Europe makes a pitch to woo scientists waged by us

The European Union and France on Monday announced an incentive of half a billion euro to woo the continents to scientists, demanding US President Trump to cut federal funding and conflict with top American universities.
French President Emmanuel Macron said at the University of Sorbone, Paris with European Commission Chairman Ursula von Der Leyen, “We ask researchers to unite and connect with us … If you love freedom, come and help us to be free,” French President Immanuel Macron’s Sorbone University’s Sorbone University’s President’s Sorbone University’s Europe Said with Leyen. Officials said that money would fund research projects and would help universities to run to help foreign scientists. Von Der Leyen announced the 500 MN Euro ($ 566.6 MN) incentive package and said that she wanted to invest 3% of GDP in research and development by 2030 to EU member states. Macron pledged 100 million from France, although it was not yet clear that it came to the top of the European Union pledge.
Trump has targeted American universities in January after freezing federal funding, starting an investigation, canceling international students’ visas and meeting other demands. Last week, he said that his administration would cancel the tax-free situation of Harvard University, a step that Harvard said that the US tax code would be an illegal misuse.
Robert N Proctor, a historian at the University of Stanford, said Trump was leading the “a liberal right -wing attack on the scientific venture”, which had been in the years. “We can see a reverse brain drain well,” he said. “This is not only for Europe, but also going to Scholars Canada and Asia.”
Encrypted messaging app Signal President Meredith Whitekar refused to comment on geopolitical disputes, but also said that it was unavoidable top talent that would be gravitational to welcome courts.
“I think the researchers, whose life, whose passions are inspired by special questions, special areas, which are present in the community of intellectual practice, will always be attracted to places where the ground is fertile for the work where they are not threatened, and where their research is not interrupted or distorted.”
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