
A New Mural in France Shows the Statue of Liberty Covering Her Eyes in a Swipe at Trump
A towering mural in France of the Statue of Liberty covering her eyes is racking up millions of views online with its swipe at U.S. President Donald Trump 's immigration and deportation policies.
Amsterdam-based street artist Judith de Leeuw described her giant work in the northern French town of Roubaix, which has a large immigrant community, as 'a quiet reminder of what freedom should be.'
She said 'freedom feels out of reach' for migrants and 'those pushed to the margins, silenced, or unseen.'
'I painted her covering her eyes because the weight of the world has become too heavy to witness. What was once a shining symbol of liberty now carries the sorrow of lost meaning,' de Leeuw wrote in a July 4 post on Facebook, when Americans were celebrating Independence Day.
Her depiction of the Statue of Liberty, a gift from the French people in the late 1800s, has inspired some sharp criticism.
Rep. Tim Burchett, a Republican lawmaker from Tennessee, wrote in an angry post on X that the work 'disgusts me.' He said he had an uncle who fought and died in France, where U.S. forces saw combat in both World War I and World War II.
In an interview with The Associated Press, de Leeuw was unapologetic.
'I'm not offended to be hated by the Donald Trump movement. I am not sorry. This is the right thing to do,' she said.
The town stood by the work, with its deputy mayor in charge of cultural affairs, Frédéric Lefebvre, telling broadcaster France 3 that 'it's a very strong and powerful political message.'
Since returning to the White House amid anti-immigration sentiment, Trump has launched an unprecedented campaign that has pushed the limits of executive power and clashed with federal judges trying to restrain him. People from various countries have been deported to remote and unrelated places like South Sudan and the small African nation of Eswatini.
Polling by Gallup released last week showed an increasing number of Americans who said immigration is a 'good thing' and decreasing support for the type of mass deportations Trump has championed since before he was elected.
The mural in Roubaix is part of an urban street culture festival backed by the town. Roubaix is one of the poorest towns in France. It was economically devastated by the collapse since the 1970s of its once-flourishing textile industry that used to attract migrant workers from elsewhere in Europe, north Africa and beyond.
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The Diplomat
4 hours ago
- The Diplomat
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The fact that these topics enjoy significant overlap in the China-EU relationship is a great strength, and that shouldn't be ignored. It's also worth noting that, compared to Trump 1.0, when the cost of renewable energy was still higher than the cheapest fossil fuels in many parts of the world, today the cost incentives of the energy systems are on the side of progress and stronger deployment of climate solutions. China issued red alerts for flood risk in late June, for the first but likely not the last time this year. Meanwhile, heatwaves are scorching Europe. As both sides enter climate disaster season, projecting extreme heat and rainfall, the urgent need for collaboration on climate issues could not be more clear. Neither side has delivered its 2035 climate plan, known under the Paris Agreement as their nationally-determined contributions (NDCs). 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The Diplomat
4 hours ago
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The U.S. can't afford to sit by while China begins to exert the leverage that it has built up over the last few decades. The U.S. response should similarly be framed over short-, medium-, and long-term goals. The United States' immediate need is to retain access to strategic materials from China and keep the manufacturing base alive. This is why Trump's agreement with China was so important: the U.S. can't reindustrialize without using Chinese raw materials in the near term. But now with temporary access, the medium-term goal must be developing alternative supply chains to meet the United States' military and commercial industrial needs. Time is an imperative: the search for a perfect set of critical policies induces a costly paralysis. Policymakers need to acknowledge trade-offs. In some cases, this means trying out a range of programs, some of which will ultimately fail. 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A fundamental readjustment of the United States' trade patterns with China isn't just necessary, it's long overdue. To that end, the United States should play both defense and offense in trade. Defensive measures insulate the U.S. from the Chinese supply shocks and unfair trade practices that contribute to the forcible deindustrialization of the American heartland. Offensive strategies would increase the number of technologies that China relies on the U.S. for, gradually rebalancing leverage away from Beijing. The Department of Defense's recent investment in MP Materials, a U.S. rare earth producer, offers a roadmap for the future. The terms of the deal include $400 million equity investment from DOD, more than $1 billion in public-government loans to construct new processing facilities, and establishing a price floor for MP's rare earth output. In the intervening days, Apple and MP announced a $500 million commitment to purchase magnets and develop a recycling plant in Texas. With DOD and other government agencies leading the way in investment, offtake agreements, and permitting, U.S. firms will help adjust the supply and demand constraints necessary for developing a fully integrated domestic supply chain. While the specifics will vary from mineral to mineral, deals like these will be the way forward. But if the U.S. does nothing to shift this balance of power, China will always be able to use the leverage that it built up over the past few decades. China could use access to raw materials to stop us from imposing further restrictions on advanced technologies, or even force the U.S. to loosen advanced technology transfer restrictions. The United States would be able to do little about it. In gray-zone economic warfare, trade leverage becomes its own kind of armament. The United States should arm itself aggressively to pursue strategies that take ammunition away from the Chinese. When that next round of trade war sniping breaks out, the U.S. will want more firepower than it has now.