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A Significant Number of Foreign College Students Come From Countries With a History of Hating Jews

A Significant Number of Foreign College Students Come From Countries With a History of Hating Jews

“At elite universities, the situation is much more extreme: international students make up almost 25% of the student population.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gV_j4Dh9koA

The argument that’s being made here is that this is the reason why we have seen such a large increase in antisemitism on college campuses.

From Tablet Magazine:

The Takeover

Something new and peculiar stands out about the wave of anti-Israel student activism that has rocked American university campuses since October: There is a visibly more radical element to these protests. Student activists almost seemed to take glee in Hamas’ massacre of innocent civilians—when they weren’t denying that it happened at all. The antisemitic rage struck a different tone than the typical anti-Israel fare that has become a central part of American student activism since Students for a Democratic Society formed in the 1960s.

So what changed? The answer is clear to anyone who watched the videos: these student protests are no longer composed solely of left-wing American students steeped in critical theory and post-colonial ideology. The protests are now havens for foreign students, especially those from Arab and Muslim countries, with their own set of nationalist and tribal grievances against Israel and the United States. In some cases, such foreign students appear to lead the protests in their pro-terrorism chants—some of which are in Arabic, or translations of Arabic slogans.

What we are witnessing is the latest consequence of a quiet revolution in higher education: the internationalization of the American university. Today, there are more than one million foreign students enrolled at American universities, making up more than 5% of the total student population. At elite universities, the situation is much more extreme: international students make up almost 25% of the student population.

The process of internationalization was slow at first, but it has rapidly accelerated in the past two decades. Since the Institute of International Education started to keep track of foreign student enrollment in 1948, it took over 50 years for enrollment to increase from 25,000 to more than 500,000 by 2000. But it only took 15 years after that for the number of international students to double to its current level of one million.

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Comments

Well, a preliminary analysis would require making up a list of countries who had “a history of hating Jews,” and then a list of those with no such history, and seeing how they compare numerically. At the extreme, I can only think of one country that has a history of welcoming Jews, and that’s the obvious one. The USA doesn’t even have such a history. Several of the founding fathers were quite adamant about it.

Steven Brizel | March 1, 2024 at 9:04 am

To the extent that such students are foreign nationals they should either be denied entry in the first place or deported as such demonstrations are violations of their visas.

I have always accepted that Europe festers a cultural prejudice against Jews. I must confess, as an American, I do not comprehend the root of this ingrained attitude outside the historical but deeply untrue belief Christians held against Jews for the crucifixion. What am I missing?

How is it okay that the same people who claim that “hate has no place here” gets a “carve out” dispensation to hate and threaten Jews?