ICE RAGE
The arrest of a Columbia University student organizer raises new fears about Donald Trumpâs crackdown on activists, immigrants, universities â and free speech itself.
- Over the weekend, plain-clothed ICE agents barged into a Columbia University apartment and arrested Mahmoud Khalil, a Palestinian activist who led negotiations during tense protests at Columbia University last summer over the schoolâs ties to Israel amid its war with Hamas. Khalil is a Columbia grad student, and his wife is currently eight months pregnant with their first child.
- The raid unveiled a chilling new strategy in Trumpâs immigration crackdown. During the arrest, Khalilâs attorney told an ICE agent that Khalil is a permanent resident with a green card â and the agent said thatâs being revoked. Secretary of State Marco Rubio later announced that all visas and green cards held by âHamas supportersâ will be revoked so they can be deported. (Green cards canât be revoked without due process, and a judge temporarily blocked Khalilâs removal from the U.S.) An important point: Student protestors opposed Israelâs mass killing of civilians in Gaza, which is different from supporting the militant group.
- Trump celebrated the detention on social media with the grim triumphalism of a tinpot dictator. âThis is the first arrest of many to come,â Trump wrote. âWe will find, apprehend, and deport these terrorist sympathizers from our country â never to return again.â
- âThe unlawful detention of Mr. Khalil reeks of McCarthyism,â Donna Lieberman, executive director at the New York ACLU, wrote in a statement, referencing the 1950s persecution of alleged communists in the U.S. Trump is punishing the student because Khalilâs views âarenât MAGA-approved â which is a frightening escalation of Trumpâs crackdown on pro-Palestine speech, and an aggressive abuse of immigration law,â Lieberman continued.
Itâs the first known instance of Trump following through on his pledge to unleash federal forces against student activists â with spooky implications for free speech.
- Some leaders in the Jewish community donât buy Trumpâs argument about arresting protestors: âNo one has the right to prevent their fellow students from studying and learning,â Jeremy Ben-Ami, president of J Street, a prominent liberal pro-Israel think tank, told What A Day. âBut rather than taking actions that really address antisemitism, the administration is actually making all students who want to express themselves freely a little less safe today.â
- You know Trumpâs doing a really bad thing when even Ann Coulter, the ultraconservative media pundit, rebukes him. âThereâs almost no one I donât want to deport, but, unless theyâve committed a crime, isnât this a violation of the first amendment?â she wrote on X. You know what, Ann, it does kinda seem that way!
- The Trump administration seems to be telling colleges: Do what we say, or we will march over you in jackboots. Trump pulled $400 million in federal grants from Columbia one day before Khalilâs arrest over what his agencies claimed was a failure to âfight antisemitism.â (Itâs worth noting that Columbia did in fact crack down hard on pro-Palestinian protesters, which we covered in this very newsletter.) Today, Harvard announced a hiring freeze amid âsubstantial financial uncertainties,â which is likely a precaution in case Trump takes action against the school, too.
Detaining student protestors while cutting school funds for political purposes âbears all the hallmarks of police states around the globe that this country used to oppose,â Ben-Ami added.
STARSHIPS AND DIPSHITS
NASA is world-renowned for its science programs and climate studies. But itâs shredding those efforts â in a way that may work out to the benefit of government-size-reduction-enthusiast and space entrepreneur, Elon Musk.
NASA announced today that itâs shuttering three offices: the Office of Technology, Policy and Strategy (OTPS); Office of the Chief Scientist; and part of the Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.
The firings are intended to âoptimize our workforce,â NASA spokesperson Cheryl Warner told What A Day.
About 30 experts work at OTPS â including NASAâs chief technologist and chief economist â advising the administrator on âkey leadership decisions,â according to office’s annual report. Basically, these are some of the smartest people who help ensure that the space agencyâs leadership makes well-informed decisions.
Chief Scientist Katherine Calvin also appears to have lost her job today. She serves as a top adviser to the NASA administrator on the agencyâs science programs â a massive part of its mission, especially on climate issues. Whatâs more, cutting her position may not save any money.
Slashing the DEI office was expected, considering Trumpâs attacks on similar offices across the government. But the other closing came as more of a surprise, especially because NASA plays a crucial role in studying climate change.
NASA is âhaving its wings clipped in terms of dealing with one of the biggest scientific problems of our current time,â Victoria Samson, a long-time space expert at the Secure World Foundation think tank, told What A Day.
Another notable factor is SpaceX, the rocket launch company owned by Musk. Trump installed space entrepreneur Jared Isaacman, a Musk ally as the NASA chief. If cuts to the agency continue, SpaceX could end up playing an even larger role with NASA, Samson suggested.
âI am worried thereâs a mentality of, âWell, why do we need NASA? We have SpaceX,â Samson said. âWhile SpaceX has been able to do a lot of amazing things, they have a different mandate than a Congress than a government agency â and Iâm hoping that we will be able to convince this government to recognize the difference between the two.â
Do you work at NASA? Reach out to me on Signal at mattberg.33 or email at whataday@crooked.com. Iâll keep you anonymous!
Want more?
NEWS NEWS NEWS
Will the government shut down on Friday? House Speaker Mike Johnson is expected to put forward a stopgap measure on Tuesday, which would allow the government to function through September. House Republicans will likely pass the measure. Then, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer would have to decide whether to rally Democrats to approve MAGAâs stopgap â or force a government shutdown. I hate that this is how Congress works!
The stock market continued to tumble today, after Donald Trump refused to rule out a rescission over the weekend. Thereâs going to be a âperiod of transition, because what weâre doing is very big,â Trump told Fox News. Meanwhile, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told NBC News that âthereâs going to be no recession in America.â Glad everyoneâs on the same page here!
Darren Beattie, a top acting State Department official, deleted tweets criticizing Secretary of State Marco Rubio for having a âlow IQâ and falsely accusing him of attending gay âfoamâ parties, CNN reports. Itâs hilarious to imagine a disgruntled Marco covered in bubbles at a rave.
The Trump administration is canceling 83 percent of USAID contracts, Rubio announced today, in a major blow to the agency that provides critical humanitarian services globally. He thanked DOGE in the statement, an apparent effort to smooth over tensions with Elon Musk. An idea to mend that relationship: They could attend a foam party together.
Utah is set to become the first state to ban fluoride in public water systems, ditching a decades-long practice thatâs scientifically proven to prevent cavities and improve oral health. But HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. doesnât believe in much public health science, so here we are!
A measles case was confirmed in Maryland on Sunday, coming from a person who recently traveled. Itâs not connected to the measles outbreak in Texas and New Mexico which has led to the death of two people, officials say.
House Republicans unveiled a bill over the weekend that could lead to $1 billion in cuts for Washington, D.C. â potentially leading to mass layoffs and furloughs of public school teachers, police officers, and other frontline workers. What happened to Republicans Backing the Blue???
Gov. Tim Walz (D-MN) said that the Harris campaign played it too safe during their 2024 presidential bid. âI think we probably should have just rolled the dice and done the town halls, where [voters] may say, âyouâre full of shit, I donât believe in you,ââ Walz told Politico. âI think there could have been more of that.â You donât say!

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