logo
Fox News Host Gleefully Mocks ICE Barbie's ‘Performance' Art

Fox News Host Gleefully Mocks ICE Barbie's ‘Performance' Art

Yahoo12 hours ago

Jessica Tarlov pushed back on her Fox News colleagues who claimed that Alex Padilla's confrontation Thursday with Kristi Noem was an obvious photo op orchestrated by the California senator by reminding her co-hosts that the Homeland Security Secretary is 'in a costume all the time.'
On The Five, Tarlov alluded to Noem's frequent dress-up excursions in the field—as a firefighter, a pilot, an Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent, a Coast Guard boat operator, and a headscarf-wearing camel rider—after Greg Gutfeld described Padilla's video evidence of being wrestled to the ground and cuffed as the 'ultimate photo op.'
'Coming from the administration and a particular secretary who loves the performance art—she's in a costume all the time, she's doing a reality TV show of arresting migrants and showing up at CECOT,' Tarlov said as Gutfeld interrupted.
'You can't make us believe this is real anymore, Jessica,' he told her. 'The 'boy who cried wolf' story—I hate to bring it up, but we don't buy this B.S.'
Since taking office, Noem has become known as 'ICE Barbie' due to her predilection for getting all dolled up in mission-appropriate outfits while tagging along with ICE officers. In the span of just four days in March, she also pretended to be a firefighter, a pilot, a member of the Maritime Security Response Team, and a U.S. Customs and Border Protection officer.
During another one of her trips to the southern border, Noem drew widespread mockery for appearing to point a rifle at an immigration officer's head. The former South Dakota governor was also criticized for filming a video in El Salvador's notorious CECOT mega-prison—while wearing what appeared to be a $60,000 gold Rolex.
Optics seem to be quite important to Noem. Last month, The Daily Mail reported that her department was even in the process of pitching a reality television show in which immigrants would compete in challenges, with the winner obtaining citizenship.
Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told the Daily Beast then that Noem hadn't reviewed the pitch, which was 'in the very beginning stages.' Noem, unnamed sources told The Daily Mail, supported the endeavor.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Southern California father who is U.S. citizen, arrested during immigration raid, family says
Southern California father who is U.S. citizen, arrested during immigration raid, family says

The Hill

time43 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Southern California father who is U.S. citizen, arrested during immigration raid, family says

(KTLA) – Family members are demanding answers after they say a man who is a U.S. citizen was wrongfully arrested by federal agents during an immigration raid in Montebello. On June 12, surveillance video captured the moment several masked and armed agents surrounded a tow truck business in Montebello. The agents quickly entered the property and began detaining mechanics and other workers at the site. One of the detained men who was later released spoke to KTLA but asked not to be identified out of safety concerns. He said he was violently grabbed and taken by the agents despite being a U.S. citizen. 'He slammed me to the gate,' the man told KTLA's Ellina Abovian. 'He put my hands behind my back. I'm an American citizen. You do not do that to Americans.' Nataly Degante, whose cousin, Javier Ramirez, 32, was arrested in the raid, said that while agents began handcuffing everyone, they reportedly never provided identification or information about why they were there. 'We see in the video that they don't come with a warrant,' she said. 'They don't have any documentation in their hands.' Degante said her cousin is a U.S. citizen and a single father of two young children. She described him as a hard worker with no criminal record. Video of the raid shows some workers being moved to the ground as agents quickly handcuffed them. Ramirez is also seen on the video yelling to the agents that he's a citizen. 'He's telling them he is a U.S. citizen and he's letting them know, 'My passport is in my pocket,'' Degante said. However, Ramirez was handcuffed and taken into custody. His brother tried following Ramirez's location through his cell phone's tracking app, but the signal was eventually lost. His family has not heard from him since. 'We haven't heard anything about him,' said Abimael Dominguez, his brother. 'He's diabetic. I don't even know if he has insulin yet or has he eaten? We don't know anything. ' It remains unclear whether the agents were with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) or the Department of Homeland Security (DHS). Some of the agents appeared to be wearing uniforms with a Border Patrol insignia. 'I voted, but not for this,' said the man who was detained and later released. 'I'm an American citizen. I want the best for all of us. I feel like there is due process that we must follow.' 'They're not only taking criminals, they are taking our community,' Degante said. As of Friday afternoon, Homeland Security has not responded to KTLA's request for comment about why Ramirez was detained or whether he was wanted for any crimes.

As Trump celebrates Army's founding, his critics take to the streets
As Trump celebrates Army's founding, his critics take to the streets

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

As Trump celebrates Army's founding, his critics take to the streets

Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up But no celebration of history takes place in a political vacuum. And protesters in large cities and small towns from Seattle to Key West, Florida, showed up to demonstrate against how Trump is making use of the modern force. His decisions over the past week to federalize the National Guard and call Marines into the streets of Los Angeles, in support of his immigration roundups, have rekindled a debate about whether he is abusing the powers of the commander in chief. Advertisement So even before Trump presided over the parade, the country was divided by a split-screen show of force. Roughly 2,000 protests, under the slogan 'No Kings,' pushed back against what the crowds decried as authoritarian overreach. While big-city rallies attracted the attention and the cameras, smaller events were organized in rural areas, including three dozen in Indiana, a state Trump won last November by 19 points. Advertisement In Dallas, another stronghold of Trump's support, crowds of protesters stretched across a wide street for at least five blocks. The Houston protest looked more like a block party, with dances to Mexican music and cool-offs in a fountain. In Pittsburgh, on a clear day, there was a festival atmosphere, with some chanting 'Shut ICE down,' a reference to U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. In Waukesha, Wisconsin, about 1,500 people marched through the streets in an area where Trump had won with 59 percent of the vote. 'This is beyond my wildest dreams,' said Dawn Lawien, an organizer. And even in downtown Los Angeles, the National Guard members stationed on Broadway near the federal courthouse were not the target of the crowd's anger; Trump was. Protesters fist-bumped the troops and thanked them for their service. Elected leaders and law enforcement officials in California and across the country encouraged protesters to remain peaceful, and organizers of the No Kings demonstrations called on participants to focus on 'nonviolent action.' In Houston, some demonstrators handed out flowers to police officers who were securing the route of the protest. But Saturday opened with an ominous turn in Minnesota when a person pretending to be a police officer assassinated a Democratic state lawmaker and attempted to kill a second. Authorities subsequently asked people to refrain from attending 'No Kings' events in the state, reporting that materials referencing the gatherings were found in the vehicle of the suspect, who remained at large Saturday afternoon. Advertisement Back in Washington, organizers of the America250 events, for which this is the first big production, were selling a 'dedicated VIP experience' to large donors, and red MAGA hats to the president's supporters. It is also Trump's 79th birthday, though he has insisted the celebration is about the Army, not him. The streets will be filled, organizers say, with veterans of the Korea and Vietnam conflicts, along with those who fought in Afghanistan and Iraq, two wars that Trump — and many Democrats — have declared were wastes of lives and money. Trump has defended the spending of as much as $45 million — including the cost of repairing Washington's streets from the damage expected from rolling 60-ton tanks down Constitution Avenue — as a small price to pay to stoke national pride and to remind the world of America's hard power. He told an interviewer on NBC last month that the price tag was 'peanuts compared to the value of doing it.' 'We have the greatest missiles in the world,' he continued. 'We have the greatest submarines in the world. We have the greatest Army tanks in the world. We have the greatest weapons in the world. And we're going to celebrate it.' But to some of Trump's critics, it is conduct unbecoming a superpower. In the first Trump term, that view was shared by military leaders who dissuaded him from replicating the French show of force. They have since been ousted, replaced by true believers like Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, a former Fox News pundit who is expected to stand alongside Trump in the reviewing stand. Advertisement Trump's political advisers are betting that half the country or more will enjoy watching the display of Army history — there will be World War I tanks and World War II equipment — and his 'America First' declarations. Parades are pure showmanship, and Trump is the master showman. Yet a military parade is also an unvarnished celebration of America's hard power, even if this one is dominated by huge equipment, like the M-1 Abrams tank, that seems antiquated in an age of drones and cyberweapons. And it comes at a moment the administration has been ridiculing as wasteful such efforts as global aid, battling HIV or backing basic research at universities that Trump has gone to war against. The parade's estimated cost will amount to about one-fifth of the annual budget of the Voice of America, which had millions of listeners around the world until Trump took it off the air this spring. The protests, which organizers deliberately kept outside Washington to avoid focusing more attention on the military celebration, have been planned for many weeks, as opposition to the administration's efforts to dismiss expert opinion, oust the 'deep state' and silence critics have mounted. Trump's decision to move 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines into Los Angeles asserted a role for the military at home, which was exactly what had given the Continental Congress pause about creating a colonial army at all. Now that same concern, 250 years later, is expected to give the weekend protests mass and weight. They have been further fueled by Trump's speech at Fort Bragg in North Carolina last week, when he lumped peaceful protesters with 'troublemakers, agitators, insurrectionists,' and later said anyone protesting in Washington would be met with 'very big force.' Advertisement In the run-up to the parade, those differences broke out on Capitol Hill, when Hegseth defended the use of troops at home and suggested preparations were underway 'if there are other riots, in places where law enforcement officers are threatened,' so that 'we would have the capability to surge National Guard there.' Organizers of the protest marches range from the American Civil Liberties Union to abortion rights and gun violence groups, but also include the 'Hands Off!' protesters who argue Trump has threatened Social Security, Medicaid and education budgets. They they have folded together, though, under the 'No Kings' group, which has called for a 'day of defiance' Saturday. 'We want to create contrast,' said Leah Greenberg, co-founder of a group called Indivisible organize the protest in Philadelphia, where the Continental Congress met to create that first army force. 'Not conflict.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store