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Politics
Swipe, Post, Apply: U.S. Turns Social Media Into a Visa Gatekeeper
U.S. requires Indian student visa applicants to make social media public, tightening digital scrutiny

by: The Washington Eye
In a move that sharpens the intersection between digital life and geopolitical gatekeeping, the U.S. Embassy in India has announced that all applicants for F, M, or J non-immigrant visas—including students and exchange visitors—must ensure their social media accounts are publicly visible before attending their visa interviews. Though framed as a routine vetting enhancement, this shift reflects a growing global trend: the transformation of social media from a personal outlet into a tool for border control.
Digital Identity as Border Infrastructure
In recent years, governments have increasingly turned to social media as an unofficial extension of their border apparatus. The United States began requesting social media identifiers from visa applicants in 2019, but the new directive escalates this protocol by requiring public access to those accounts. The goal, according to U.S. officials, is to allow consular officers to verify identity and detect any perceived threats based on content, affiliations, or ideological expression.
This evolution is not merely administrative—it is philosophical. National borders are no longer guarded only by passports and biometric data, but by the narratives and signals encoded in online lives. What an applicant posts, likes, or comments on can now shape their ability to cross borders. This represents a profound shift in how governments conceptualize security and identity in an age of digital transparency.
Surveillance, Speech, and the Cost of Visibility
The implications for applicants are not limited to logistical hurdles. This policy introduces a clear tension between transparency and personal freedom. Students and exchange visitors—many of whom are politically active or engaged in global conversations—are now forced to weigh the consequences of their online expression against their hopes of international mobility.
By compelling public visibility, the U.S. is effectively flattening the distinction between public speech and personal browsing. Posts that are satirical, political, or critical—particularly in areas like U.S. foreign policy or global human rights—may be scrutinized not in their intended context, but through the lens of national security. For many, especially those from politically volatile or socially repressive regions, this opens the door to self-censorship and diminishes the internet as a space of free discourse.
Passports in the Platform Age
This policy also underscores how access to education and international exchange—long symbols of soft power and global diplomacy—are becoming increasingly conditional on digital conformity. In 2023–24, over 330,000 Indian students were enrolled in U.S. institutions, making India the largest source of international students in the U.S. The new visibility requirement arrives at a time when students are preparing for fall admissions, turning routine social media posts into potential gatekeepers of opportunity.
More broadly, it highlights the growing power asymmetry between states and individuals in the age of data. A visa applicant’s curated digital footprint becomes not only a résumé but a risk profile. The burden to prove innocence—or ideological neutrality—is placed squarely on the individual, even before any in-person engagement with the U.S. immigration system.
A Final Note: The Border Is Now Also Online
By making social media visibility a prerequisite for entry, the U.S. is formalizing what has long been informally true: our online lives are now subject to the same scrutiny as our documents and fingerprints. This development sits at the crossroads of surveillance, migration policy, and global inequality—where the politics of borders increasingly bleed into the politics of platforms. For international students, the implications are clear: in the pursuit of knowledge, even self-expression must now pass through a national security filter.

The Washington Eye
Entertainment
End of an Era: Anna Wintour Steps Down at Vogue After 37 Years
Anna Wintour steps down as Vogue Editor-in-Chief after 37 years, reshaping fashion journalism

by: The Washington Eye
In a move that marks the end of an iconic era in fashion journalism, Anna Wintour is stepping down from her role as Editor-in-Chief of Vogue U.S. after an unprecedented 37-year tenure. The announcement, made on June 26, 2025, has sent ripples across the global fashion community, as Wintour has long been regarded as the most influential figure in modern fashion media. Since assuming the role in 1988, Wintour has reshaped Vogue into not only a trendsetting fashion magazine but also a cultural institution. From placing celebrities like Michelle Obama and Kim Kardashian on the cover to transforming the Met Gala into a global spectacle, Wintour’s vision blurred the lines between high fashion, pop culture, and power.
Although Wintour is relinquishing the Editor-in-Chief title, she is not exiting the stage. She will continue to serve as Global Editorial Director of Vogue and Chief Content Officer at Condé Nast, where she will oversee content strategy across major publications including Vanity Fair, GQ, Architectural Digest, and more. This shift is viewed as a strategic realignment of her responsibilities, allowing her to focus on global editorial priorities and mentor the next generation of media leaders. A new role, “Head of Editorial Content, American Vogue,” will be created to replace the Editor-in-Chief position, though a successor has not yet been named.
Under Wintour’s stewardship, Vogue became synonymous with influence. Her first cover in 1988, which featured model Michaela Bercu wearing jeans and a Christian Lacroix jacket, signaled a departure from traditional glamor and a move toward modern, street-inspired fashion. Over the decades, she championed young designers like Alexander McQueen, John Galliano, and Marc Jacobs, giving them a platform that catapulted their careers. She also led Vogue into the digital age, ensuring the magazine’s relevance in a rapidly evolving media landscape. Her distinct personal style—marked by her signature bob haircut and oversized sunglasses—made her an instantly recognizable cultural icon, parodied and portrayed in everything from Saturday Night Live to The Devil Wears Prada.
Despite her legendary status, Wintour has not been without critics. She has often been described as cold and distant, earning her the nickname “Nuclear Wintour.” In recent years, she has faced scrutiny over issues of diversity and inclusion within Vogue’s pages and leadership ranks. In response, she has taken steps to diversify the brand’s content and staff, and her continued role as Chief Content Officer suggests she will be deeply involved in shaping inclusive editorial strategies across Condé Nast’s portfolio.
At a staff meeting announcing the transition, Wintour explained that her decision reflects a desire to focus on broader, more strategic responsibilities. “Anybody in a creative field knows how essential it is never to stop growing in one’s work,” she said. “Now, I find that my greatest pleasure is helping the next generation of impassioned editors storm the field with their own ideas.” According to Condé Nast CEO Roger Lynch, Wintour’s new configuration will allow her to dedicate time and energy where she’s most needed—mentoring editors and guiding the global vision of the brand. The fashion world now waits to see who will take the editorial reins of American Vogue, and whether they can fill the shoes of a woman who defined fashion publishing for nearly four decades. Wintour’s departure from the Editor-in-Chief role is not a goodbye but a symbolic passing of the torch. Her presence and influence remain deeply embedded in Vogue’s DNA, and her continued leadership at the global level ensures that the Wintour era is far from over. For those who have followed her journey, one thing is clear: while her title may change, her command of the fashion narrative remains firmly

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