Rather than say ‘don’t let the door hit you in the ass on your way out’ say ‘you can’t come here in the first place,’ period. Last I looked the word “education” is not in the Constitution and is not our job to to pay for it.
Better idea = perhaps these rich colleges can go to another country and build their schools with foreign money and get rich off them instead.
“Last I looked the word “education” is not in the Constitution and is not our job to to pay for it.”
WIKI
The National Defense Education Act (NDEA) was signed into law on September 2, 1958, providing funding to United States education institutions at all levels.
NDEA was among many science initiatives implemented by President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1958 to increase the technological sophistication and power of the United States alongside, for instance, DARPA and NASA. It followed a growing national sense that U.S. scientists were falling behind scientists in the Soviet Union. The early Soviet success in the Space Race catalyzed a national sense of unease with Soviet technological advances, especially after the Soviet Union launched the first-ever satellite, Sputnik, the previous year.
In 1940 about one-half million Americans attended college, which was about 15 percent of their age group. By 1960, however, college enrollments had expanded to 3.6 million. By 1970, 7.5 million students were attending colleges in the United States, or 40 percent of college-age youths.
The act, therefore, was designed to fulfill two purposes. First, it was designed to provide the country with specific defense oriented personnel. This included providing federal help to foreign language scholars, area studies centers, and engineering students. Second it provided financial assistance—primarily through the National Defense Student Loan program—for thousands of students who would be part of the growing numbers enrolling at colleges and universities in the 1960s.
NDEA established the National Defense Student Loan (NDSL) program to provide low-interest federal loans to “promising, yet needy students”, and to enable them to pursue undergraduate and graduate educations. The national defense student loans were especially targeted toward students who possessed superior capacity in mathematics, engineering, or a modern foreign language or who desired to teach in elementary or secondary schools.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Defense_Education_Act