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Coming to America? In 2025, the US to some looks less like a dream and more like a place to avoid

Coming to America? In 2025, the US to some looks less like a dream and more like a place to avoid

Time of India6 days ago

The world may be rethinking the American dream.
For centuries, people in other countries saw the United States as place of welcome and opportunity. Now, President
Donald Trump
's drive for mass deportations of migrants is riling the streets of Los Angeles, college campuses, even churches - and fueling a global rethinking about the virtues and promise of coming to America.
"The message coming from Washington is that you are not welcome in the United States," said Edwin van Rest, CEO of Studyportals, which tracks real-time searches by
international students
considering studying in other countries. Student interest in studying in America has dropped to its lowest level since the COVID-19 pandemic, it found. "The fact is, there are great opportunities elsewhere."
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There has long been a romanticized notion about immigration and America. The reality has always been different, with race and ethnicity playing undeniable roles in the tension over who can be an American. The U.S. still beckons to the "huddled masses" from the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty. The strong economy has helped draw millions more every year, with the inflow driving the US population over 340 million.
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Early clues across industries - like tourism, trade, entertainment and education - suggest the American dream is fading for foreigners who have historically flooded to the US.
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US-bound scholars carry cares of the word on shoulders
Polling by Pew Research Center from January through April found that opinions of the US have worsened over the past year in 15 of the 24 countries it surveyed.
Trump and many of his supporters maintain that migrants in the country illegally threaten American safety, jobs and culture. But people in the country legally also have been caught in
Trump
's dragnet. And that makes prospective visitors to the US, even as tourists, leery.
Trump's global tariff war and his campaign against international students who have expressed pro-Palestinian sympathies stick especially stubbornly in the minds of people across American borders who for decades clamored to participate in the land of free speech and opportunity.
"The chances of something truly horrific happening are almost certainly tiny," Duncan Greaves, 62, of Queensland, Australia, advised a Reddit user asking whether to risk a vacation to the land of barbeques, big sky country and July 4 fireworks. "Basically it's like the Dirty Harry quote: 'Do you feel lucky?'"
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What's changing for international students in the US right now?
'American Creed,' American dilemma For much of its history, America had encouraged immigration as the country sought intellectual and economic fuel to spur its growth.
But from the beginning, the United States has wrestled with the question of who is allowed to be an American. The new country was built on land brutally swiped from Native Americans. It was later populated by millions of enslaved Africans.
The American Civil War ignited in part over the same subject. The federal Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 prohibited the immigration of Chinese laborers for a decade. During World War II, the US government incarcerated about 120,000 people of Japanese descent in 10 concentration camps. About two-thirds were US citizens.
Still, the United States has always been a nation of immigrants, steered by the "American Creed" developed by Thomas Jefferson, which posits that the tenets of equality, hard work and freedom are inherently American.
Everyone, after all, comes from somewhere - a fact underscored on-camera in the Oval Office this month when German Chancellor Friedrich Merz gave the president the framed birth certificate of Trump's grandfather, also named Friedrich, who emigrated from Germany in 1885. He was one of millions of Germans who fled war and economic strife to move to the United States in the late 19th Century.
There's a story there, too, that suggests the Trump family knows both the triumphs of immigration and the struggle and shame of being expelled.
After marrying and making a fortune in America, the elder Trump attained US citizenship and tried return to Germany. He was expelled for failing to complete his military service - and wrote about the experience.
"Why should we be deported? This is very, very hard for a family," Friedrich Trump wrote to Luitpold, prince regent of Bavaria in 1905, according to a translation in Harper's magazine. "What will our fellow citizens think if honest subjects are faced with such a decree - not to mention the great material losses it would incur."
Trump himself has married two immigrant women: the late Ivana Zelničkova Trump, of what's now the Czech Republic, and his current wife, Melania Knauss Trump of Slovenia.
They're still coming to America. To Trump, that's long been a problem It's hard to overstate the degree to which immigration has changed the face and culture of America - and divided it.
Immigration in 2024 drove US population growth to its fastest rate in 23 years as the nation surpassed 340 million residents, the U.S. Census Bureau said in December. Almost 2.8 million more people immigrated to the United States last year than in 2023, partly because of a new method of counting that adds people who were admitted for humanitarian reasons. Net international migration accounted for 84% of the nation's 3.3 million-person increase in the most recent data reported.
Immigration accounted for all of the growth in 16 states that otherwise would have lost population, according to the Brookings Institution.
But where some Americans see immigration largely as an influx of workers and brain power, Trump sees an "invasion," a longstanding view.
Since returning to the
White House
, Trump has initiated an far-reaching campaign of immigration enforcement that has pushed the limits of executive power and clashed with federal judges trying to restrain him over his invocation of special powers to deport people, cancel visas and deposit deportees in third countries.
In his second term, unlike his first, he's not retreating from some unpopular positions on immigration. Instead, the subject has emerged as Trump's strongest issue in public polling, reflecting both his grip on the Republican base and a broader shift in public sentiment. A June survey from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research found that 46% of US adults approve of Trump's handling of immigration, which is nearly 10 percentage points higher than his approval rating on the economy and trade. The poll was conducted at the beginning of the Los Angeles protests and did not include questions about Trump's military deployment to the city.
Other countries, such as Denmark, open their doors The US is still viewed as an economic powerhouse, though people in more countries consider China to be the world's top economy, according to the Pew poll, and it's unclear whether Trump's policies could cause a meaningful drain of international students and others who feel under siege in the United States.
Netherlands-based Studyportals, which analyzes the searches for international schools by millions of students worldwide, reported that weekly pageviews for degrees in the US, collapsed by half between Jan. 5 and the end of April. It predicted that if the trend continues, the demand for programs in the US could plummet further, with US programs losing ground to countries like the United Kingdom and Australia.
"International students and their families seek predictability and security when choosing which country to trust with their future," said Fanta Aw, CEO of NAFSA, which represents international educators. "The US government's recent actions have naturally shaken their confidence in the United States."

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'History has repeatedly shown that military interventions in the Middle East often produce unintended consequences, including prolonged conflicts and regional destabilization,' it said, citing the American invasion of Iraq in 2003. It said a measured, diplomatic approach offers the best hope for stability in the Middle East. European Union The European Union's top diplomat said Iran must not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon, but she urged those involved in the conflict to show restraint. 'I urge all sides to step back, return to the negotiating table and prevent further escalation,' EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said in a post on social media. Italy Foreign Minister Antonio Tajani said Iran's nuclear facilities 'represented a danger for the entire area' but hoped the action could lead to de-escalation in the conflict and negotiations. New Zealand New Zealand Foreign Minister Winston Peters urged 'all parties to return to talks.' 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