staying late to finish off presentations for next week. I cannot imagine this being any different in the USA. I'm not sure governement workers will pull long hours to grant those permits. Modern day research cannot allow itself such a blatent chokepoint.

    --
    In Canada, we don't fancy things like socks
  7. Uh huh. by Shky · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Students from India, which has cordial relations with the U.S., will need licenses to study, but students from Saudi Arabia -- home country for most of the participants in the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, and much of the financing and ideology behind Islamist terrorism -- will not.

    I think what's far scarier is that the country that Timothy McVeigh and Ted Kaczynski come from doesn't have this restriction. They're able to go to US universities without licenses.

    --
    CC Licensed Serialized Story and Podcast: Ingenioustries
  8. Hidden Agenda? by Nytewynd · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It seems that by if this were in the interest of security, they would be required to include Saudi Arabi in the list of contries. By including India, it almost seems like a backwards attempt to limit foreign students from replacing Americans in the technical fields. I am not sure if that is a conspiracy theory/tinfoil hat kind of thought, but something seems odd about this entire piece of legislation.

    First of all, like someone mentioned, anything you can learn in the US in a classroom is already published somewhere. The same textbook you buy for your class is probably on Amazon.com for anyone in any country to purchase. Teaching an Indian student about Nuclear Engineering is really not a security concern. If that student was intent on learning nuclear technology to create WMDs, there are other countries they could go to anyway to learn.

    Placing restrictions on education is the last thing we should be doing. With the general population dumbing down, we should be accepting anyone willing to learn. Highly educated people are becoming few and far between. I don't care if the next guy that designs the power plant that keeps my house lit up is Indian or American, as long as someone learns how to do it.

    I don't want to get politcal, but this seems like a situation entirely fabricated by the government for some kind of hidden agenda.

    --
    /. ++
  9. What does this have to do with anything? by El+Cubano · · Score: 4, Insightful

    but students from Saudi Arabia -- home country for most of the participants in the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, and much of the financing and ideology behind Islamist terrorism -- will not.

    Aside from making me wish I could mod the article -1, Flamebait, what does this matter? The only possible purpose to this statement is to inflame the debate.

    NEWS FLASH: The USofA is home to the majority of terrorists that have attacked abortion clinics and is the source of the financing and ideology of right wing militants. We should immediately move to ensure that all Americans that attend universities apply for licenses to use the knowledge the acquire.

    Ridiculous, right? Feel better now?

    1. Re:What does this have to do with anything? by Nytewynd · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The relevance is that this is being introduced in the name of security. The point is to restrict education of possible military knowledge to people from countries we are worried about. That is exactly how Saudi Arabia fits into the issue. It's not a slam on Saudi Arabi, nor is anyone saying that Saudi Arabians are all evil, but if you are restricting people based on the potential military threat of their home country, Saudi Arabia probably should be at the top of the list.

      The USA is definitely overpopulated with it's own terrorist. That is one reason I hate how all of a sudden the general population thinks all Muslims are secretly plotting the annihilation of our country. These same people that apparently love freedom, democracy and the US are the ones harassing people exercising their freedom of choice at the clinics. Apparently, to some people freedom is only a good thing when it is a subset of things you agree with.

      These types of issues are used as scare tactics by politicians. It works for them because people don't think about things. They believe most of what they are told.

      --
      /. ++
    2. Re:What does this have to do with anything? by Quixote · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Well, the submitter was merely pointing out a logical fallacy behind the purported reasoning of these (proposed?) restrictions.

      If the idea indeed is to deny knowledge to potential enemies, it makes sense to see who these "enemies" are. And looking at the fact that the majority of the 9/11 hijackers were Saudi; Bin Laden is a Saudi; many of the others in the Al Qaeda hierarchy are Saudi; it would make sense to include Saudis in this set of restricted students. Now, to not put restrictions on Saudis and then turn around and place such restrictions on Indians (to name a group) who have had no involvement whatsoever in terrorism against the US and EU, defies logic, doesn't it??

    3. Re:What does this have to do with anything? by dvdeug · · Score: 3, Insightful

      but students from Saudi Arabia -- home country for most of the participants in the 9/11 attacks on New York and Washington, and much of the financing and ideology behind Islamist terrorism -- will not.

      The only possible purpose to this statement is to inflame the debate.

      Why? Saudi Arabians have repeatedly attacked the US, and Saudi Arabia is highly undemocratic and has no religious freedom. India is a free country and Indians have never posed a threat to the US. Shouldn't that be taken into account when discussing further restrictions on who can be taught dangerous information?

  10. exporting knowledge by wk633 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is akin to the law which prohibited "Applied Cryptography" to be exported with the floppy disk, which had source code listings from the book. The book (with the text version of the source) was fine, just not the disk with the magnetic version.

    Because we all know foreigners are too dumb to use an OCR scanner...

  11. Re:Saudi Arabia... by cperciva · · Score: 4, Informative

    Somebody please explain why our government panders to a the terrorist capitol of the world.

    The Saudi Arabian government panders to the terrorist capitol of the world because the US government is headed by their friends.

  12. That's the problem! by AnObfuscator · · Score: 3, Funny

    It's those evil Canadians! They're trying to export our top secret TEXTBOOKS and even... *gasp* our LECTURE NOTES! They must be STOPPED at ONCE!

    --
    multifariam.net -- yet another nerd blog
  13. Another wrong idea [Re:Wrong idea!] by skwang · · Score: 4, Interesting
    WWII was about Eugenics and superiority through control of genetics.

    Blanket statements such as these always invite the inevitable discussions. ("No your wrong!" "You suck!" "No YOU suck!"). World War II had many causes. Unlike some other wars which can be traced back to a single cause, WWII's causes included:

    European theater

    • Hilter's desire to return Germany to first class world power status after being humilated by the Treaty of Versailles.
    • Hilter's policy of "living space" which demanded the forced exodus of people of slavic origin in order to make space of his "Master Race." And my forced exodus I also mean the systematic genocide of entire races. (The eugenics you speak of).
    • Domination of the European continent, politically. Hilter's Germany probably would not have occupied France and other Western European countries if Germany had won the war. Instead they would have set up satellite states similar to the Soviet Union's Warsaw Pact.
    • Mussolini's desire to elevate Italy to first class world power status.
    • His own imperial desires to conquor the Balkens, Greece, and North Africa in order to make modern Italy a second "Roman Empire."
    • Britian and France's inability to recognize Facsim as a threat they had to match early on, instead appeasing Hilter and letting him "annex" the Sudatenland, Austria, and Chezkoslovakia. (okay not really a cause but not everything is Hilter's fault)
    Pacific Theatre
    • Japan's desire to become a first class world power.
    • The Japanese military government's view that an overseas empire would make it less dependent on foriegn raw material. Specifically oil which it had to import. ("Foriegn dependence on oil" sound familiar?)
    • The miltary's desire to conquor China for it's fertile land and resources.
    • Japan figuring that it was better off fighting the US in one crushing blow instead of negotiating.

    Of course I havn't touched on all the causes and I am sure I got some of my details wrong. In addition I am sure I made a blanket statement somewhere that will invite discussion.

    Oh well. :\

  14. American Physical Society on this topic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the APS, sent on 22 April 2005

    Dear Chairs of PhD-granting Physics Departments,

    I am writing to alert you to a possible threat to research in your department
    and to urge you and your faculty to write to the Department of Commerce (DOC)
    in response to its "Advance notice of proposed rulemaking" published in the
    Federal Register on March 28, 2005. The notice calls for comments that must be
    received by May 27, 2005. As discussed below, the leadership of the American
    Physical Society feels this issue is so important that you should seek to
    provide thoughtful and accurate responses by your university administration,
    your department and individual faculty who might be affected by the
    recommended changes. We believe that your comments can make a difference.

    The proposed rulemaking by the DOC is a response to recommendations presented
    by the Department's Inspector General. Implementation of these
    recommendations would cause two major changes:

    1) The operation of export-controlled instrumentation by a foreign national
    working in your department would be considered a "deemed export", even if that
    person were engaged in fundamental research. As a consequence, a license
    would be required for each affected foreign national (student, staff or
    faculty member) and for each export controlled instrument. Typical export
    controlled instruments are high-speed oscilloscopes, high-resolution
    lithography systems, high-end computers and GPS systems. The situation is
    complicated by the fact that the list of instruments is different for each
    country.

    2) U.S. organizations would be required to apply for a deemed export license
    for students, employees or visitors who are foreign nationals (but not U. S.
    naturalized citizens or permanent residents) and have access to controlled
    technology if they were born in a country where the technology transfer in
    question would require an export license, regardless of their most recent
    citizenship or permanent residency. For example, transfer of technology to a
    Chinese scientist who has established permanent residency or citizenship in
    Canada would be treated, for export licensing purposes under the proposed
    guidelines, as a deemed export to a Chinese foreign national. (The list of
    export-controlled instruments for Chinese nationals is particularly
    extensive.)

    The Department of Commerce officials who have the responsibility for
    developing new policies and practices in response to the Inspector General's
    recommendations are anxious to determine what the impact of implementing those
    recommendations would be. They must seek a balance between increases in
    national security that might result from the implementation of the new rules
    and the decrease in national security that would result from negative impacts
    to US research and development.

    In initial discussions by the APS Panel on Public Affairs (POPA) it was
    thought likely that consequences would be:
    a) research would slow down significantly due to the need to obtain licenses
    for each foreign national and, particularly, Chinese student, staff member,
    postdoc, or faculty member using export controlled instrumentation. We
    believe that a separate license would have to be obtained for each
    instrument. In this regard, it should be noted that the relevant DOC office
    has the staff to handle about 800-1000 license requests per year. Present
    times to process a license request are typically 2-3 months.
    b) instruments would have to be secured to ensure that those who do not have
    the required license could not use them.
    c) the number of Chinese and other foreign national students would decrease
    markedly as their "second-class" status on campus became apparent, thus
    ultimately weakening the nation's science and technology workforce.
    d) the administrative costs of research would rise markedly.
    e) national security would ultimately be weakened as a consequence of a

  15. Clarification of your thesis [Re:Another wrong by skwang · · Score: 5, Informative
    Let me restate your thesis because I don't believe I understand it. Please correct me if I am wrong, which I probably am.

    Thesis: World War II (WWII) was fought by the UK, France, USSR, China, and USA (Allies) against Germany, Italy, and Japan (Axis)[1] in order to prove to their citizens, or to whoever, that they were against Anti-Semitism and Eugenics, especially because the governments and leaders of said Allies engaged in Anti-Semitism and Eugenics and they did not want their own bigotry to come to light. By fighting against a greater injustice than their own they could redeem themselves in the eyes of others.

    [1]I am purposely leaving out many other combatants due to space limitations.

    I am going to write the first part of this post assuming that I have your thesis correct (which I probably don't) and will address what I think about said thesis.

    Eugenics and Anti-Semitism are not the same thing. They are related in that they both rely on what we enlightened people would now consider bigotry. Certainly at the time they were probably not considered evil or inhumane. Fortunately by out standards they are. I won't disagree with you that Americans, Britons, and Russians where just as Anti-Semitic as Germans or any other nationality. I also won't disagree with you how Eugenics was used in the US. There are numerous shameful examples that even make headlines today as when the Governor of Virginia apologized for his state's Eugenics programs.

    I don't believe that humanitarian reasons had much to do with the reasons why WWII occured. The idea that human rights somehow trump all other international issues began after WWII with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which was adopted by the United Nations (UN) in 1948. Of course it was drafted and the ideals developed during the Second World War, but the reasons that caused WWII were a result of state of international affairs in the 1930s.

    Finally I'd like to disagree with you about your final point:
    Of course the worst thing of all is that the US didn't work up much of a sweat about things even AFTER Poland was invaded. London was being firebombed and we were still discussing "if we get pulled into this war, whose side would we be on?"
    The United States of before WWII was a different country than the one that emerged afterwards. In fact US foreign policy was always been defined as a mix of two poles, idealism (Woodrow Wilson) and realism (Theodore Roosevelt). Before WWII idealism coupled with isolationism reigned. The idea that the US should be the "city on the hill," acting as a beacon for all to copy our own shining example of democracy, dominated US foreign policy and the minds of ordinary citizens. By working to make a better democratic republic at home the US could be an example to countries abroad.

    But there was a current of realism in American foriegn relations and that was not directed toward Europe but toward the East to China. Trade relations with China was the reason for the friction between the US and Japan in the 1920s and 30s. The US may not have "cared" about Germany annexing Central Europe, but when Japan invaded Manchuria in 1933 the US cared.[2] The embargo against oil which the US imposed against Japan after its invasion of China in 1937 was one of the primary reasons Japan wanted to extend its empire to the Dutch East Indies (Indonesia today), a major source of petroleum. Japan could only do so if the US Navy in the Pacific was neutered. This directly lead to the surprise attack of the US Naval Base at Pearl Harbor. The Japenese were aiming for one decisive blow in order to knock out the US. And with Britian fighting against Germany the British colonies were vulnerable. Japan stood to gain everything with one roll of the dice.

    [[2]The real "start" of WWII as far as I am concerned. Of course real fighting didn't begin until 1937 when Japan invaded the rest of China and it didn't become worldwide until 1939 with the invasion of Poland. Europeans/

  16. Re:An international student's perspective by alphakappa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Which means you've all missed the largest lesson that you should have learned when we let you into our country to study.

    I'm assuming that your statement is about personal liberty, and if so, I* agree wholeheartedly with you. Also, there' the fact that all this 'dual' purpose technology is not impossible to develop elsewhere - those who want it will create it, while the brilliant minds that want to learn and contribute here will be scared away. I hate the thought of having to prove that I'm not a potential terrorist.

    Losing the Chinese and Indian students will be a big problem for the US in the years to come. Right now, the main reason why Chinese and Indians come to the US to study is that they can get opportunities here that they cannot get in their home country. We all know how China and India are developing - what happens that they can get the same opportunites at home? Who will do the graduate research in American universities? Instead of preparing for that eventuality, I see that you have stuff like 'leave no child behind'. I'm not trying to be condescending here - as a great lover of education, it pains me to see that education is nobody's priority in this country.

    (* I'm Indian)

    --
    "When the only tool you own is a hammer, every problem begins to resemble a nail." - Abraham Maslow (1908-1970)