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Time To Defund ‘Biased' NPR! PLUS, Kirk Cameron's New Show To Pushback Against ‘Woke' Children's TV

Time To Defund ‘Biased' NPR! PLUS, Kirk Cameron's New Show To Pushback Against ‘Woke' Children's TV

Fox News27-03-2025

Story #1: Will takes you inside the recent spirited and viral debates he's had with Democrats on the 4pm version of 'The Will Cain Show.' Plus, where would you sit on a plane ride full of FOX News personalities?
Story #2: Actor Kirk Cameron debuts a groundbreaking new show 'Iggy & Mr. Kirk' meant to overturn our perception of how modern day television is meant to be for children and families and pushback against in 'Wokeness' of current media.
Story #3: Senator Jim Banks (R-IN) on the defunding of NPR and the confirmation of Dr. Marty Makary and Dr. Jay Bhattacharya to lead America's health agencies.
Tell Will what you thought about this podcast by emailing WillCainShow@fox.com
Subscribe to The Will Cain Show on YouTube here: Watch The Will Cain Show!
Follow Will on Twitter: @WillCain
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Activists shut out of Sacramento immigration hearings following ICE detainment
Activists shut out of Sacramento immigration hearings following ICE detainment

CBS News

time27 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Activists shut out of Sacramento immigration hearings following ICE detainment

There was pushback outside the federal building in Sacramento on Thursday as members of a local activist group say they were prohibited from attending a scheduled immigration hearing that is typically open to the public. The group, NorCal Resist, said some of their volunteers watched as ICE agents detained an immigrant who was there for an appointment. NorCal Resist volunteers say they often accompany immigrants to appointments to observe, document, and support them through their proceedings. But on Thursday, many activists were left outside as the federal building went on lockdown for several hours after the man was detained, and only those with appointments and employees were allowed in, according to CapRadio. "It's a public government building that we have every right to be in," said Giselle Garcia, a volunteer with NorCal Resist. "This is a gross violation of the law that they're doing here." Some activists stayed there through the afternoon, with one activist describing their interaction first-hand to CBS News Sacramento. "It was alarming. There was an armed man who stood in front of me, and I just have a little poster board sign, and there were agents having their faces covered," the protester, who asked not to be named, said. Shortly after 4 p.m., CBS Sacramento saw a caravan of vehicles leaving the federal building, led by a van and unmarked government vehicles. Around half a dozen ICE agents, mostly in masks, exited a gate at the federal building as the vehicles left. ICE has not confirmed the details of its activity in Sacramento. Democratic Congressman Ami Bera, who represents Sacramento County, said President Trump's immigration policies are "creating a culture of fear in our immigrant communities." "We'll support you if you want to go after criminals, but the folks that are not a threat to our community, let's figure out a better way to address that," Bera told CBS Sacramento. Bera told CBS Sacramento that Democrats and Republicans would need to find common ground "to ease tensions in this country." "We're going to have to listen to one another," Bera said. "I want us to come together as a country, so let's do it." Republican Congressman Kevin Kiley spoke to media members over Zoom on Thursday and said that California and the City of Los Angeles have each passed policies that "have encouraged lawlessness" and "a breakdown of order." "Unfortunately, we had political leaders as well who added fuel to that fire with irresponsible and inflammatory rhetoric," Kiley said.

How ICE Raids Have Impacted Texas Rapper HOODLUM's Hometown
How ICE Raids Have Impacted Texas Rapper HOODLUM's Hometown

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

How ICE Raids Have Impacted Texas Rapper HOODLUM's Hometown

HOODLUM in 'Just Left Walgreens,' directed by DGreenFilmz. Graphic by Chris Panicker. One of the best Texas rap songs of the year isn't as easy to find as it should be. There are two ways to listen to HOODLUM's 'Better Dayz (Freestyle)': directly on his Instagram page or hidden on the second half of another video called 'Just Left Walgreens.' 'As soon as I posted the song, YouTube banned it right away,' claims HOODLUM, on FaceTime from the front porch of his crib in Houston, where he's moved from his hometown of San Antonio. 'They said I was interfering with votes or some shit, and it was the second time, so they took it down.' 'Better Dayz (Freestyle)' rolls in at the 1:50 mark of 'Just Left Walgreens' with a news clip from earlier this year: 'The president, in his first week in office, is already enforcing an immigration crackdown that has instilled fear in some major cities.' (The video also features him flexing a Cybertruck.) Then, backdropped by a woozy instrumental moving at half-speed, HOODLUM, in his cracked voice that sounds like he just got done ripping an entire carton of cigarettes, vents about the terror and community division that has been caused by the surging presence of ICE—the United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency conducting mass raids across the country—in San Antonio, where a sizable portion of the population, including HOODLUM, is Mexican. 'My dawg kid got no papers, she might die 'cause a fever/They could run in the church, so don't be trustin' the preacher/They could run in the school, so don't be trustin' the teacher,' he raps with a heavy heart. It's a really good song, not only because of the strong message, but also because HOODLUM's mumbly, leaned-out rap-sing sounds naturally chopped and screwed and gives his memories the feel of a melancholic dream sequence. On his standout tapes, such as 2023's Southside Story and last year's Brown in America, with the simmering, sample-heavy Texas funk of his go-to producer, bigtexjohnny, as the backbone, HOODLUM uses his flow—which, on occasion, is nearly inaudible—to dig into nostalgic, hardened scenes of hustling, getting high, and hanging with friends and family amid fears of death and going broke. And 'Better Dayz (Freestyle),' isn't the first or last time HOODLUM has tackled political turmoil head on. A few years ago, after the end of the the first Trump administration, he wrote 'B.I.A (Brown in Amerikka),' where, in a groove that recalls the heyday of G-funk, he sang, 'And it was all good 'til ICE started rolling through the hood,' alongside stories of drug deals and crooked cops. The song's video apparently got him his first YouTube strike. Then, this week, following the protests against ICE in Los Angeles that led to President Trump sending in the National Guard, and ICE's ongoing sweeps at court hearings and on college campuses in San Antonio, he dropped a snippet of new song 'Burn It Down' on his Instagram account. 'Say they coming for us, they can't take us all,' he says, fired up, over a gloomy piano riff. It's not a protest anthem, just a moment of rage and confusion that comes from watching your hometown get torn apart. One evening, earlier this week, I had a FaceTime conversation with HOODLUM. He smoked and spoke candidly while kids played in the background. We chatted about Texas rap, the effect ICE has had on San Antonio, and his role as a marquee rapper from a city that doesn't have too many, especially in a social media climate where information is buried by algorithms looking to push and normalize the ultra-conservative political agendas of Silicon Valley and the Trump administration. HOODLUM: Houston is more mixed. In my neighborhood, there's only, like, one other Mexican family. Everyone else is white, Black, Arab, or Asian. Where I'm from on the southwest side of San Antonio, it was either Black or Mexican. It's small and big at the same time, and everyone is really together. Not really, but there was some. There was this guy named There was King Kyle Lee and Liveola. Sometimes Chamillionaire would come down from Houston and go to the flea markets on the southside, sign people, and throw them on CDs. But it was never a big scene; it was always on the backs of Houston. Some, but my first CDs were probably OutKast's Southernplayalistic and that one AZ album [Doe or Die]. I always wanted to go to New York. I liked 2Pac. Wayne. Bankroll Fresh. A lot of Latin music, too. I liked stuff with a lot of samples. I always wanted to sample stuff like Curtis Mayfield, the Isley Brothers, and Sunny Ozuna. Probably Frank Sinatra, 'Jesus Is a Rock.' There's this one part that I feel like me and John [aka producer bigtexjohnny] could make really dark, turn it into some 'I Feel Like Dying' type shit. Z-Ro, because of the melodies and beat choices. He would rap on fuckin' Sade or whatever. Devin the Dude, I'd always listen to his Greatest Hits (Screwed). He's the one person I really want on my next album. At first, it kind of just happened and I started just pushing it even further. But I was really into Wayne and I just started trying to drag my voice out as long as possible over all these Curtis Mayfield samples or whatever. One of my favorite Waynes is when he rapped on 'Dear Summer,' or the era when he was really into New York. That's part of why I liked New York so much. It's just all I knew. I didn't know anything outside of San Antonio until my music started blowing up and, all of a sudden, I was in, like, Europe and shit, Norwegian kids rapping my lyrics, tripping me the fuck out. I'm just documenting my life, and people don't always pick everything up because I'm rapping so slow, but, if you catch it, I'll be saying some shit. Like 'Brown in Amerikka,' I wrote that years ago just because they [ICE] would just be in the neighborhood everyday from the morning 'til 4 o'clock. We would know not to answer the door. At first, not really, because it was never something I did intentionally. I would just be writing what's going on in my head. Like, I remember we couldn't even have holidays—Thanksgiving, Christmas, July 4th—because those are the days they would come gather up your whole family. It was just fucked up. I liked how Wayne did it when Katrina hit. Like 'Georgia… Bush' isn't just rapping your ear off about it the whole time. It's still a Wayne song. So now whenever I do get into politics, I make sure that it still sounds like my songs. It's always felt like everyone has looked at us Chicanos as less than, and we never cared, but it's weird now. You feel it now. It could be a white person, a Chinese person, a Black person, even though in San Antonio the Black people and Mexicans have always been together. It's the internet and this Trump shit. Everyone is feeling bolder about it. Like, bro, what are we doing? They're hunting kids. Yeah, they're getting money to capture kids. It's kinda been this way since the beginning, though. My dad is 73; I heard the stories of when it was cool for the Navy men to come and take girls and cut their hair and rape your girlfriend. In high school, I would get paid to help bring kids to their families, and they would be so grateful to make it. All of this gets swept under the rug, like when I rapped, 'Kids askin' mom, like, 'Is Trump gon' take you?'' that shit is really happening. Yeah, they're taking good people, bro. Like, the part at the beginning of 'Brown in Amerikka,' that happened in San Antonio. A bunch of people in a 18-wheeler just tryna come here for a better life and the cartel left them there and they all suffocated and died. And they're going harder at certain people. It's fucked up, man. And they're really tryin' to divide us. Online, they're accounts telling Black people to not stand with us, but this is about all of us. Like, when those protests happened a few years ago, the Mexicans that knew it was the right thing to do were there. I think it's good. I don't know if the government would try all that military shit in San Antonio; we're really the majority. They would have to take everybody. But you never fucking know; they're close to the majority in L.A., too. Right now, they still try to keep it under the radar; they're real sneaky about it. It could 'cause people are finally tired of it. I'll see an old Mexican man and he'll never ever tell you everything he's done in his life. But I just know he's worked his ass off. All these families worked their ass off. No one ever told them thank you for helping keep this country alive. They never asked for any credit and this is what they get. Speaking out more is good. I don't know; I would share it even if I wasn't a rapper. I don't even know if people really even want to hear that shit from us. Nobody wants to hear disturbing shit all the time. Life's really hard, bro. But sometimes you need it to fuel the fire. Honestly, what they're doing in L.A. Every person actually standing up and saying something. There's no other way. Because no one is going to see you if you don't make yourself seen. Originally Appeared on Pitchfork

Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term
Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term

The Democratic Party has been without a leader since losing the White House in November, and as Democrats navigate President Donald Trump's second administration, they've developed some unlikely alliances. From violent protests erupting in Los Angeles to the defense of controversial deportees and accused extremists, the party's fractured response to Trump's agenda has drawn scrutiny not just from the right, but from within its own ranks. Amid the chaos unfolding in Los Angeles, Trump said those protesting and rioting against Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) are "not protesters, they are troublemakers and insurrectionists." Images emerged this weekend of rioters setting cars on fire and large swaths of protesters shutting down highways as Trump federalized the National Guard for the first time since 1965. He ordered National Guardsmen and Marines to Los Angeles to protect federal immigration agents during the ongoing arrests. Led by California Gov. Gavin Newsom, long considered a potential 2028 presidential candidate, Democrats have railed against Trump and rallied behind the anti-ICE protesters. Democrat Accuses Trump Of Unleashing 'Campaign Of Terror' On Illegals As La Riots Rage Read On The Fox News App "This brazen abuse of power by a sitting president inflamed a combustible situation, putting our people, our officers, and the National Guard at risk," Newsom said. Ice Ramps Up Arrests Of Convicted Criminals As Riots Rage In Blue City: 'You Will Not Stop Us' And Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., said on NBC, "A lot of these peaceful protests are being generated because the president of the United States is sowing chaos." "The vast majority of protesters and demonstrators are peaceful," Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif., said on MSNBC. "They're passionate." Kilmar Abrego Garcia, a Salvadoran national deported from Maryland earlier this year, is set to face federal charges for human smuggling and conspiracy, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced Friday. For months, Democrats have ridiculed the Trump administration for deporting Abrego Garcia to a high-security prison in his home country, El Salvador. Returning Abrego Garcia to the U.S. became a major cause for the Democratic Party. Sen. Chris Van Hollen, D-Md., was the first of several lawmakers to travel to El Salvador to visit Abrego Garcia this year, sparking social media backlash after being photographed with purported margaritas at a restaurant. "As I have repeatedly said, this is not about the man, it's about his constitutional rights and the rights of all. The administration will now have to make its case in the court of law, as it should have all along," Van Hollen said Friday. Abrego Garcia is accused of being a member of the violent Salvadoran gang MS-13. According to court records filed by his wife, Jennifer Vasquez Sura, he also allegedly physically abused her on multiple occasions. Kilmar Abrego Garcia Indicted On Human Trafficking Charges, Ordered To Appear Before Judge In Nashville Earlier Friday, another Maryland Democrat, Rep. Glenn Ivey, who also made a trip to El Salvador to advocate for Abrego Garcia, used his X account to promote an event to continue the "critical conversation on the fight to return those who are wrongfully imprisoned in El Salvador." And Maryland Gov. Wes Moore celebrated the news of Abrego Garcia's return, telling Fox News Digital, "I want to thank our federal delegation for their efforts to ensure our government adheres to the rule of law." Moore said it was "never about one person, but about the due process that governs all people in our country." Earlier this year, few Democrats were willing to denounce vandalism on Tesla showrooms, charging stations and vehicles, even as Attorney General Pam Bondi labeled the attacks "domestic terrorism," an issue Democrats have railed against for years. What began as protests against Elon Musk and his leadership at the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) escalated into violent incidents, including shots fired at a building, destroyed dealership windows and charging stations set on fire. In an interview with Fox News' Bret Baier on "Special Report" in March, Musk blamed Democrat leaders' anti-DOGE rhetoric for the surge in violence against his company. Sen. John Fetterman, a Pennsylvania Democrat who has earned a reputation for bucking his party on key issues like immigration and supporting Israel, dissed Democrats for suddenly backing Musk amid the billionaire's social media spat with Trump. Dems Who Have Spoken Passionately Against Domestic Terrorism Go Silent As Tesla Torchers Are Charged "The Dems, we've been dumping all over Musk and vandalizing Teslas or whatever, and now, suddenly, we might be more back into him," Fetterman said, calling out Democrats' inconsistency. Trump told Fox News' Laura Ingraham that Democrats lost big in November because they're backing "90% negative issues," including support for Mahmoud Khalil, the Columbia University activist who was arrested and faced deportation for his alleged support of the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas. "Backing Khalil is not a great issue, but backing Khalil is better than backing these other hundreds of people that are really serious criminals. It's probably a step better than that," Trump told Ingraham. Secretary of State Marco Rubio accused Khalil of participating in "antisemitic protests and disruptive activities, which foster a hostile environment for Jewish students in the United States." "Condoning antisemitic conduct and disruptive protests in the United States would severely undermine that significant foreign policy objective," Rubio said, defending his move to revoke Khalil's green card over his alleged affiliation with the terrorist group, Hamas. But more than 100 Democrats sent a letter accusing the Trump administration of a "brazen attempt to use the power of the United States government to silence and punish people who do not agree with the sitting President" by arresting Khalil. The Democrats requested documentation of the "reasonable grounds" for his arrest and affirmed his "constitutional right in our democracy to express his political views." Ivy League Anti-israel Ringleader Mahmoud Khalil Withheld Details Of Foreign Ties From Visa Application: Feds The procedural request followed a fiery letter sent by 14 House Democrats, including "Squad" members Reps. Rashida Tlaib, Illhan Omar and Ayanna Pressley, demanding Khalil's release and labeling his detention an "illegal abduction" and violation of the First Amendment. Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez called the arrest "inhumane" and "unconstitutional." Tlaib, who is the only Palestinian American in Congress and was censured last year for her criticism of U.S. policy on the war in Gaza, said the Trump administration's "illegal actions set a dangerous precedent" and called to "free Mahmoud Khalil." Earlier this year, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer faced backlash from his own party after voting for the Republican-proposed continuing resolution to avert a government shutdown. Soon after, a Siena College poll found Schumer's favorability was down at 39% among New York state voters questioned in the poll, which was conducted April 14-16. Meanwhile, Ocasio-Cortez's favorability soared to 47% as rumors swirled about her ambitions for higher office. Texas Democrat Rep. Jasmine Crockett said the Schumer criticism among donors was "reminiscent" of when former President Joe Biden was "taken down" before the 2024 presidential election. Embattled Dnc Vice Chair Decides Not To Run After Diversity Re-vote Called And former DNC Vice Chair David Hogg sparked intraparty conflict this year when he vowed $20 million through his outside political action group, Leaders We Deserve, to primary challenge older House Democrats in safe blue districts he said are "asleep at the wheel." After months of growing tension between DNC officials, Hogg announced he would not compete in the new vice chair election after a majority of members voted for a new contest in the wake of a procedural error in the Feb. 1 elections. But the DNC has a different take on their response to Trump's second term. "The American people think Donald Trump is off the rails — they oppose his deployment of troops to LA, they don't support his budget bill to give handouts to the rich, and they don't trust him to run the economy," DNC spokesperson Aida Ross told Fox News Digital. "That's why Trump has the lowest approval ratings of any modern president at this point in his term. Democrats on the other hand are on a record-breaking streak, winning and overperforming in elections across the map this year, including in red states." Fox News Digital's Andrew Mark Miller, Peter Pinedo and Jasmine Baehr contributed to this report. Original article source: Democrats forge strange bedfellows as party flounders in Trump's 2nd term

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