4 pointsby thinkcontext5 hours ago2 comments
  • rebekkamikkoa5 hours ago
    I don’t think this is realistic at all.

    It basically means a huge percentage of these people might never come back. Once you go back to your home country, life moves on. Your plans change. Your path changes. And that could be terrible for the economy.

    Hundreds of thousands of people either wouldn’t enter the local economy, or they’d be delayed for a very long time. I really don’t see companies being okay with that. Think about all the students who are ready to enter the job market. Instead, they’d have to go back home, wait for a visa, and only then come back. That kills the speed of the economy and makes hiring way more unpredictable.Or at the very least, it would seriously slow things down.

  • thinkcontext5 hours ago
    Curious how the tech lobby will react. You would hope Musk and Huang might take their own personal experience into account.
    • rebekkamikkoa5 hours ago
      Absolutely. I don't think they will be happy.

      So many great students will be off the market. This will affect to the whole tech space. No way they will be happy with this decision.

      • pixel_popping29 minutes ago
        Not from the US, but is a green card actually necessary to work there after studying? afaik student visa is different from green card right?

        Most countries, you get a visa of some kind but you have no way to permanent residency at all unless you marry but you can keep staying there somewhat permanently.

    • Arodex3 hours ago
      Musk has no problem "pulling the ladder behind him", and Huang's only duty is to shareholders - which means kissing Trump's ring to avoid retaliation.

      Americans voted for this.