
Hillary Clinton turns comments off after posting her take on LA riots
Hillary Clinton turned off comments after she fired a post to X condemning Donald Trump for deploying the National Guard to what she called 'peaceful demonstrations' in Los Angeles.
The former Secretary of State and First Lady slammed Trump in the Tuesday afternoon post.
' California Governor Newsom didn't request the National Guard be deployed to his state following peaceful demonstrations. Trump sent them anyway. It's the first time in 60 years a president has made that choice,' she wrote.
'Trump's goal isn't to keep Californians safe. His goal is to cause chaos, because chaos is good for Trump,' she added.
Many noted that Clinton turned off the comments on her post, not allowing anyone to reply to her opinion.
However, they could still quote tweet and expressed their displeasure with the one-time Democrat nominee for president.
'A public figure and a fraud like herself shouldn't be able to lock her replies,' wrote one, tagging X CEO Elon Musk at the end.
'Turn on your replies. Let the world really see what we think about what you've got to say,' wrote another.
Another asked: 'Ever notice that only leftists disable comments?'
'Nothing shouts accountability like limiting comments,' added another conservative.
One more questioner asked what was on everyone's mind: 'Why are you hiding from comments?'
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth revealed the military will stay in Los Angeles for 60 days to combat violent 'rioters, looters and thugs'' during the immigration riots.
The chaos began on Friday when anti-ICE protesters seized on a handful of police raids across the city, taking to the streets to burn cars and march against what they say are unfair deportations.
Local business owners are outraged as destructive looters continue to target downtown stores as the protests rage on.
President Donald Trump is deploying another 2,000 National Guard troops, along with 700 Marines, to LA today after Monday marked a fourth day of destructive protests.
California has filed a lawsuit over the use of National Guard troops following the first deployment, telling reporters that Trump had 'trampled' the state's sovereignty.
Trump claims the city would have been 'completely obliterated' if he had not deployed the Guard.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass appeared to threaten the looming World Cup as she begged Trump not to deport more migrants on Tuesday.
Bass, speaking at a press conference, said the city's economy will 'collapse' if Trump deports more illegal migrants, and taunted him: 'Don't you want the World Cup to be a success for you?'
She insisted the city is not 'in flames' but slammed vandals spraying graffiti and destroying businesses.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Independent
33 minutes ago
- The Independent
Sen. Rand Paul calls Trump admin ‘incredibly petty' as he's uninvited from White House picnic
Sen. Rand Paul blasted President Donald Trump and his administration as 'incredibly petty' after his family's invitation to a White House picnic for members of Congress was abruptly rescinded. 'I think I'm the first senator in the history of the United States to be uninvited to the White House picnic,' the Kentucky Republican told reporters on Wednesday. 'I just find this incredibly petty. I mean – I have been, I think, nothing but polite to the president.' Trump himself may not see it that way, however, having been angered by Paul's recent opposition to his 'Big, Beautiful Bill.' Paul, a fiscal hawk, briefly formed an alliance with Elon Musk earlier this month when he labelled the president's signature tax and spending legislation 'a huge mistake,' joining the tech billionaire in expressing anxiety about the bill adding as much as $5 trillion to the national debt over the next decade. That led the president to lash out at the senator in a brace of posts on Truth Social, in the first of which he complained: 'Rand Paul has very little understanding of the BBB, especially the tremendous GROWTH that is coming. He loves voting 'NO' on everything, he thinks it's good politics, but it's not. The BBB is a big WINNER!!!' In the second, he griped: 'Rand votes NO on everything, but never has any practical or constructive ideas. His ideas are actually crazy (losers!). The people of Kentucky can't stand him. This is a BIG GROWTH BILL!' Paul also risked Trump's wrath by criticizing the upcoming military parade in Washington, D.C., on Saturday, marking the president's 79th birthday and the 250th anniversary of the founding of the U.S. Army. The senator told reporters he has 'never been a big fan of goose-stepping soldiers in big tanks and missiles rolling down the street,' and compared the event to the sort of triumphalist show of might more commonly associated with the Soviet Union and North Korea. Paul has further provoked the administration by accusing it of 'running sort of a paid influencer campaign against me for two weeks on Twitter.' 'We know they're being paid because... someone has told us that the White House called them from the White House, and offered them money to attack me online,' he said. As if that were not enough, Paul has also attacked Trump's senior adviser Stephen Miller for 'basically going around casually talking about getting rid of habeas corpus.' The picnic blacklisting is nevertheless embarrassing for the senator, who learned of his exclusion when he inquired about picking up his tickets, according to Politico. Paul said he did not know whether Trump himself or a White House staffer had made the decision to cross him off the guest list, but said the 'level of immaturity is beyond words.'


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Democratic governors embrace border security, reject Trump immigrant 'abuses'
WASHINGTON, June 12 (Reuters) - Three prominent Democratic U.S. governors face a grilling on Thursday from a Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives panel over immigration policy, as President Donald Trump steps up a crackdown on people living in the country illegally. The governors of New York, Illinois and Minnesota are due to testify to the House Oversight Committee following days of protests in downtown Los Angeles over the Trump administration's aggressive ramping up of arrests of migrants. Tensions escalated as Trump ordered the National Guard and Marines into California to provide additional security. Trump's immigration crackdown has become a major political flashpoint between the White House and national Democrats. California's Democratic Governor Gavin Newsom, seen as a contender for the party's presidential nomination in 2028, in a Tuesday night video speech accused Trump of choosing "theatrics over public safety." Minnesota's Tim Walz, who ran unsuccessfully for vice president last year; Illinois' JB Pritzker, also seen a 2028 hopeful, and New York's Kathy Hochul, walked a careful line in their prepared testimony for Thursday's hearing, voicing support for immigration enforcement, if not Trump's tactics. "If they are undocumented, we want them out of Illinois and out of our country," Pritzker said. At the same time, Pritzker lashed out against "any violations of the law or abuses of power" and said, "Law-abiding, hardworking, tax-paying people who have been in this country for years should have a path to citizenship." Reuters/Ipsos polls show Trump getting more support for his handling of immigration than any other policy area. "Minnesota is not a sanctuary state," Walz proclaimed, adding that state officials cooperate with federal immigration authorities, while noting that it offers "respect" to cities and counties that choose to give no more than the legal minimum support to the Department of Homeland Security.


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Arnold Schwarzenegger ‘cries' as he admits Trump doesn't like him during Kimmel interview
Former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger jokingly cried after he was quizzed on whether the president liked him during an interview on Jimmy Kimmel Live. Schwarzenegger, a Republican who backed Kamala Harris for the presidency in November's election, was asked by Kimmel Wednesday night whether Donald Trump likes him, as well as what he thought about the Los Angeles riots. 'I think that you're a person who is trusted on both sides and that's very rare nowadays,' Kimmel said. 'I think probably Donald Trump doesn't want you to be trusted because I don't think Donald Trump likes you very much, to be honest.' 'True?' Kimmel jibed while the 77-year-old began to crumple up his face as if he were crying. Schwarzenegger has said in the past that he 'will always be an American before I am a Republican', citing it as a reason for his Harris and Tim Walz vote in November 2024. When asked for his thoughts on the LA anti-ICE protests, he told Kimmel, 'This wouldn't happen if the politicians would do their work. Think about it.' 'The Democrats and the Republican 's have no interest in solving this problem [ immigration ] because they use that to raise money and so what they do is they just keep pointing the finger at each other and then they're surpised if all of a sudden we are using our 'middle finger' on them.' 'It's all bogus because I think we can do better than that,' he added. He added later on, 'The whole thing is to do with deportation. 'Of course, this is a very sensitive subject for me because when I came over to this country, I was living in fear of being deported,' before joking that he was scared he was going to be deported for 'creative reasons.' Having grown up in Austria, Schwarzenegger idolised the United States and the American way of life. 'Everything that I have ever accomplished in my life is because of America – that's the bottom line,' he told Kimmel. Schwarzenegger moved to California in 1968, when he was just 21, despite not being fluent in English, and 'it was a disaster,' he says, because of the political uproar at the time. Yet, he began to pave the way for his career, starting as an established bodybuilder, where he won several world titles after his move. By the 1980s, Schwarzenegger had achieved Hollywood stardom, starring in numerous action movies of the era. He became a US citizen in 1983. A decade later, the star had become increasingly politically active as a Republican, running for the California governorship, where he won, and was sworn in as the 38th Governor of California on November 17, 2003. He was the first foreign-born governor of California since Irish-born Gov. John G. Downey in 1862. During his tenure from 2003 to 2011, Schwarzenegger focused his efforts on reducing California's greenhouse gas emissions, increasing the minimum wage, and updating the state's workers' compensation system. Naturally, physical education and after-school programs were also a core focus of his. He endorsed the After-School Education & Safety Act, which passed in 2002.