I meant New |
To obtain a visa to the United States, applicants must demonstrate they are not a threat to national security, which includes not supporting terrorism or terrorist organizations. This is a broad requirement, and individuals with any history of terrorism-related activity, including providing material support, could be deemed inadmissible If foreign nationals support Hamas’ actions on Oct 7, they are terrorist supporters. Whipping up people to protest, encampments, over taking buildings, threatening students on campus can and should be seen as a threat to national security. To repeat myself. THEY ARE GUESTS. And guest can to told to leave. |
Exactly. Just as an example: An American citizen can shout out support for Al Qaeda (can’t fundraise or raise arms though). A person on a visa has restrictions on support for terrorism including pure speech in a way a citizen doesn’t. This is law 101 people. Not complicated. |
+1 |
They are not guests, they pay their way. They are not a threat to national security and are not terrorist or Hamas supporters. They were not threatening as it has been proven that the protests were mostly peaceful. To accuse them of being Oct 7 supporters is just ignorant |
They are guests in this country, even if they pay their way. Same as if I travel to another country or attend school there. |
Protesting Israel's genocide = antizionist ≠ pro-Hamas but still leads to arrest ± deportation |
Many protests have crossed that line. The videos are out there for all to see. |