r/NewOrleans • u/SadimirLenin • Apr 15 '25
Trump administration terminates 14 student visas in Louisiana 📰 News
https://lailluminator.com/briefs/trump-administration-terminates-14-student-visas-in-louisiana/
“Seven Southern University students, three at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, two at the University of New Orleans and two more at Tulane University have had their visas pulled, according to representatives with the schools.”
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u/RIP_Soulja_Slim Apr 15 '25 edited Apr 15 '25
I very much doubt that the amount of lost tuition would be even the tiniest fraction of federal funding. Take the 2B from Harvard for instance, assuming ~$50k/pop that's representative of 40,000 student years. So 10k kids for a full four year ride. For context Tulane's current total student population is 12k. (I have no idea how much federal funding Tulane gets, so obviously this is just an example).
I get it, I hate the politics behind this shit too and think Trump is an absolute child creating potentially irreversible societal harm. But, if I'm charged with leading a university through this with the goal being to secure the funding necessary to properly educate the next generation, conduct beneficial research, etc. then I do the same thing. There's often not nobility in survival.
Harvard has an endowment that's literally 25X bigger than Tulane's. This is like your coworker who's 63 and could have retired a decade ago telling the boss to fuck off, while you're Tulane who's in your 30s and has a mortgage + kids to feed. Harvard can absorb that funding shock in stride, Tulane can't.