US President Donald Trump said on Tuesday that he would cut funding for schools that allow “illegal protests”, their latest threat to the country’s education system to shut down the flow of federal funds.
Republican has earlier threatened to cut government funds to American colleges, schools and universities on teachings on gender and race, if they allow transgender athletes to compete on girls’ sports teams, or if they emphasize the Covid -19 vaccine mandate.
“All federal money will be closed for any college, school or university that allows illegal opposition,” he wrote on his true social platform.
“The agitators will be imprisoned/or permanently sent back to the country from where they came. American students will be permanently expelled or arrested on the basis of crime, arrested. No mask!” He said.
Donald Trump has repeatedly threatened to reverse the American education system, which involves defaming the entire department of education and returning all controls on the syllabus to individual states.
His statement came when American complexes were cried by student protests against Israel’s war in Gaza last year, which ignited allegations of anti-Jews.
On Monday, the US government said that it was considering scrapping more than $ 50 million in contracts with Columbia University in New York, it failed to protect the Jewish students on allegations.
The iconic Ivage League School found itself at the center of the firstorm last year.
Protests told the leaders of higher education in the Congress about the allegations of anti-Jewish-Jewishism and whether the Jewish students were being enough to protect.
Education Secretary Linda McMahon has said that Trump established a task force last month, which was anti-Jewish in schools, reviewing the federal grant to Colombia, education secretary Linda McMahon.
He said, “Americans have now seen scary for more than a year, as Jewish students have been attacked and harassed on elite university complexes.”
Schools receiving Federal Fund “have a responsibility for the safety of all students,” he said, arguing that Columbia’s clear failure to maintain its end of this basic agreement raises a very serious question about the fitness of the institute to continue business with the United States government. “
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