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In the private group chat with AI scientists and Trump administration officials, Andreessen stated that universities "declared war on 70% of the country and now they're going to pay the price." He criticized DEI and immigration policies, describing them as "two forms of discrimination" that are "politically lethal."
Andreessen further claimed that Stanford University and MIT are operating as "mainly political lobbying operations fighting American innovation."
The billionaire tech investor also addressed Stanford's decision to remove his wife, Laura Arrillaga-Andreessen, as chair of its Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society, noting it was done "without a second thought, a decision that will cost them something like $5 billion in future donations."
This isn't the first time Andreessen has called out what he perceives as a broken university system.
In a recent interview with billionaire venture capitalist and Palantir co-founder Joe Lonsdale, Andreessen raised concerns about access to elite education.
"If you're the parents of a smart kid where I grew up [rural Wisconsin] and you think you're going to get them into a top university in this country, you're fooling yourself," Andreessen said. "What level of untapped talent exists in this country that a combination of DEI and immigration have basically cut out of the loop for the last 50 years?"
Andreessen argued that the intersection of DEI policies and high-skilled immigration has "warped" perceptions of who gets access to elite education. "Nobody wants to talk about, but I've started to talk about the intersection of DEI and immigration that has really warped our perceptions on high-skilled immigration over the last 50 years," he said.
Andreessen also pointed to the sharp rise in foreign enrollment at top universities, noting, "You look at the foreign enrollment rates at the top universities, which went from 2 or 3 or 4 percent 50 years ago or whatever to 27% or 30% or 50%."
"There's been this massive transformation of who gets admitted through affirmative action, as we now know it, DEI," the tech billionaire continued. "This goes straight to the political divide in the country. If you're parents of a kid where I grew up [rural Wisconsin] and you've got a smart kid and you think you're going to get them into, you know, a top university in this country, like you're fooling yourself."
Andreessen drove the point home, adding, "There is this really fundamental question which is, what level of untapped talent exists in this country that a combination of DEI and immigration have basically cut out of the loop for the last 50 years? And how long can we have this story to everybody in the Midwest and in the South that says, sorry, because of historical oppression, your kids are shit out of luck."