UC students’ protests over tuition hikes are seriously misguided. Where have they been for the last year as California’s budget was decimated?

November 22, 2009

University of California students should be better informed. Where have they been for the last year or two as California’s economy went into the tank and the Governor and state Legislature refused to raise any taxes to balance the budget? What, exactly, do they expect UC President Yudof and the Board of Regents to do? Print money?

Students should be protesting the fact that Californians refuse any tax increases — alcohol taxes, commercial real estate taxes, and corporate income taxes to name a few — that could close the yawning budget deficit and save the world’s greatest university system from this historic decline. A quarter a drink alcohol tax alone could raise $3.5 billion a year.

Students should be protesting against the people of California — including their parents and themselves — who always seem to want something for nothing. Either we raise taxes to balance the budget or we dismantle the greatest system of higher education ever created — UC, CSU and California community colleges together — along with all our other social services.

The Legislative Analyst says that California will run $20 billion deficits through 2015, at which time there will be little left of our great state. Why don’t UC students aim their protests at the people and politicians who refuse to raise taxes and save California?


Undocumented immigrants: Why do we want to keep them out of college?

July 7, 2008

State activists passing laws to prevent undocumented immigrants from getting in-state tuition to public universities — or even banning undocumented immigrants from attending public universities, as South Carolina has done — are really hurting their own states.

To begin, young undocumented immigrants are here in this country because their parents brought them, not because they came on their free will. They should not be punished for their parents’ actions. They are already integrated into their local US culture and community.  They won’t go back to an alien culture, even if they were born there. Because of that, it would behoove us to help them become as productive as possible, and that means a college education.

The high number of high school drop-outs costs states hundreds of billions of dollars each year; this problem is particularly acute among Latino youth. If undocumented youth have no chance of going to college, they have less reason to finish high school. Not helping students go to college creates much greater costs and results in an uneducated workforce.

The number of undocumented immigrants going to college right now is miniscule. This is certainly not a serious policy problem for any state. Nationwide, about 65,000 undocumented youth graduate from US high schools. Only a very small percentage of these — 5 to 10 percent — are going to college. So in each state, we’re only talking about a few dozen to a few hundred who will apply to college. These students are the high achievers, the smart and driven students who will become educated, productive members of society — the US society, because here is where they are from  Their education will quickly pay for itself when they enter the workforce.

Despite all the billions spent on preventing illegal immigration in this country, we’ve had very little success in making people who have spent their lives here go back to where they were born. That being the case, we should encourage young undocumented immigrants who have lived their lives in the US to become well educated.

Immigration critics will say it’s unfair to US citizens to allow undocumented young people to take up slots at public colleges and universities. I say it’s unfair to US society to allow our best and brightest residents — whether legal or not — to be left uneducated.

I’ve got an idea: how about if everybody foreign national who earns a Ph.D. here automatically becomes a citizen. Maybe that way we wouldn’t have to import so many scientists and engineers.