logo
Did a Tourist Get Blocked From the U.S. Over a J.D. Vance Meme?

Did a Tourist Get Blocked From the U.S. Over a J.D. Vance Meme?

Time​ Magazine4 hours ago

'Two pictures spoiled Mads' dream vacation,' read a headline from Norwegian newspaper Nordlys on Monday, which was amplified by British tabloid the Daily Mail on Tuesday.
Mads Mikkelsen—not the Danish actor but a 21-year-old tourist from Norway—told his hometown outlet that he was denied entry to the U.S. at Newark Liberty International Airport on June 11 after handing over his phone to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials who came across a meme of U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance.
Mikkelsen claimed the officials threatened him with a $5,000 fine or five years in prison if he refused to give the password to his mobile device and that, after he relented and it was scrutinized, he was sent back to Norway.
On social media, anti-Trump influencers including former Republican congressman Adam Kinzinger and #Resistance movement activist Brian Krassenstein, among others, shared reports of the denial of entry and encouraged the spreading of more Vance memes, which became popular after President Donald Trump's explosive meeting with Volodomyr Zelensky in the Oval Office in February, when Vance demanded the Ukrainian President say 'thank you' to Trump.
'These are the same people who blame Europe for a lack of free speech,' disinformation researcher Pekka Kallioniemi posted on X about the Trump Administration in relation to the story.
Tricia McLaughlin, a spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security, which oversees ICE and Customs and Border Protection (CBP), called the claims of Mikkelsen's denied entry over the Vance meme 'FALSE' and 'BS.'
CBP said in a post on X that 'Mads Mikkelsen was not denied entry for any memes or political reasons, it was for his admitted drug use.'
The second photo seen by the ICE officials, by Mikkelsen's own admission, was a wooden pipe he'd made himself a few years ago. He also told Nordlys that the officials asked him 'direct questions about drug smuggling, terrorist plots, and right-wing extremism' and that he had been forced to give a blood sample.
It remains unclear why Mikkelsen was subjected to heightened scrutiny. CBP did not answer TIME's requests for comment.
The bigger picture
Tighter immigration controls, however, have become a cornerstone of Trump's second term.
Besides an outright ban on nationals from certain countries and heightened vigilance on nationals from others, the Trump Administration has required immigration officials to improve vetting procedures for some non-immigrant visas, including social media screening of international student visa applicants. DHS also announced in April that authorities would begin screening the social media accounts of undocumented immigrants in the U.S. for 'antisemitic activity.'
While border agents have long been empowered to deny entry on a case-by-case basis, reports of increased scrutiny, detentions, and denials of tourists have proliferated in recent months.
Some incidents have sparked concerns about border agents' discretion becoming politicized. In March, a French minister deplored how a researcher for the French National Center for Scientific Research was denied entry to the U.S. after authorities found 'personal opinion on the Trump administration's research policy' on his phone. And just last week, border agents reportedly sent back an Australian writer to Melbourne from Los Angeles after they interrogated him about his views on the conflict in Gaza.
Some countries, including China, Denmark, and Finland, have issued travel advisories to their citizens about heading to the U.S. in response to various Trump policies.
Amid all this, travelers are increasingly turning away from the U.S., and the World Travel & Tourism Council said the U.S. economy is set to lose $12.5 billion in international traveler spending this year.
There's not much visitors can do if border officials want to deny them entry. You have the right to remain silent, an immigration lawyer told the New York Times, but a border officer is likely to deny you entry as a result. And if they detain you instead of sending you back right away, they can hold you for up to 90 days.
Nate Freed Wessler, a lawyer at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), told the Guardian that after landing on an international flight but before clearing customs, you have fewer civil rights than you do elsewhere in the U.S. 'The normal Fourth Amendment requirement of a warrant or individualized suspicion doesn't apply,' he said. 'The only minimal protection CBP has in their policy is distinguishing between manual and forensic searches,' he added, explaining that a forensic search of a mobile phone, for example, involves plugging it into another device to analyze it, while a manual search includes scrolling through its contents. 'For a forensic search, they say they need reasonable suspicion, but they don't define what that means. For a manual search, there are no guardrails. They argue it's less invasive, but that's just not true. They can still do keyword searches and spend hours combing through your device.'
'Keep calm (but delete your nudes)' advised the Guardian's headline for tourists headed to the U.S. WIRED has advised traveling with a separate phone altogether—though a phone that appears 'too squeaky clean,' it warns, 'can arouse suspicion'—or at the very least minimizing risk by printing your boarding pass and any other documents you may need to present so you can avoid taking your phone out of your pocket.
Noor Zafar, a senior staff attorney with the ACLU's Immigrants' Rights Project, told the Washington Post that travelers should keep the contact information of an immigration attorney in case they run into complications at the border.
'The stories are definitely concerning,' Zafar said in March. 'I think we're just in a period of more aggressive policies being implemented at the border. And I think that requires people to take extra precautionary measures.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

NATO commits to higher spending sought by Trump and mutual defense
NATO commits to higher spending sought by Trump and mutual defense

USA Today

time16 minutes ago

  • USA Today

NATO commits to higher spending sought by Trump and mutual defense

While Trump got what he wanted at the brief NATO summit, his allies will be relieved he committed to the fundamental principle of collective defense. THE HAGUE, June 25 (Reuters) - NATO leaders on June 25 backed the big increase in defense spending that President Donald Trump had demanded, and restated their commitment to defend each other from attack. While Trump got what he wanted at the brief summit, tailor-made for him, his NATO allies will be relieved that he committed to the fundamental principle of collective defense after less clear-cut language on June 24. In a five-point statement, NATO endorsed a higher defence spending goal of 5% of GDP by 2035 - a response not only to Trump but also to Europeans' fears that Russia poses a growing threat to their security following the 2022 invasion of Ukraine. More: Israel-Iran ceasefire seems to hold as Trump lands in Europe for NATO summit The 32 allies' brief communique added: "We reaffirm our ironclad commitment to collective defense as enshrined in Article 5 of the Washington Treaty – that an attack on one is an attack on all." Asked to clarify his own stance on Article 5, Trump said: "I stand with it. That's why I'm here. If I didn't stand with it, I wouldn't be here." Macron brings up trade war at NATO summit Trump had long demanded in no uncertain terms that for other countries step up their spending on defense to reduce NATO's heavy reliance on the U.S. Despite an appearance of general agreement, French President Emmanuel Macron raised the issue of the steep import tariffs threatened by Trump, and the damage they may do to transatlantic trade, as a barrier to increased defense spending. More: Can Trump pull off peace plans, trade deals at the G7? What to know about the summit "You cannot come to us as allies and ask that we spend more, tell us we will spend more at NATO - and do a trade war. It's an aberration," he told reporters. NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, who hosted the summit in his home city of The Hague, said NATO would emerge as a 'stronger, fairer and more lethal' alliance. He had earlier acknowledged that it was not easy for European countries and Canada to find the extra money, but said it was vital to do so. "There is absolute conviction with my colleagues at the table that, given this threat from the Russians, given the international security situation, there is no alternative," the former Dutch prime minister told reporters in his home city of The Hague. The new spending target - to be achieved over the next 10 years - is a jump worth hundreds of billions of dollars a year from the current goal of 2% of GDP, although it will be measured differently. Countries would spend 3.5% of GDP on core defence - such as troops and weapons - and 1.5% on broader defence-related measures such as cyber security, protecting pipelines and adapting roads and bridges to handle heavy military vehicles. All NATO members have backed a statement enshrining the target, although Spain declared it does not need to meet the goal and can meet its commitments by spending much less. More: Trump says US strike impaired Iran's nukes. What does Pentagon say? Live updates Rutte disputes that but accepted a diplomatic fudge with Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez as part of his efforts to give Trump a diplomatic victory and make the summit go smoothly. Spain said on June 25 that it did not expect its stance to have any repercussions. Trump meets Zelenskyy after summit Rutte kept the summit and its final statement short and focused on the spending pledge to try to avert any friction with Trump. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy had to settle for attending the pre-summit June 24 dinner rather than the main meeting on June 25, although he met Trump separately after the conference ended. The Kremlin on June 24 accused NATO of being on a path of rampant militarization and portraying Russia as a "fiend of hell" in order to justify its big increase in defense spending.

Mushy Wording Lets NATO Commit to Trump's Military Spending Demand
Mushy Wording Lets NATO Commit to Trump's Military Spending Demand

New York Times

time17 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Mushy Wording Lets NATO Commit to Trump's Military Spending Demand

NATO leaders agreed on Wednesday to a goal of spending 5 percent of their gross domestic product on defense. But that doesn't mean each member nation will actually spend that much. The difference lies in a bit of mushy diplomatic language that lets the NATO secretary general, Mark Rutte, claim that he delivered on a spending demand issued by President Trump. The brief and unanimously approved communiqué that NATO issued after leaders wrapped up their annual summit says that 'allies' — not 'all allies' — had agreed to the 5 percent figure. Mr. Trump floated that target, up from the current 2 percent, early this year in a push to have Europe and Canada spend more on their militaries instead of relying on the United States for security. At the time, few believed it was realistic, given that nine of NATO's 32 member countries still had not reached the 2 percent spending pledge that was set in 2014. Several were balking at the 5 percent commitment as recently as Wednesday, emboldened by an assertion last weekend by Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez of Spain that 'we're not going to do it.' Mr. Sanchez said Spain would spend 2.1 percent of its G.D.P. on defense, 'no more, no less,' because that was all his country needed to meet military capability targets set by NATO. Spain currently spends about 1.28 percent of G.D.P. on defense, according to the most recent official figures available. The language compromise, struck between Mr. Sanchez and Mr. Rutte last weekend, let both sides claim victory. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store