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Reading: MSU college students react to Trump’s threats in direction of faculty protests 
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Michigan Post > Blog > Michigan > MSU college students react to Trump’s threats in direction of faculty protests 
Michigan

MSU college students react to Trump’s threats in direction of faculty protests 

By Editorial Board Published March 11, 2025 3 Min Read
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MSU college students react to Trump’s threats in direction of faculty protests 

EAST LANSING, Mich. (WLNS)— Many college students are anxious after President Trump threatened to chop funding for colleges that enable “illegal” protests. Michigan State College has a historical past of protests on campus, together with pro-Palestinian rallies, that the Trump administration is cracking down on. 

College students from MSU instructed 6 Information that no protest is unlawful, particularly on faculty campuses. 

“This is our right to free speech,” said a sophomore at MSU. “A right to come together, and he is directly attacking that.”

Tyler Pintea, a senior, says Trump is trying to violate the First Modification. 

“And that is simply form of a violation of our constitutional proper to protest the federal government and to allow them to know the way we’re feeling,” mentioned Pintea. 

 Pintea believes that President Trump is taking issues too far. 

“Trying to threaten people from protesting is step one in the dictator handbook. The whole fundamental of protesting is that we the right to do it,” said Pintea. “We can do any protest as long as it’s peaceful, and all the protests that I’ve seen, and mostly likely everyone else has seen, have been peaceful.”

College students on the college have held pro-Palestinian rallies since 2023, and so they imagine the administration is making an attempt to intimidate individuals. 

“It makes individuals scared, and that is what he is making an attempt to do. Is he is making an attempt to scare individuals and he is making an attempt to scare individuals into submission,” mentioned a scholar who requested to be nameless. 

Three days in the past, Trump pulled $400 million from Columbia College.

Sophia Ramirez, a first-generation freshman, says that motion hits near dwelling. 

“I rely on that funding, especially because I’m a minority. So, that really goes into the student grants that I get, and the student loans,” said Ramirez. “We have a right to express that, and if he does pull funding, I feel like it’s very eye-opening for students here.” 

Pintea says he’s fearful MSU might be affected. 

“It’s very likely that Trump will hit our college eventually,” said Pintea. especially considering our President has been very vocal about his support for DEI.”

TAGGED:CollegeMSUprotestsreactStudentsthreatsTrumps
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