12 comments

  • maeln 2 days ago
    > An early-career biological anthropologist said she was still awaiting contract details from AMU before putting pen to paper because of salary discrepancies, though she took comfort in the fact that the cost of living is lower in France — especially considering that education for her two children, who she said were eager to settle in Marseille, would be free.

    Researcher are severely under paid in France (young researcher often earn barely more than the minimum wage). I doubt she will find the salary to her expectation (though the very strong worker right, and 5 weeks vacation might compensate for that).

    In general, research is severely underfunded in France. That is nice that we try to make a gesture toward researcher under threat, but how many of them will we be able to keep when they realized the struggle of getting any funding for research here...

    • jltsiren 2 days ago
      Researchers are underpaid and research is underfunded everywhere. Like most jobs that people find inherently interesting.

      I don't know about the specific situation in France. In general, Europe spends more on academic research than the US, both in absolute terms and as a fraction of GDP. However, it's easier to make an academic career in the US. Because the gap between academic and industry salaries is wider in the US, Americans are more likely to leave the academia after PhD. And because employment-based immigration is particularly difficult in the US, many would-be immigrants end up doing a PhD without any intention of staying in the academia. Which means you have less competition if you stay in the academia in the US.

    • jonathanlb 2 days ago
      This is addressed in TFA:

      > [...] the fact there's less money for research.

      > An early-career biological anthropologist said she was still awaiting contract details from AMU before putting pen to paper because of salary discrepancies, though she took comfort in the fact that the cost of living is lower in France — especially considering that education for her two children, who she said were eager to settle in Marseille, would be free.

      > The university’s president insisted that participants in the “Safe Place for Science” program would be paid the same wages as French researchers. The statement sought to appease concerns within France’s academic community that money would now be focused on drawing U.S. scientists whereas local researchers have long complained of insufficient funding.

      > But the biological anthropologist said a more carefree life could compensate for a lower salary. "There’ll be a lot less stress as a whole, politically, academically," she reflected.

      • maeln 2 days ago
        The underfunding is not addressed, and it is not even a subject in France right now. This specific researcher might be fine with a more carefree life (that is, what she thinks might be a more carefree life), but the general issue remains.
    • spacemadness 2 days ago
      At least it beats being attacked by your government daily for having the audacity to become a scientist. Especially if you publish science that isn’t politically convenient.
    • zzzeek 2 days ago
      you get to live in France, have free health care and school for your kids (and I bet these underpaid researchers in france actually get completely unheard of in the US things like modest pensions). How much do you actually need to be paid? Most Americans would materially benefit from such an exchange
      • rank0 2 days ago
        The data on this is very clear: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disposable_household_and_per_c....

        > According to the OECD, 'household disposable income is income available to households such as wages and salaries, income from self-employment and unincorporated enterprises, income from pensions and other social benefits, and income from financial investments (less any payments of tax, social insurance contributions and interest on financial liabilities). 'Gross' means that depreciation costs are not subtracted.'[1] This indicator also takes account of social transfers in kind 'such as health or education provided for free or at reduced prices by governments and not-for-profit organisations.'

        United States: 62,300

        France: 45,548

        Americans need to be more grateful for what they have.

        • saubeidl 2 days ago
          Disposable income is a poor metric to use though.

          Money isn't everything. The french have better public transport, more social stability, a life expectancy that's higher by five (!) years etc etc.

          By pretty much whatever standard you use, their quality of life is much higher.

          • rank0 2 days ago
            Look, I am not saying life is inherently better in America vs France. This thread started as a debate about wages and social benefits. If you're truly interested in a good faith discussion on that topic, the metrics I'm highlighting are essential. If you've already cemented your opinion and just have a bone to pick with the United States there's probably not much common ground we can find.

            > Disposable income is a poor metric to use though.

            Hard Disagree. It's directly related to standard of living. You're also leaving out the other parts. It's adjusted for PPP, taxes, essential household costs (healthcare, shelter, etc), and social benefits.

            > Money isn't everything. The french have better public transport, more social stability, a life expectancy that's higher by five (!) years etc etc.

            Of course money isn't everything...but again we started off by talking about it.

            > By pretty much whatever standard you use, their quality of life is much higher.

            Except for household income, wealth, affordability, and others. See for yourself! This is an excellent resource: https://data-explorer.oecd.org/vis?lc=en&tm=NAAG&pg=0&snb=12...

            As another random (non-definitive) data point take the homelessness rate: https://worldpopulationreview.com/country-rankings/homelessn...

            I stand by my statement. Too many Americans don't appreciate how good they have it. Cultural differences are real.

            • saubeidl 2 days ago
              I think if you're a person that is primarily focused on economic indicators, I can see your point.

              Because you mentioned it, I do think a lot of this comes down to cultural differences. To me (and to most Europeans!), the economic stuff just doesn't matter as much, so it's not a compelling argument to make.

              I had excellent cheap pasta on a beautiful plaza in Italy yesterday, I got there via 30 euro Ryanair flight, and I booked it over my abundant PTO. At no point exploring Florence, a city of 400.000 people, did I feel unsafe at all.

              That, to me, is the kind of stuff that really matters and the kind of stuff that I just can't have in the US.

              It's also the kind of stuff that is hard to capture in economic stats, which is why I don't really pay as much attention to them.

              I've lived in the US for almost a decade. I made a lot more money, but my life felt worse.

              But maybe Americans really do just have different values and they'd rather have more money on their bank account.

              I upvoted you because you argued your point well.

              It's just that we're talking past each other, quality of life is so much more than that. It's the environment you live in. It's knowing that a random piece of bread you'll buy in a supermarket or in a train station will have a certain level of quality. It's cheese that doesn't taste like plastic. It's having time to spend with your loved ones. It's nobody having to worry about a medical emergency bankrupting them. It's higher education not being gated to the well-off.

              • FirmwareBurner 2 days ago
                >To me (and to most Europeans!), the economic stuff just doesn't matter as much

                Then why did you move to make more money in the US? Why are many young Europeans moving to work abroad?

                People who gaslight others for chasing money, are those who already have enough money and can't empathize with those wo do not.

                >I had excellent cheap pasta on a beautiful plaza in Italy yesterday, I got there via 30 euro Ryanair flight

                Cherry picking personal holiday travels isn't representative of anything in this topic. Also 30 Euro flights are not the norm everywhere. You need to live in the right country/city and get lucky.

                • saubeidl 2 days ago
                  It's just to illustrate a point regarding quality of life.

                  Experiences like these are just straight up impossible in the US. Believe me, I've tried. There's no nice Italian plazas anywhere and in most places in the country you wouldn't even wanna be sitting outside.

                  • nec4b 2 days ago
                    Is it possible for you drive over the border to Mexico and have best Mexican food costing almost nothing. Can you fly to Caribbean or Hawaii over the weekend? Can you camp in Grand Canyon, Yosemite or Yellowstone? Your view is in no way representative of a typical European who cares a lot more about money then you. Money, which you ironically made in the states.
                    • FirmwareBurner 1 day ago
                      Exactly He was being such a hypocrite with that pov.
                  • FirmwareBurner 2 days ago
                    Touristic spots are taste dependent subjective, not indicative of objective quality of life metrics.
                    • saubeidl 2 days ago
                      But Florence is a real city, where real people live. As is the city I live in and it, too, has plenty such spots.

                      There is very few places in the US where I would like to sit outside on a plaza and have my dinner - and that is indicative of social decay and a lack of focus on building pleasant public spaces.

                      • FirmwareBurner 2 days ago
                        A lot of people don't care about having Italian plazas on daily basis, like my German ex-boss who just moved to the US, and probably also Italians who move abroad for jobs. You keep harping on about one point that matters to you personally but even you don't live in Italy. Why is that?

                        Europe also doesn't have grand canyons. I don't need to see a grand canyon every month though.

                        >- and that is indicative of social decay and a lack of focus on building pleasant public spaces.

                        Go to Frankfurt train station.

                        • saubeidl 2 days ago
                          It is not I who keeps harping on about this point. I listed a whole number of points in the post you cherry-picked this one from.

                          Feel free to address the others instead!

                          • FirmwareBurner 2 days ago
                            [flagged]
                            • saubeidl 2 days ago
                              Ah I see, you edited your comment post-discussion to disingenuously distort the conversation. That's foul play.
                              • FirmwareBurner 1 day ago
                                [flagged]
                                • saubeidl 1 day ago
                                  You add new points after I addressed your only point, only to then accuse me of harping on about said point.

                                  I do not appreciate the dishonesty or the tone. Please do better.

            • const_cast 2 days ago
              It's important to note as someone living in the US, most of our cost of living is completely invisible. We have thousands of "small" invisible taxes tacked on to everything we do.

              Benefits are expensive, healthcare is expensive, transportation is expensive, food is expensive, and on and on. It's quite hard to just compare the US to France because of that. I think a lot of this "disposable income" relies on you being an able-bodied person of young age with zero health conditions and zero risk of emergencies. As soon as that's not the case, that "disposable" income vanishes.

          • maeln 2 days ago
            From my anecdotal evidence (so it proves nothing), it seems like being poor / middle class in France is better than in the U.S. But being high-middle class / rich / in the owner class, is better in the U.S, since you already don't need the socialized healthcare, you actively seek segregated places to live, you do not take the public transport (or at least that often), etc, but you do get to enjoy all the amenities for rich people that the U.S offer, which is way more than France since it has a higher volume of rich people.
            • saubeidl 2 days ago
              [flagged]
              • tomhow 20 hours ago
                Please don't stir up nationalistic flamewar like this on HN.
                • saubeidl 15 hours ago
                  The sentiment expressed is explicitly anti-nationalist.
                  • tomhow 14 hours ago
                    Yes, right, and our position is the same, whichever the direction of the attack.
              • zorobo 2 days ago
                I assume you are not living in Paris then. Here in Paris:

                - housing is expensive

                - it's not cardboard boxes, it's tents

                - you'd be mugged/knifed rather than shot, agreed

                - public transportation is good when not on strike. However, it's dirty and you might get robbed

                - the world's most creative government when it comes to taxes

                - it's still beautiful though…

                • saubeidl 2 days ago
                  I don't live in Paris. Generally, I don't love cities >2M inhabitants.

                  The parts of Paris I went to recently were quite nice, but of course, a tourists view is different from a locals.

                  I'd be surprised if it was anywhere near as bad as, say the SF tenderloin though.

              • FirmwareBurner 2 days ago
                >my net worth is easily in the seven figures. I ended up moving away for the above reasons.

                Easy to high road others now, AFTER you made 7 figures in the country you now publicly despise, and wouldn't be able to where you're originally from.

                Why try to emotionally pull the ladder?

        • zzzeek 2 days ago
          Yeah I didn't say "richer" I said "better"
      • Invictus0 2 days ago
        > free healthcare

        > earn 40k/yr

        > get taxed 30% on it

        • jonathanlb 2 days ago
          > get taxes 30% on it

          As opposed to paying more out of pocket or getting denied a claim? No thank you.

          • betaby 1 day ago
            As opposed to paying the same rate and still not having functioning health care. Hello from Quebec, Canada,
            • mcphage 1 day ago
              > As opposed to paying the same rate and still not having functioning health care. Hello from Quebec, Canada

              What do you mean "as opposed to"—that's exactly where the entire US is at.

              • saubeidl 1 day ago
                As opposed to France, where taxes are high, but health care functions and life expectancy is five years higher than in the US.
                • mcphage 1 day ago
                  See, that would make a good comparison.
        • zzzeek 2 days ago
          can bike to work without being run down by a 10 ft high pickup truck, I dunno sign me up maybe
        • FirmwareBurner 2 days ago
          [flagged]
          • saubeidl 2 days ago
            If we redefine words to have no meaning, then there is no such thing as words with meaning, yes.
          • rickydroll 2 days ago
            Which is why I prefer to differentiate them as taxpayer-funded versus employer-subsidized health care
          • zzzeek 2 days ago
            pointless pedantry

            "free" means "no payment is due for medical care, regardless of how extensive the care"

    • computerthings 2 days ago
      [dead]
  • probably_wrong 2 days ago
    > The university’s president insisted that participants in the “Safe Place for Science” program would be paid the same wages as French researchers. The statement sought to appease concerns within France’s academic community that money would now be focused on drawing U.S. scientists whereas local researchers have long complained of insufficient funding.

    I think the University's president is being cheeky or directly obtuse. Sure, US refugee researchers will get the same wage as a French researcher, but that's poor comfort for the French researchers who would have otherwise gotten those positions.

    I understand that the University is aiming at getting top researchers for peanuts which wouldn't be a bad deal for French science as a whole, but it is still a bad deal for the French science community.

    • kouru225 2 days ago
      You think it’s a bad thing that French researchers will have direct access to the “top researchers”???

      Sounds like a major benefit to French researchers

      • probably_wrong 2 days ago
        It's only a benefit for the French researchers who can get a position in France. Those who can't are already forced to emigrate (and we're back to where we started) or to quit science entirely.

        But retention is also a problem. How many of those scientists will stay in Aix-Marseille? Refugees, almost by definition, go back to their country once things calm down. And life in a country where you don't speak the language is not conducive to staying there long.

        I'm not saying everything will be bad - there's a plus associated to getting great minds for cheap. But if I were a French scientist fighting for grants I would definitely feel odd about my country explicitly telling me "French need not apply".

      • saubeidl 2 days ago
        I think they're talking about other French researchers, which will now have to compete with these "refugees" for positions.
    • busterarm 2 days ago
      And the ascending French political right will paint this as a continuance of decades of French policy prioritizing immigrants over French people.

      So when they eventually have the political reigns, this policy will end and these researchers will have to start over somewhere else.

      • saubeidl 2 days ago
        I don't think the cordon sanitaire will break any time soon.
    • spacemadness 2 days ago
      Isn’t this the same argument that America should kick out non American students and would be researchers from American universities? Either way it’s protectionist. Basically what Trump supports but in France.
      • UncleEntity 2 days ago
        That's exactly what I was thinking...

        Some may argue that the (former) US policy of attracting the world's best students and researchers was good for the country as a whole. Perhaps even lead to some industries being far superior to foreign competitors?

        Unfortunately, those 'some' aren't currently setting policy.

  • ThinkBeat 2 days ago
    I wonder what the mixture of academics will apply and who will be picked.

    Clearly professors or scholars in Women's studies / gender studies, critical race theory, and climate science are the ones worst hit by the current leadership in the US.

    • KittenInABox 2 days ago
      > Clearly professors or scholars in Women's studies / gender studies, critical race theory, and climate science are the ones worst hit by the current leadership in the US.

      Source?? Here's the thing, as far as I know, women's studies/gender studies, crt, whatever... they're cheap, mostly phd students doing mass surveys of interviews or studying metadata. The expensive stuff is engineering, clinical trials, specialized equipment for labs... that stuff is also being hit.

    • malcolmgreaves 2 days ago
      It’s also all science across the board. The Republicans have made sure that research goes underfunded.
    • ryandv 2 days ago
      > Clearly professors or scholars in Women's studies / gender studies

      Good riddance. The standards for scholarship in these fields are laughable; see how Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work accepted for publication a form of Mein Kampf, rewritten to use more modern inclusive and feminist language [0] [1].

      If your field of study is so epistemically bankrupt and your systems of review so defective as to not be able to identify Nazi ideology when a few words are swapped around, and to then accept those ideas for publication, it's not clear to me that you should be receiving any funding at all - particularly when it's those same fields that are so vocally and vociferously against this ideology.

      [0] http://norskk.is/bytta/menn/our_struggle_is_my_struggle.pdf

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grievance_studies_affair

      • spacemadness 2 days ago
        Sounds like you have an axe to grind.
        • spankibalt 2 days ago
          The replication crisis hit the STEM chadlingers pretty hard as well. They are still bitter about it. As for the hoax? Garbage to sell books to the peanut galleria.
        • ryandv 2 days ago
          [flagged]
      • UncleEntity 2 days ago
        > ee how Affilia: Journal of Women and Social Work accepted for publication a form of Mein Kampf, rewritten to use more modern inclusive and feminist language

        Was that a troll or a serious endeavor?

        Because, as a troll, it's pretty funny...

  • curiousgal 2 days ago
    I genuinely feel for them. This is nothing but a stunt, once they have to renew their visas and experience the systemic anti-immigration bureaucratic machine they will regret moving there.
  • Am4TIfIsER0ppos 2 days ago
    Give me your passport! I want in!
  • brunker2 2 days ago
    I've always maintained that US academia would pay dearly for the Trump administration's views on ahhh... climate change during the Little Ice Age period from roughly the 16th to 19th centuries.
    • rsynnott 2 days ago
      Not sure if you're just being obtuse, but, er, I mean, yeah, climate science is in a lot of trouble under ol' minihands.
  • aaron695 2 days ago
    [dead]
  • cjdrake 2 days ago
    [flagged]
    • saubeidl 2 days ago
      ... because?
      • oytis 2 days ago
        Well, lots of them literally fled from an imminent death threat.
        • epistasis 2 days ago
          Most of them fled before they knew of a the death threat. What Nazis looked like early on is pretty much exactly what's going on in the US.
          • saubeidl 2 days ago
            Case in point: "We Study Fascism, and We’re Leaving the U.S."

            https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/14/opinion/yale-canada-fasci...

            • oytis 2 days ago
              That's very touching, but not very nuanced - which is fine for a 6 minute video, but maybe it's just not the right format for this topic.

              Like, yes, if the regime is planning extermination of your people, you'd better run as soon as possible. But in case of milder authoritarian regimes like Russia, emigration only made ths regime fiercer and stronger as society gets more homogeneous when dissenters leave. Centres of resistance in safe places is a fairy tail, you can't resist if you are not there.

              I think it's way too early to give up on America - the authoritarian turn there has just started, and it's a duty of Americans to stop it while it's still possible. Otherwise eventually they will discover they have nowhere to run, it's going to have a domino effect if American democracy falls

              • saubeidl 2 days ago
                Personally, I doubt there is still time to stop it in the US. I think the best we can do now is to build up the rest of the free world to be a bulwark against authoritarianism, including the one in the US.
                • oytis 2 days ago
                  Why though? Institutions have just started to crumble (we didn't even see a really rigged election yet, though might see one soon), and the actual civic resistance in the streets has barely started. Trump's grip on America is much weaker than, say, Yanukovich's grip on Ukraine was, and there is no external force that could realistically support Trump in case of an internal revolt.

                  I understand that some people might still want to flee for personal reasons, but in the end the eagerness of people to stand for democracy physically is the final test for its viability - all institutions can only work as long as revolt is a possibility. Otherwise it's just words on paper that a dictator can ignore without consequences.

              • epistasis 2 days ago
                I think that what you'll find with a lot of scientists is that their first loyalty is to all of humanity, in front of any national loyalty.

                Scientists in the US have basically zero influence on any policy, on anything to do with Trump. They are not elite enough. Their voices are not heard.

                Under that regime, a few people deciding that their talents are best used to advance science, rather than screaming into the wind in their home country, makes a lot of sense.

                Plus, it's really important to understand how these things change so quickly. People are currently being abducted by masked men, presumably under the control of the state, but without any certainty, and being sent to prisons outside the US without any due process, in direct violation of the constitution. Scientists are being detained at the border, and sent to camps for months at a time without any clarity about if there was a crime, if they will be released, if they will ever get to see the inside of a courtroom.

                Bring any of this insanity up, and slightly less than half the country will say "OK, that's fine, you're obviously exaggerating or making things up or these detained scientists deserved it." Which is an environment that only leads to even further suppression of the people.

                There are a few scientists in Russia, but they mostly try to get the fuck out of there as fast as possible. And all the brave souls that dared say that the war against Ukraine was a war, well, they are now rotting in cells for daring to speak a very mild truth.

                Our society will not come to protect scientists when Trump decides to go after them, and scientists realize that. And as a source of "truth" outside of the approved information environment of Trump, they are going to be one of the first casualties as Trump consolidates power, and there's jack shit that staying in the country will do to stop that, except to be the meat that gets fed into the grinder. Honestly, leaving the country now is probably more effective at stopping Trump than staying, because at least it makes a statement.

                Thinking through this, by writing it out, is actually making me rethink my decision to stay. My spouse is a scientist, with lots of local support and connections, so we will probably stay because we don't want to let down all the people that have believed in her research and it will be difficult to move it to a new country. But Our staying here does not help fight against fascism, and it puts all the other work in great peril.

                • oytis 2 days ago
                  I just don't think it's going to be good for humanity if US ceases to be a democracy. Sure, scientists probably don't have to be on the forefront of the struggle, and I understand those who decide to leave but saying that there is no other choice as to leave - or even that that is the most moral choice - is wrong in my opinion. US has long taken freedom for granted, but there are many countries in the world where civil societies have fought against much more brutal regime than Trump tries to install, had very little reasons for hope - and still won.

                  It's kind of an important topic to me - I myself left Russia for good, but not when Putin's regime has started, but rather when it has become so entrenched that there was indeed no hope left. At the same time I've always looked with awe at nations that made it, most of all Ukraine - and sincerely hope that Americans won't give up easily now.

                  • saubeidl 2 days ago
                    Yeah, I fully agree, it'll be awful for everybody if the US goes full on rogue state.

                    But I also believe the best thing left for us to do is to build up the remaining free world to a point where it can convincingly deter aggression by authoritarian states including the US.

                    I feel like once you're at the "masked men disappear unwanteds to Gulags without due process" stage, it's hard to come back.

                    • oytis 2 days ago
                      I don't want to downplay it, but even if US literally had masked men disappear American citizens without trace, that would be... well, just a dictatorship - many of them were overcome when society picked up the fight.
                  • epistasis 2 days ago
                    I think we are very kindred spirits. If you have thoughts on what to do, please share because I'm desperate to find out.

                    I think that US culture is far closer to Russia or Belarus in culture these days than Ukraine. The Ukrainians I know all said "why aren't the Americans all out in the streets" when Trump started doing all these things. Because that's what Ukrainians do when there's injustice. In the US, those who resist feel defeated already, because of the reelection of somebody who was clearly criminal and has no respect for democracy, and there's very little leadership on pushing back.

                    I think the energy may come back, we in the US may find our strength again. But the information environment is so poisoned that I fear only violence will finally break through to the poisoned minds, and I really really don't want it to come to that. Maidan happened in Ukraine because the general populace said "we won't tolerate the government beating students doing protests." In the US, we've become quite tolerant of that, and even of the masked police.

                    I want to stay and fight, but I don't know how. I don't know if anybody knows how. Eastern Europe is about 10-20 years ahead of where the US is in terms of government evolution, because the fall of the USSR caused a speed-run through.

                    • saubeidl 2 days ago
                      There's a shimmer of hope right now with Mamdani in New York. It could be the start of a legitimate nationwide movement.

                      Establishment Dems are complicit.

                • saubeidl 2 days ago
                  The points you make strongly remind me of this book based on interviews of Germans post-WW2, about the rise of Nazism:

                  > In the university community, in your own community, you speak privately to your colleagues, some of whom certainly feel as you do; but what do they say? They say, ‘It’s not so bad’ or ‘You’re seeing things’ or ‘You’re an alarmist.’

                  > "And you are an alarmist. You are saying that this must lead to this, and you can’t prove it. These are the beginnings, yes; but how do you know for sure when you don’t know the end, and how do you know, or even surmise, the end? On the one hand, your enemies, the law, the regime, the Party, intimidate you. On the other, your colleagues pooh-pooh you as pessimistic or even neurotic. You are left with your close friends, who are, naturally, people who have always thought as you have.

                  > "But your friends are fewer now. Some have drifted off somewhere or submerged themselves in their work. You no longer see as many as you did at meetings or gatherings. Informal groups become smaller; attendance drops off in little organizations, and the organizations themselves wither. Now, in small gatherings of your oldest friends, you feel that you are talking to yourselves, that you are isolated from the reality of things. This weakens your confidence still further and serves as a further deterrent to—to what? It is clearer all the time that, if you are going to do anything, you must make an occasion to do it, and then you are obviously a troublemaker. So you wait, and you wait.

                  > "But the one great shocking occasion, when tens or hundreds or thousands will join with you, never comes. That’s the difficulty. If the last and worst act of the whole regime had come immediately after the first and smallest, thousands, yes, millions would have been sufficiently shocked—if, let us say, the gassing of the Jews in ’43 had come immediately after the ‘German Firm’ stickers on the windows of non-Jewish shops in ’33. But of course this isn’t the way it happens. In between come all the hundreds of little steps, some of them imperceptible, each of them preparing you not to be shocked by the next. Step C is not so much worse than Step B, and, if you did not make a stand at Step B, why should you at Step C? And so on to Step D.

                  They Thought They Were Free - The Germans, 1933-45

                  https://press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/511928.htm

  • 762236 2 days ago
    [flagged]
    • saubeidl 2 days ago
      Do you not see the irony in your statement?

      What is conservatism if not an ideology?

      All you're saying is universities that align with the prevalent ideology of the authoritarian regime will be fine. Congrats, you're now the Soviet Union.

      • travisgriggs 2 days ago
        I think the OP was posting somewhat tongue in cheek. Sardonic even.
        • saubeidl 2 days ago
          Poe's law at work. It is impossible to tell.
          • verdverm 2 days ago
            check their comment history...
      • tjs8rj 2 days ago
        The problem is our public institutions (universities) are using public dollars on things that are not desired by the public.

        Institutions have accountability to the people. Nobody except a fringe wants universities to be maga centers, most people just want them to reflect “common sense” and forward the will of the American people

        • maeln 2 days ago
          > The problem is our public institutions (universities) are using public dollars on things that are not desired by the public.

          That are not desired by the public until it is. A lot of people might find research in advance and quite esoteric math useless, as it does not produce any benefit to them. That is until those research yield something that can be used in a way, or in another field, where it does impact their lives. The issue is that you cannot easily tell what is useful or not. Some research have a clear goal, who, if achieved, will yield very tangible benefit, but they might never reach it. On the other hand, something that seems impenetrable to the average man might yield incredible benefit.

          Without the freedom to explore, nothing would ever be found.

          • tjs8rj 1 day ago
            Nobody is complaining about research into stuff we’re not sure is useful yet. The problem is public dollars are being spent on activism.
        • kentm 2 days ago
          Public universities should not be beholden to the public in what they research. It’s important that institutions are able to make conclusions that are true and expand human knowledge despite certain portions of the population not liking those conclusions.

          I would also dispute your assertion that “no one wants universities to be maga centers.” Leaders on the right have said that they do want that, or at least the right wing American mythos to be uncritically taught and not challenged.

          • tjs8rj 1 day ago
            This isn’t about research topics, this is about money being spent on activism

            I said “nobody except a fringe”, which is correct

        • epistasis 2 days ago
          This is simply untrue and backforming extreme right-wing ideology as a reason for why people voted for a ln entire candidate.

          One things that fascists do when voted into power is assume that any random strange ideology as part of the platform is now so popular that it must override existing law and procedure, and that is exactly what Trump is doing here. Which is why these researchers are leaving. Not because they are doing something the public dislikes. The public looooves scientific research.

      • 762236 2 days ago
        If a university has thought diversity, their demographics will match America's: they'll employ around 50% conservatives. If they have like 3% conservatives, as many do, that is a good sign that they are captured by an ideology, and then the question becomes, why should conservatives support institutions with federal money that actively spread an ideology that excludes conservatives? If the universities want to continue this way, they should pursue First Amendment religious protection.
        • saubeidl 2 days ago
          Your core assumption is false. Education is not evenly distributed alongside ideologies.

          Education is negatively correlated with conservatism, thus a sample of a job requiring higher education will not be representative of the general public.

          • like_any_other 2 days ago
            It of course helps that 19% of academic jobs require a loyalty oath to progressivism: https://www.campusreform.org/article/diversity-statements-ca...

            That is, in 19% of jobs it is an official, open requirement. It's safe to assume the unofficial discrimination is higher.

          • 762236 2 days ago
            Historical employment rates of conservatives at universities were much higher than now.
            • saubeidl 2 days ago
              That was in a time when conservatism wasn't openly anti-science and anti-scientific process.
              • 762236 2 days ago
                I started voting for Republicans because I watched Democrats become anti-science, e.g., gender-affirming care. Anyone with ideology rejects science, which includes people from both parties, but currently my life is impacted in a negative way by liberal ideology, not conservative ideology (conservatives actually talk with me, while liberals shun me if I ask for evidence).
                • const_cast 2 days ago
                  > I started voting for Republicans because I watched Democrats become anti-science, e.g., gender-affirming care.

                  Gender-affirming care is not "anti-science", you just don't understand the science.

                  Gender-affirming care is not saying that people can change their biological sex. It was never that. That was, and will remain, a conservative hallucination.

                  Gender-affirming care is about curtailing the effects of gender dysphoria and improving the quality of life of transgender individuals, and some cisgender individuals. Which is science-backed. It works. Gender-affirming care leads to better outcomes for transgender individuals, period.

                  The problem here with you, and other's, is that you're just arguing the wrong points. You might not think gender dysphoria is real or that it matters, but that's not the conversation. The conversation is "does gender-affirming care help people and improve outcomes". Which yes, it does.

                  Whether those people deserve to be helped is not a scientific question. It's a political one. Please, know and understand the difference.

                • saubeidl 2 days ago
                  There's no such thing as being "without ideology". To quote Zizek, leading expert on ideology:

                  > I already am eating from the trashcan all the time. The name of this trashcan is ideology. The material force of ideology - makes me not see what I'm effectively eating. It's not only our reality which enslaves us. The tragedy of our predicament - when we are within ideology, is that - when we think that we escape it into our dreams - at that point we are within ideology.

                • maeln 2 days ago
                  > I started voting for Republicans because I watched Democrats become anti-science, e.g., gender-affirming care.

                  No, you decided to vote republicans when you stop agreeing with some of the science.

                  > (conservatives actually talk with me, while liberals shun me if I ask for evidence)

                  https://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=fr&as_sdt=0%2C5&q=tran...

            • verdverm 2 days ago
              The definition and constituents of "conservatives" has changed over that same time
            • bilbo0s 2 days ago
              Maybe conservatives of, say, the Greatest Generation, were simply better educated?
        • verdverm 2 days ago
          Dental assistants are significantly female. Should we defund them until they are more representative? How many other industries and professions are like this?

          Also, America is not 50% conservative. The split is more like thirds, i.e. America is non-binary

        • const_cast 2 days ago
          > If a university has thought diversity, their demographics will match America's: they'll employ around 50% conservatives.

          Well sure, but you're missing a very key component here: conservatives are ideologically opposed to education, especially public education. It's a foundational part of American conservative ideology.

          Yeah, that influences things.

      • ap99 2 days ago
        Your response reveals the way you're thinking about this.

        i.e. If I accept and employ a conservative person then I'm aligning with conservative values and betraying liberal values.

        What the GP is proposing is abandoning this black and white thinking, or in other words: accepting diversity of thought.

        (Waiting for downvotes from the HN echo chamber that abhors diversity of thought.)

        • saubeidl 2 days ago
          That is straight up not what's happening though and the "diversity of thought" framing is a way conservatives like to gaslight people into accepting their censorship.

          Climate change research is being threatened. Universities are being bullied for supporting trans athletes.

          There's a reason these folks are fleeing. It's not because they can't stand to have colleagues with opposing views, it's because they are threatened. To reframe it as "diversity of thought" is disingenuous and dishonest.

          • ap99 2 days ago
            You're implying there was an abundance of diversity of thought before 2024 or 2016.

            Was there?

            Academia has been this way for decades.

            • kentm 2 days ago
              I would argue there was. You’re using “Accepts conservative thoughts uncritically” as the barometer here. Conservative thought just tends to lose out when examined critically, so the right seeks to compensate by authoritarian measures.

              See heavy handed, top down efforts to suppress climate science, gender and trans science, research into effects of diversity, etc.

            • saubeidl 2 days ago
              So which is it now? Is it newly found diversity of thought or has it always been this way? I don't remember the last time the president bullied universities the way this one is doing, fwiw.
          • jklinger410 2 days ago
            > Climate change research is being threatened. Universities are being bullied for supporting trans athletes.

            These two things are not equivalent.

            • kentm 2 days ago
              They are. Transgenderism has decades of research backing it and the right has just unilaterally decided that it’s wrong. They didn’t do this based on any sort of real research but rather empty appeals to nature and essentialism.

              Sports bans were not put in place because of a prevalence of trans athletes beating cis athletes.

              • 762236 2 days ago
                Gender affirming care is unsupported by evidence, so it is inaccurate to say "unilaterally".

                Trans woman tend to dominate their sports. There are so many examples of this. We don't need to have opinions on this: just use the evidence.

                • kentm 2 days ago
                  > Gender affirming care is unsupported by evidence, so it is inaccurate to say "unilaterally".

                  It is supported by evidence -- plenty of research around outcomes and comparisons to the alternative. The right wing does not engage with that evidence. Your denial of this is exactly an example of "unilaterally" denying it.

                  > Trans woman tend to dominate their sports. There are so many examples of this. We don't need to have opinions on this: just use the evidence.

                  There aren't, actually. You say there's so many examples but I have failed to see any of them. They tend to dig up examples where trans women just manage to place at all, usually in lower ranks. Hardly an example of domination, and even if it was its an anecdote and not statistical. In fact, the right was so desperate for examples that they leapt to conclusions at the Olympics and claimed that a cis woman was trans.

            • saubeidl 2 days ago
              Why not? Both are "diversity of thought", aren't they?
              • sophacles 2 days ago
                It's only diversity of thought if it's lockstep with thier thoughts. You know... diversity - rigid sameness.
                • saubeidl 2 days ago
                  That is exactly what I called out in my post above. "Diversity of thought" is just a mask conservatives use for "our groupthink", in my experience. Same as "freedom of speech" or "states rights".

                  Always only when it's convenient for them.

      • hollywood_court 2 days ago
        Also, "thought diversity" and conservatives aren't things that typically go together.
    • micromacrofoot 2 days ago
      this is completely out of touch with what's actually happening, hundreds of millions of dollars are being pulled from ongoing research that's entirely apolitical... it's a campaign of vengeance
      • bilbo0s 2 days ago
        In fairness..

        in certain ideologies, belief in scientific research and the scientific method, in and of itself, is regarded as a political ideology. Not necessarily only a scientific one.

        To them, it's exclusionary to require that ideas be backed by data and replicated via peer review before being taken seriously, or even published in certain journals. Whereas to most academics the very problem are the cracks in the integrity of peer review, and the replication crisis.

        It's a case of world views that are simply diametrically opposed.

      • mathiaspoint 2 days ago
        It's not vengeance. Public institutions get funded by the public as long as the public feels they benefit. Many of these institutions went on a massive PR campaign demonizing the majority demographic. Regardless of whether it's actually true or not they now feel like the institutions are a net loss for them and would prefer the money is spent elsewhere.
        • micromacrofoot 1 day ago
          > Many of these institutions went on a massive PR campaign demonizing the majority demographic

          I'm sorry what? where's the evidence?

          the current administration has been saying (in their words) that they're pulling funding from Harvard because they aren't doing enough to stop antisemitism and are pushing for a direct role in governance — they've attempted to freeze billions of dollars in grants for a number of things including medical research

          Historically this research has shown massive measurable return on investment, which is why it's funded so well.

  • sunshine-o 2 days ago
    [flagged]
    • kashunstva 2 days ago
      > What are those clowns gonna do? go back to the US or find a next country to travel to? … Researchers are supposed to think long term

      I will ignore the ad hominem part of your argument because it’s mean-spirited and does nothing to contribute to the discussion. Instead I would focus on the reality of research funding. Liking or disliking the current administration has little or nothing to do with their decision to immigrate. Their field of expertise is an area known to be a target of this administration’s skepticism; and given that they have been capriciously withdrawing funding from numerous disciplines, its logical they will do the same here. What would you suggest they do for four years (or more) while their research is unfunded?

    • rsynnott 2 days ago
      I wouldn't read all that much into polling two years out, especially given that traditionally they don't do great in the second round. The French presidency also has a somewhat lesser scope to fuck everything up than the US presidency has, and then of course there is Europe (even amongst the ol' Nazis, pretty much all talk of Frexit has evaporated after the object lesson of Brexit).
  • wonderwonder 2 days ago
    [flagged]
    • greesil 2 days ago
      Climate science, space physics, planetary sciences, astronomy all heavily impacted. MRNA research, cut. There are so many cuts it's hard to keep track of. So no it's not just whatever things you think are "woke". And, this is done not to save money but as a deliberate anti science agenda.
      • bilbo0s 2 days ago
        Just, Devil's Advocate..

        but what if they think Climate science, space physics, planetary sciences, astronomy..MRNA research are "Woke"?

        I don't agree with them, but I do know that "Woke" means a lot of things to these people.

        • wonderwonder 2 days ago
          [flagged]
          • saubeidl 2 days ago
            You are arguing with a strawman of your own making.
            • wonderwonder 2 days ago
              I stated I have no sympathy for researchers from institutions that actively pushed antisemitism. I was told that this means I am anti-woke and anti-science. Ok
              • saubeidl 2 days ago
                You invented the whole antisemitism angle. Why are you accusing these researchers?
                • wonderwonder 2 days ago
                  friend I did not invent the antisemitism angle. Ivy league schools have been rife with antisemitic behavior aided and abetted by the faculty. If you missed this news the last couple of years then I suggest you take a look. Jewish students have been assaulted, spit on, prevented from going to class etc. all while the admin of these schools looked on in admiration or actively participated.

                  These scientists didn't flee their schools while this was going on but as soon as an Admin comes into power that doesn't coddle them, they have to flee America due to "anti-science" and "anti-woke" rhetoric.

                  So I have no sympathy for researchers or scientists that are able to somehow gleefully endure being part of a school that supports the beating of students but somehow can't be part of a nation that suddenly wont tolerate it.

                  • greesil 2 days ago
                    They are leaving because they can't get money to run their labs, pay grad students and researchers, or their spacecraft won't ever fly, and so on. Not because they don't get to be antisemitic. How is this not clear to you?
                    • saubeidl 2 days ago
                      It is really hard to assume good faith with the way that poster is arguing.
                      • greesil 2 days ago
                        Some people are just very single issue oriented, or have their heads jammed so far up in a hole. Kind of the same thing really.
          • greesil 2 days ago
            Yes all the scientists do this, which is why they were all defunded /s
      • wonderwonder 2 days ago
        [flagged]
  • linotype 2 days ago
    > Speaking from the university’s hilltop astrophysics lab, AMU President Eric Berton likened the situation to that of European academics who fled persecution by Nazi Germany both before and during World War II.

    This is offensive on so many levels, not least of which to history.

    • saubeidl 2 days ago
      Experts in the rise of fascism disagree to the point that they, too, have fled the country: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/14/opinion/yale-canada-fasci...
    • sofixa 2 days ago
      Why is it offensive? The current US administration has an outgroup they say ludicrous things about (do you remember the "eating pets" bit?), and have started rounding them up (by masked men in unidentified vehicles and without uniforms) with no due process to send to camps (often abroad).

      Various scientific research areas have also been the focus of extensive and frankly asinine criticism. Do you remember when the orange guy drew a hurricane with a sharpie? Or when he proposed nuking it? Or when various research funding was killed by DOGE, often with blatant misrepresentations of what the research was? What about the brain dead woman kept as an incubator?

      Various media organisations have been sued on flimsy at best pretenses to silence them (like the CBS trial which was just settled).

      If anyone is failing to see the similarities to other historical far right rises to and centralisation of power, they're lacking in knowledge on these, or stand to benefit.

      • linotype 2 days ago
        It’s offensive because it compares the idiotic and fascist behavior of the current US administration with the behavior of the European Nazis, who murdered millions during the Holocaust, downplaying the massive suffering caused by the Germans.
        • saubeidl 2 days ago
          In German we have a saying: "Wehret den Anfängen." It literally translates to "Beware the Beginnings".

          As somebody who's history education was mostly centered around said beginnings, let me tell you, things sound real familiar right now, and not in a good way.

          If you're interested, read this excerpt of a book based on post-war interviews with Germans about the rise of Nazism and see if any of it sounds familiar: https://press.uchicago.edu/Misc/Chicago/511928.htm

        • sofixa 2 days ago
          It doesn't downplay anything. The Nazis didn't start by slaughtering millions, they did a bunch of other things before that to establish their rule, and importantly, to clarify who the outgroup is, deny them rights, and paint them as the bad subhumans in front of everyone. While planning deportations (e.g. the Madagascar plan) and rounding up some of them, as well as detractors in camps.

          That's roughly at the stages where the idiotic and fascist US administration currently is at. Ignoring the parallels serves no purpose. That's not to say they will move on the next stage (industrial extermination) like the Nazis did.

    • computerthings 1 day ago
      [dead]