University of California Greed and Its Consequences

StarmanMBA

Active member
Letter sent to UCI Chancellor and Deans August 26, 2019:

Dear UCI Leaders:

I have lived in Irvine for more than forty years.  What amazes me more than any other single fact is the profound increase in the number of Chinese immigrants here.

For this, Californians have the greedy educators to *thank*.  You want more money.  When private businesses attempt to increase market share, or sell more products to willing consumers, they are attacked for "corporate greed"  by your faculty as well as impressionable students who have been trained to badmouth all things American, or even caucasian.  But when educators want more money, whether from the state coffers, foreign students, or from research grants no matter how trivial, that's urgent business.  It's for the students (wink, nudge).

I was certain that growing your business entailed the influx of many thousands of Chinese students, but not until today did I learn the millions of dollars you rake in from the huge differential in tuition paid by Chinese students as compared with Californians who are the specific reason cited in the Charter for the establishment of the University of California.
$29,754 additional tuition, over and above the $11,442 paid by California high school graduates.

It isn't just the students you bring to America.  It's also their parents, wives, grandparents, as many as they can import to take advantage of our social security and welfare benefits.  Nowhere else on earth does any society act in such a way against the welfare and interests of its own citizens, to  benefit foreigners intent on taking advantage of the host's foolishness.

Disgraceful of you.  Shameful.

StarmanMBA

_____________Charter of the University of California
Assembly Bill.
No. 583.

INTRODUCED BY MR. DWINELLE.
M A R C H 5 , 1 8 6 8 .

A N A C T
To Create and Organize the University of California.

The People of the State of California, represented in Senate and Assembly, do enact as follows:



Section 1. A State University is hereby created, pursuant to the requirements of Section four, Article nine, of the Constitution of the State of California, and in order to devote to the largest purposes of education the benefaction made to the State of California under and by the provisions of an Act of Congress passed July second, eighteen hundred and sixty-two, entitled an Act donating land to the several States and Territories which may provide Colleges for the benefit of Agriculture and the Mechanic Arts.

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Sec. 3. A proper degree of each College shall be conferred at the end of the course upon such students as, having completed the same, shall, at the annual examination, be found proficient therein; but each College shall also have a partial course for those who may not desire to pursue a full course therein; and any resident of California, of the age of fourteen years or upwards, of approved moral character, shall have the right to enter himself in the University as a student at large, and receive tuition in any branch or branched of instruction at the time when the same are given in their regular course, on such terms as the Board of Regents may prescribe. The said Board of Regents shall endeavor so to arrange the several courses of instruction that the students of the different Colleges and the students at large may be largely brought into social contact, and intercourse with each other, by attending the same lectures and branched of instruction, and that one homogeneous spirit may be diffused among the youth attending the University.

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Sec. 10. Scholarships may be established in the University by the State, Associations or individuals, for the purpose of affording tuition in any course of the University, free from the ordinary charges, to any scholar in the public schools of the State, who shall distinguish himself in study, according to the recommendation of his teachers. And shall pass the previous examination required for the grade at which he wishes to enter the University, or for the purpose of private benefaction; provided, that the said scholarships shall be approved and accepted by the Board of Regents.

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Recent article:

In a recent article for the Spectator, U.S. author and publisher Roger Kimball noted:

?There are nearly 400,000 Chinese students in American universities. Thanks to Article 7 of the Chinese National Intelligence Law of 2017, each of these students is required to ?support, assist and cooperate with state intelligence work according to law?. In other words, the United States is home to some 400,000 potential spies from China.?



I think UC should admit more Chinese students.  After all, they pay $45,000 in annual tuition compared to a measly $15,000 for native born Californians, and aren't "revenues" what all of you cherish so dearly?  Profits are terrible according to you academics.  "Revenues," however, are worshipped in academia, n'est-ce pas?
 
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