logo
‘Environment of fear': Popular US leftist Twitch streamer Hasan Piker says he was grilled about Trump by Customs agents at Chicago airport

‘Environment of fear': Popular US leftist Twitch streamer Hasan Piker says he was grilled about Trump by Customs agents at Chicago airport

Independent13-05-2025

Federal customs agents allegedly subjected Hasan Piker, one of the country's most popular progressive online streamers, to lengthy questioning at a Chicago airport over the weekend about his views on Trump and the war in Gaza, prompting concern from civil liberties advocates.
'The reason for why they're doing that is I think to try to create an environment of fear, to try to get people like myself, or at least others that would be in my shoes that don't have that same level of security, to shut the f*** up,' Piker, a U.S. citizen, later said on a stream, suggesting the administration wanted to 'get something out of me that I think they could use to basically detain me permanently.'
The commentator, who has nearly 3 million followers on Twitch, said agents seemed aware of his past videos and asked him about his opinions on President Trump, if he'd interviewed members of militant groups like the Houthis and Hezbollah, and whether he considered Hamas a terror organization or a resistance group.
'I kept repeating the same statement over and over again,' Piker said of his responses to the questioning. 'I kept saying ... I'm on the side of civilians. I want the endless bloodshed to end. I am a pacifist. I want wars to end.'
The Independent has contacted the White House and Customs and Border Patrol for comment.
Civil liberties experts condemned Piker's alleged questioning.
'No U.S. citizen should be detained by law enforcement, at the border or anywhere, because of their protected speech,' Ari Cohn, of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression free speech watchdog group, wrote on X.
If Piker was in fact singled out because of his views, it would mark an escalation of the Trump administration's continued campaign to prosecute activists and academics it deems as holding unacceptable views, which has so far concentrated on non-citizens.
Tufts University scholar Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish doctoral student, was held in immigration detention for six weeks and continues facing potential deportation after co-writing an op-ed with Tufts students in a student newspaper that criticized Israel's war in Gaza.
'Simply and purely,' she was detained for 'the expression she made or shared in the op-ed' critical of Israel, Louisiana federal Judge William K. Sessions III said in a ruling this week granting the Ozturk bail.
'I put the government on notice they should introduce any such evidence ... That was three weeks ago, and there has been no evidence,' Sessions said. 'That literally is the case. There is no evidence here as to the motivation, absent consideration of the op-ed.'
The Trump administration is also reportedly using artificial intelligence to "catch and revoke" the visas of foreign students who officials perceive as supporting Hamas and other designated terror groups.
Trump signed an executive order in January calling on agencies to review migrants for their views, ensuring immigrants both seeking to enter and already inside the U.S. 'do not bear hostile attitudes toward its citizens, culture, government, institutions, or founding principles.'
As The Independent has reported, pro-Palestine activists, or those accused of aligning with them, have fled the country for fear of unjust prosecution by the administration.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gavin Newsom finally finds a cause: taking on Trump
Gavin Newsom finally finds a cause: taking on Trump

Telegraph

time34 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Gavin Newsom finally finds a cause: taking on Trump

The Democratic governor of liberal California has welcomed Donald Trump to his state, cosied up to Conservative podcasters, and slashed healthcare provisions for illegal immigrants this year. But the reinvention of Gavin Newsom as the sort of Democrat who might be able to win back Republican voters came to a shuddering halt during a weekend of riots. With Mr Trump ordering troops onto his streets, Mr Newsom hit back, accusing the president of intentionally inflaming a difficult situation. It leaves Mr Newsom with no choice but to halt his drift Right-ward, said Hank Sheinkopf, a Democratic strategist. 'If not, he loses his entire constituency,' he said. 'In other words, there's a toleration level for moving to the centre, but not when it comes to massive chaos in Los Angeles.' Mr Newsom has put himself at the front of Democrat efforts to examine how they lost the 2024 election so badly. He launched a podcast in March in which he picks the brains of leading figures in Trump world. And Mr Newsom angered liberals with the very first episode, in which he interviewed Charlie Kirk, the controversial Conservative, when he said it was unfair that transgender athletes could compete in women's sport. He also said Democrats simply could not compete with the likes of Mr Trump and Elon Musk when it came to online reach. 'We're toast,' he said. Last month, facing a budget crunch, the telegenic governor back-pedalled on a promise of healthcare for all. He announced a freeze in enrolment for undocumented adults in the state's public health insurance programme. He has also urged cities to ban encampments for homeless people, cracking down on the tent cities that have blighted so much of California. And in January, he thanked Mr Trump for federal help in rebuilding after devastating wildfires that swept through Los Angeles. 'I've been always a hard-headed pragmatist,' he told reporters recently when quizzed about his shifting positions. 'I'm not an ideologue.' Trump a 'stone cold liar' That all seems a long time ago after immigration raids around Los Angeles on Friday sparked three days of riots, and an order by Mr Trump to send in 2,000 National Guard troops. Tom Homan, the president's border tsar, threatened to arrest the California governor if he got in the way. 'Come and get me, tough guy,' was Mr Newsom's pithy response on X. After Mr Trump agreed the governor should be arrested, the governor shot back saying it was 'a line we cannot cross as a nation'. He threatened to sue the federal government for its illegal act and called the president a 'stone cold liar' for failing to bring up his plan to send the National Guard when they spoke by telephone. 'There is currently no need for the National Guard to be deployed in Los Angeles and to do so in this unlawful manner and for such lengthy period is a serious breach of state sovereignty that seems intentionally designed to inflame the situation while simultaneously depriving the state from deploying these personnel and resources where they are truly required,' he wrote in a letter. That puts him at the centre of the news headlines, said James Carville, the veteran Democratic strategist and former adviser to Bill Clinton, even if it was too early to say that the party had finally found a national figurehead to oppose Mr Trump. But he said Mr Newsom's full-blooded reaction to Mr Trump and his tsar did not mark a reversal of his shift to the Right, but were compatible with his rejection of progressive totems such as identity politics. 'I don't think we should say we can render a verdict after 48 hours, but his actions have been totally what he would expect,' he said after Mr Trump had 'invaded' his state with troops. At the same time, he added, the crackdown on illegal immigrants remained a popular part of the platform that helped Republicans reclaim the White House last year. That leaves the governor and Democrats with a fine line to straddle: taking on Mr Trump over his decision to send in troops but without being painted as soft on illegal immigration or unrest in the streets. 'I think Trump sees all kinds of trouble on the horizon,' Mr Carville said. 'What he's very good at is just doing something to dominate the news.'

Trump says meeting on Iran planned for Thursday
Trump says meeting on Iran planned for Thursday

Reuters

time36 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Trump says meeting on Iran planned for Thursday

WASHINGTON, June 9 (Reuters) - U.S. President Donald Trump on Monday said the U.S. and Iran would continue talks on Thursday for a nuclear deal, adding that Tehran was a tough negotiator and that the main impediment to an agreement was over enrichment. "We're doing a lot of work on Iran right now," Trump told reporters at an economic event at the White House. "It's tough. ... They're great negotiators." "They're just asking for things that you can't do. They don't want to give up what they have to give up," he added. "They seek enrichment. We can't have enrichment. We want just the opposite. And so far, they're not there." "They have given us their thoughts on the deal. And I said, you know, it's just not acceptable," Trump said as Tehran plans to hand Washington a counter-proposal. Trump also said he discussed Iran among other topics with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Monday, adding that the call went well.

University of Michigan drops private security after reports of surveillance
University of Michigan drops private security after reports of surveillance

The Independent

time37 minutes ago

  • The Independent

University of Michigan drops private security after reports of surveillance

The University of Michigan said it's cutting ties with a private security company that was accused of following pro-Palestinian activists on and off campus. The university said it found the actions of one security company employee "disturbing, unacceptable and unethical." It did not elaborate. 'Going forward, we are terminating all contracts with external vendors to provide plainclothes security on campus,' President Domenico Grasso said in a statement Sunday. In a Guardian story last week, students said they were surveilled around Ann Arbor. The news outlet posted video from a member of a Muslim group who decided to confront a man who was watching him from a car last summer. That man in turn yelled and accused him of trying to steal his wallet. Tensions have been high between the university and pro-Palestinian student groups. A student encampment stood for a month on campus last year before authorities shut it down citing safety issues. Seven people were charged with felonies related to the encampment's removal, though charges were dropped in May. The university, which has campus police, said it hired private security about a year ago to report suspicious activity in high-traffic areas, not to perform surveillance. 'No individual or group should ever be targeted for their beliefs or affiliations,' Grasso said.

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