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Trump deploys National Guard as Los Angeles protests against immigration agents continue

Bhaijaan

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LA is burning, again. This time by illegal immigrants fearing mass deportation.

June 6.
Over 110 undocumented immigrants were arrested in coordinated operations across the city, including at a warehouse in the Fashion District, a Home Depot, and a local doughnut shop. Some of those arrested were reported to have prior criminal records. The raids triggered immediate backlash from pro-immigrant groups, who quickly gathered outside the Metropolitan Detention Center to protest. Demonstrators attempted to block detainee transfers and clashed with federal authorities, prompting the use of tear gas to disperse crowds.


As tensions escalated, protests spread beyond downtown Los Angeles into neighborhoods like Paramount, Compton, Boyle Heights, and Pasadena. In Paramount, demonstrators clashed with federal agents near a staging area, leading to more flash-bang grenades and tear gas being deployed. Protesters blocked the 101 Freeway multiple times, torched several Waymo self-driving cars, and vandalized both police and federal vehicles. In many cases, the demonstrations turned violent, with fireworks, rocks, and even Molotov-style bottles thrown at officers.


In response to the growing unrest, President Trump invoked Title 10 and authorized the deployment of 2,000 California National Guard troops to Los Angeles—despite strong opposition from California Governor Gavin Newsom, who called the move unlawful and politically inflammatory. About 300 guardsmen arrived by early Sunday, with 500 more U.S. Marines placed on high alert at Camp Pendleton. The move deepened tensions between the state and federal governments, with Mayor Karen Bass calling the deployment a “chaotic escalation,” while Trump defended it as necessary to “liberate” the city and combat what he described as a “migrant invasion.”


The protests have resulted in dozens of injuries, including at least 27 protesters and several officers. Around 60 arrests were made on Sunday alone. Alongside the physical toll, there’s been significant property damage, including to law enforcement vehicles and Waymo’s autonomous taxi fleet. In one particularly concerning incident, an Australian journalist covering the unrest was hit by a rubber bullet, prompting international condemnation and renewed scrutiny of police crowd-control tactics.


At the core of the protests is a demand to end mass deportations and federal immigration raids in sanctuary cities like Los Angeles. The situation has triggered a constitutional standoff between federal authority and California’s state government. ICE operations are expected to continue for at least 30 more days, and the National Guard remains deployed in the city. As legal challenges mount and the possibility of further escalation looms, both civic leaders and community members are bracing for what could become one of the most politically charged and divisive moments in recent LA history.
 
This is the problem with illegal immigrants causing violence. These guys are thugs and needed to treated accordingly.
 
Woah calm down Ramgopal bhai, the Indian tweeter mentioned Mexicans and Indians not bomb hurling Jihadis.
You know what you were implying , so its OK, you can calm down Abdul bhai.. The Dems luv these crime causing illegals and good that Trump is dealing with them appropriately..
 
You know what you were implying , so its OK, you can calm down Abdul bhai.. The Dems luv these crime causing illegals and good that Trump is dealing with them appropriately..

Stick to the topic , it a Mexican area. Eating veggies often diverts a persons mind, Ive noticed.

As for the OP, California was stolen of Mexico, so them they are not illegal.
 
Stick to the topic , it a Mexican area. Eating veggies often diverts a persons mind, Ive noticed.

As for the OP, California was stolen of Mexico, so them they are not illegal.
You and your fantasies. Its in the US , part of the US. Illegals have no right to be here and they will be deported and we have a prez now who has the ba*** to enforce the law. Dont be here in the US illegally period. Come in "legally " with proper paperwork and the US welcomes you with open arms.
 
What are they protesting ?
They are protesting Trump's deportation of illegal immigrants. So, they come to the US illegally, stay here illegally, get all the benefits, commit crimes and when the law is being enforced by their deportation, they resort to street violence, destruction of property and waving other country's flags. No nation in the world will accept it. Do this in an Islamic nation and you know what will happen right ? :)
 
Gonna order some nice Pork Burrito & Prawn tacos tonight in honour of my homies. Gotta wash it down with some chilled Heinekens. 👍🏻
 
Stick to the topic , it a Mexican area. Eating veggies often diverts a persons mind, Ive noticed.

As for the OP, California was stolen of Mexico, so them they are not illegal.


In 1846, during the Mexican-American War, U.S. settlers in California declared independence (the “Bear Flag Revolt”), and U.S. military forces quickly took control.

The war ended with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 where Mexico ceded about half its territory to the U.S. (including California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, and parts of several other states).

The U.S. paid Mexico $15 million and assumed some Mexican debts. California became a U.S. state in 1850.
 
In 1846, during the Mexican-American War, U.S. settlers in California declared independence (the “Bear Flag Revolt”), and U.S. military forces quickly took control.

The war ended with the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo in 1848 where Mexico ceded about half its territory to the U.S. (including California, Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, Utah, and parts of several other states).

The U.S. paid Mexico $15 million and assumed some Mexican debts. California became a U.S. state in 1850.

I know the history but many Mexicans feel this was a colonial enterprise. Im not justifying their riots.

Also many cartels send illegals to sell and cultivate drugs. Cannabis can grow in the random hills in Cali very well. Then theres meth and cocaine which is also control by the cartels.

What it does show is USA cant control its own city but wants to control other groups and nations abroad.
 
I know the history but many Mexicans feel this was a colonial enterprise. Im not justifying their riots.

Also many cartels send illegals to sell and cultivate drugs. Cannabis can grow in the random hills in Cali very well. Then theres meth and cocaine which is also control by the cartels.

What it does show is USA cant control its own city but wants to control other groups and nations abroad.

The best possible solution is that we all join hands to balkanise the United States. Of course Pakistanis will be there to protect US but this is something we the rest of the world would have to do at some point. Purely business. Hopefully Pakistanis will stay out of this fight between big boys. We mean you no harm.
 
End of the usa to be honest the west on a whole has been on a social decline.

The future stable countries with high standards will be china and the gulf arab countries
 
Stick to the topic , it a Mexican area. Eating veggies often diverts a persons mind, Ive noticed.

As for the OP, California was stolen of Mexico, so them they are not illegal.
what diet makes whole threads disappear from PP? Like you celebratory posts on Hamas attack.

Mexico was stolen from "native" Americans by the spanish.
 
Hide it from @deltexas, he will not be able to survive this, it is already too hot in Texas.
Texas is fine, we have a strong Rep governor Abbott who deals tough with illegals unlike Newsom and his bunch in California. Thats the thing. Immigrants assimilate and try to assimilate into the region or country they move into unlike a certain religion who want to impose their philosophy wherever they move.
 
Texas is fine, we have a strong Rep governor Abbott who deals tough with illegals unlike Newsom and his bunch in California. Thats the thing. Immigrants assimilate and try to assimilate into the region or country they move into unlike a certain religion who want to impose their philosophy wherever they move.
What has Mexican tried to impose on you and Americans, do tell us Mr. Kumar, the corn beef muncher, how have you assimilated in Texas, while smoking those beef briskets.

:afridi
 
Hard to agree with Californian administration or Trump, sad for all the Latino families being ripped apart though, esp with no criminal cases.
 
End of the usa to be honest the west on a whole has been on a social decline.

The future stable countries with high standards will be china and the gulf arab countries

Also Pakistan thanks the the oil & gas reserves plus CPEC
 
China Issues Travel Warning Over LA Riots

he Chinese consulate in Los Angeles has warned its citizens to remain alert amid the ongoing riots in the Californian city and to stay away from large gatherings.

Why It Matters

The LA protests against immigration enforcement over the weekend descended into rioting and looting. U.S. President Donald Trump is deploying 2,000 National Guard troops to quell the violence.

Scenes from downtown LA have been the subject of multiple broadcasts by Chinese state television channels and are among the top trending topics on China's main social media platforms Weibo and WeChat.

During the George Floyd protests in summer 2020 and the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol months later, China's government and state media mocked the Trump administration over police violence, racial tensions as well as what Beijing considered to be general failures of the U.S. democratic system.

What To Know

"Law enforcement actions are ongoing in many places in the Los Angeles area," the Chinese consulate's alert said on its website and social media channels.

"The Consulate General in Los Angeles reminds Chinese citizens in the Los Angeles area to pay close attention to official announcements and media reports, remain vigilant, enhance safety precautions, stay away from gatherings, crowded places or areas with poor public security, and avoid traveling at night or alone," the advisory said.

On Weibo, China's online users responded with concern—and ridicule. "'Beacon of freedom'—yeah, right!" one wrote. Another said: "China is now the safest place in the world. The smartest choice would be to leave the U.S. if you can and return to China as soon as possible."

China's state broadcaster CCTV has provided around-the-clock coverage of the anti-ICE protests and riots. On Sunday, it created the hashtag "LA is a mess," which has been viewed 31.5 million times and remains among the top five trending topics on the website, according to a review by Newsweek

CCTV's latest post about the row between the U.S. federal government and the state of California over the deployment of the National Guard drew hundreds of comments, one of which read: "California must emulate Harvard and fight to the end."

"Trump will turn America on its head," another top-related commented read. A third called for the establishment of a "California People's Republic."

What People Are Saying

California Gov. Gavin Newsom
posted to X: "Donald Trump has manufactured a crisis and is inflaming conditions. If he can't solve it, we will. To the bad actors fueling Trump's flames—California will hold you accountable."

President Donald Trump posted to Truth Social: "A once great American City, Los Angeles, has been invaded and occupied by Illegal Aliens and Criminals. Now violent, insurrectionist mobs are swarming and attacking our Federal Agents to try and stop our deportation operations — But these lawless riots only strengthen our resolve."

 
This is partly Elons doing. He gave Trump advice to include Tulsis and Patels in key security positions and they have failed miserably.

If you compare the success of Trump 1.0 Vs failures of Trump 2.0 the key differences is the inclusions of ex Indians in government positions. They have taken America backwards, having successfully negotiated ceasefire to save their motherland from Pakistan, they are standing back and giving bad advice to plunge America into chaos.
 
Trump defends deployment of Marines to LA amid immigration protests

Hundreds of U.S. Marines arrived in the Los Angeles area on Tuesday under orders from President Donald Trump, who defended the deployment as he sought to quell protests in the city despite objections from California Governor Gavin Newsom and other local leaders.

The president has also activated 4,000 National Guard troops.

The city has seen days of public protests since the Trump administration launched a series of immigration raids on Friday. State officials said Trump's response was an overreaction to mostly peaceful demonstrations.

About 700 Marines were in a staging area awaiting deployment to specific locations, a U.S. official said.
The Marines do not have arrest authority and will protect federal property and personnel, according to military officials. There were approximately 2,100 Guard troops in greater Los Angeles on Tuesday, with more on the way, the official said.

The troop deployments are estimated to cost about $134 million, a senior Pentagon official said on Tuesday. Bryn MacDonnell, who is performing comptroller duties at the Pentagon, told lawmakers the cost included travel, housing and food for troops.

"Think of how much veteran nutrition assistance and housing (the Trump administration) could be providing instead of dishonoring these troops using them as pawns," Newsom wrote on X, referring to the deployments' cost.


 
Texas is fine, we have a strong Rep governor Abbott who deals tough with illegals unlike Newsom and his bunch in California. Thats the thing. Immigrants assimilate and try to assimilate into the region or country they move into unlike a certain religion who want to impose their philosophy wherever they move.
Yes because Texas has been white for thousands of years, it’s not like it was taken by force from Mexicans, can’t accuse our white colonial masters of imposing their philosophy on us tho right? 🤡
 
This is partly Elons doing. He gave Trump advice to include Tulsis and Patels in key security positions and they have failed miserably.

If you compare the success of Trump 1.0 Vs failures of Trump 2.0 the key differences is the inclusions of ex Indians in government positions. They have taken America backwards, having successfully negotiated ceasefire to save their motherland from Pakistan, they are standing back and giving bad advice to plunge America into chaos.
Tulsi is not an Indian by any means, unless you mean Hindus.

Trump 1.0 wasn’t any successful either, Obama Era progress and innovation trickles down to his term, no way can any president make good economy in an year.
 
Yes because Texas has been white for thousands of years, it’s not like it was taken by force from Mexicans, can’t accuse our white colonial masters of imposing their philosophy on us tho right? 🤡
Won’t say its colonial, if anything Colonial rulers Spain were thrown off.

surprisingly if you think about it its history is similar to Pakistan, Majority Muslim( Texas Majority white in 1845 wanted to join US), and yeah they got it.

Don’t Pakistanis consistently talk good about Kings that waged wars, any reason you have an issue with what US-Texas did?
 
I rather trust Mexicans than white South Afrikans that have been robbing the country.

Its as simple as this one community does all the tough labor helps in building America and another comes in with their extremely recent white supremacist attitude and talks about being victim.
 
Won’t say its colonial, if anything Colonial rulers Spain were thrown off.

surprisingly if you think about it its history is similar to Pakistan, Majority Muslim( Texas Majority white in 1845 wanted to join US), and yeah they got it.

Don’t Pakistanis consistently talk good about Kings that waged wars, any reason you have an issue with what US-Texas did?
Plenty of Pakistanis criticize the Mughals when they did step out of line. Islam is perfect, humans aren’t. If they fail in their implementation, it’s on them.

I do find it rich though the boot licking Indians engage on this forum regarding the west that has far more blood on its hands than Muslim empires ever did, and how Islam constitutes rights for minorities where the white settlers who engaged in mass genocide when they came to the states were given a free pass. Last I checked, Hindus still exist India and have for centuries even under Muslim rule.

But I was talking to the above user about him blaming Muslims for “enforcing their philosophy” while he resides in a state that is built on centuries of enforcing philosophy by “foreign invaders” a term you lot love to to throw around
 
Plenty of Pakistanis criticize the Mughals when they did step out of line. Islam is perfect, humans aren’t. If they fail in their implementation, it’s on them.

I do find it rich though the boot licking Indians engage on this forum regarding the west that has far more blood on its hands than Muslim empires ever did, and how Islam constitutes rights for minorities where the white settlers who engaged in mass genocide when they came to the states were given a free pass. Last I checked, Hindus still exist India and have for centuries even under Muslim rule.

But I was talking to the above user about him blaming Muslims for “enforcing their philosophy” while he resides in a state that is built on centuries of enforcing philosophy by “foreign invaders” a term you lot love to to throw around
British never gets a free pass from Indians, there is a reason why majority blockbusters of Indian cinema from Lagaan, Kranti to recent RRR are anti-British.

On Islam thats your faith and everyone likes their own faith, British ruled India as well and Hindus ,Buddhists and Muslims still remained, same with Dutch Indonesia, British and America in China etc etc the local population surviving doesn’t mean zilch in Asia, because the cultures west of Afghanistan were more evolved.
 
British never gets a free pass from Indians, there is a reason why majority blockbusters of Indian cinema from Lagaan, Kranti to recent RRR are anti-British.

On Islam thats your faith and everyone likes their own faith, British ruled India as well and Hindus ,Buddhists and Muslims still remained, same with Dutch Indonesia, British and America in China etc etc the local population surviving doesn’t mean zilch in Asia, because the cultures west of Afghanistan were more evolved.
If you can claim that we don’t ever question Mughals when they deviated from Islam in terms of whatever wrong they did I can easily say that Indians don’t hold British and Americans to the same standard for their war crimes despite going to their lands to reside in, but are ready to jump Muslims for far less. That’s the whole point that in the post that you quoted of mine first up.

That’s why I found it ironic that the guy who I quoted is talking about Muslims “enforcing their philosophy” while he resides in a state and country that is a product of ethnic cleansing and enforcing their philosophy.
 
California judge orders hearing request to limit military in LA

A federal judge in California has scheduled a hearing for Thursday on the state's request for an emergency order to stop Donald Trump from using the military for immigration enforcement actions in Los Angeles, our partner network NBC News reports.

We reported earlier that California governor Gavin Newsom had filed an emergency motion blocking National Guard troops and the marines from assisting with immigration raids (see post at 8.25pm).

Now, US district judge Charles Breyer has granted the Trump administration's request for more time to respond.

The Trump administration has been given until until tomorrow to file a response, with a hearing set for Thursday.


SKY News
 
Trump brings receipts he called Newsom amid LA riots as California gov claims there wasn't 'even a voicemail'

President Donald Trump hit back at Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom's claims that the president did not recently call him, telling Fox News he spoke to the governor for about 16 minutes on Saturday.

Trump told Fox News Tuesday while traveling to Fort Bragg, North Carolina, that Newsom did not pick up his first call over the weekend, but that he picked up the second call and the pair spoke for about 16 minutes on Saturday.

"I told him to, essentially, ‘Get his ass in gear,’ and stop the riots, which were out of control," Trump said Tuesday. "More than anything else, this shows what a liar he is – said I never called."

Trump provided a screenshot of the phone call dated June 7 at 1:23 a.m.

White House director of communications Steven Cheung added in comment to Fox Digital Tuesday afternoon: "The President called Gavin Newsom to tell him to get his ass in gear. The Governor has clearly decided to disgustingly side with the violent rioters instead of protecting Californians. The only liar here is Newsom who continues to fail his state as he prioritizes doing interviews with leftist media to gaslight the public instead of helping his state."

Earlier Tuesday, Trump held an event addressing wildfire response and prevention from the Oval Office, where he fielded a handful of questions from the media regarding the ongoing anti-ICE riots in Los Angles, telling a reporter he spoke to Newsome "a day ago."

"A day ago. I called him up to tell him (he's) got to do a better job. He's done a bad job," Trump said.

In a response post on X, Newsom claimed Trump did not call him or leave a voicemail in the past day.

"There was no call. Not even a voicemail. Americans should be alarmed that a President deploying Marines onto our streets doesn’t even know who he’s talking to," Newsom posted to X Tuesday afternoon, accompanied by video of Trump in the Oval Office.

"This call is from 3 days ago," the governor's press office added on X following the White House's pushback on Newsom's claim that Trump did not call.

Newsom's office added in an email to Fox News Digital Tuesday that: "The Governor’s comment is clearly in regards to the President’s comment this morning of ‘a day ago,’" adding that Newsom had already confirmed his Saturday phone call in a media interview on Sunday.

Newsom spokesperson Izzy Gardon added in a comment to the Sacramento Bee Tuesday: "I just personally looked through the governor’s phone. No missed call. No voicemail. Nothing. The last time they spoke was Friday when the governor called him."

Los Angeles descended into violent riots Friday when federal immigration officials converged on the city to carry out raids targeting illegal immigrants. Local leaders such as Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass and Newsom, however, quickly denounced the raids in public statements while offering words of support for illegal immigrants in the state.

Protests over the raids soon devolved into violence as rioters targeted and launched attacks on federal law enforcement officials.

Trump announced Saturday that he was deploying 2,000 National Guard troops to help quell the violence. The Trump administration also deployed hundreds of U.S. Marines to respond to anti-immigration chaos on Monday evening as the violence continued.

"If I didn’t ‘SEND IN THE TROOPS’ to Los Angeles the last three nights, that once beautiful and great City would be burning to the ground right now," Trump posted to Truth Social on Tuesday morning.

 
British never gets a free pass from Indians, there is a reason why majority blockbusters of Indian cinema from Lagaan, Kranti to recent RRR are anti-British.

On Islam thats your faith and everyone likes their own faith, British ruled India as well and Hindus ,Buddhists and Muslims still remained, same with Dutch Indonesia, British and America in China etc etc the local population surviving doesn’t mean zilch in Asia, because the cultures west of Afghanistan were more evolved.

If that were true, you'd see a lot more Indians being critical of Brits rather than Mughals, and you'd also see them standing up for minority rights abroad rather than bootlick their hosts by crooning about how well they integate compared to Pakistanis.
 
If that were true, you'd see a lot more Indians being critical of Brits rather than Mughals, and you'd also see them standing up for minority rights abroad rather than bootlick their hosts by crooning about how well they integate compared to Pakistanis.
There are , you just don’t care about that, Shashi Tharoor has been shouting at top of his voice.
Not sure what are you guys on about bootlick, it would had made sense had the entire Pakistani nation not debted to west or China.
 
There are , you just don’t care about that, Shashi Tharoor has been shouting at top of his voice.
Not sure what are you guys on about bootlick, it would had made sense had the entire Pakistani nation not debted to west or China.

I see you missed the point entirely about Indians abroad crooning to their hosts about how well they integrate compared to Pakistanis. There's your bootlicking for you.

As for Pakistan debt, do you ever see Pakistanis defending this? They are hypercritical of their govt.
 
I see you missed the point entirely about Indians abroad crooning to their hosts about how well they integrate compared to Pakistanis. There's your bootlicking for you.

As for Pakistan debt, do you ever see Pakistanis defending this? They are hypercritical of their govt.
Not the government taking so much loans but sure.
 
It was you who specifically gave debts as an example. Did you want me to address something else?
Yes Indians should learn from Pakistani Establishment, take loans from West and then use it to create mansions in Europe.
Only bootlicking here is killing their own countrymen.
 
Yes Indians should learn from Pakistani Establishment, take loans from West and then use it to create mansions in Europe.
Only bootlicking here is killing their own countrymen.

Do you understand we are talking about general civilians and posters, not govts? Seems I am talking about the people in general and you are talking about Pakistan govt.
 
Over 30 people arrested in Spokane

More than 30 people have been arrested in Spokane, Washington, after anti-ICE protests in the city Wednesday, the city’s police chief Kevin Hall said.

The arrests have been “predominantly misdemeanor arrests,” Hall said during a news conference late Wednesday local time.

“There was no tear gas administered… and no rubber bullets,” he said. “What you saw out there was inert smoke,” Hall added, referring to smoke that is non-toxic and non-explosive.

Ahead of the curfew, police donned gas masks and deployed a device that released smoke into the crowd, according to KHQ’s video.

The mayor of Spokane, Lisa Brown, earlier Wednesday declared a state of emergency and announced a curfew in certain areas.

Large groups of protesters took to the city’s streets on Wednesday afternoon, carrying signs and blocking roads, according to video from CNN affiliate KHQ. They were demonstrating outside an ICE facility against raids and potential deportations.

“As the crowd grew, as the crowd resisted several orders to disperse, I issued the curfew with ample time to let people leave the area,” Brown said during the news conference.

CNN
 
LA under curfew for second night after hundreds arrested

A curfew is in place for a second night in Los Angeles after nearly a week of unrest in the city over US immigration raids.

Multiple people were arrested for violating the downtown curfew shortly after it came into effect at 20:00 local time (03:00 GMT), the BBC's US partner CBS reported.

Nearly 400 people have been arrested in LA since protests began on Friday, including 330 undocumented migrants and 157 people arrested for assault and obstruction, including one for the attempted murder of a police officer.

Federal prosecutors have so far charged two men for throwing Molotov cocktails at police officers in two separate incidents.

A total of 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines have been deployed to help quell the unrest. Some of those National Guard troops are now authorised to detain people until police can arrest them.

As the overnight curfew began, LA Mayor Karen Bass wrote on X that it was designed to "stop bad actors who are taking advantage of the president's chaotic escalation".

She had earlier blamed the demonstrations on US President Donald Trump's immigration raids, which she said "provoked" residents by causing "fear" and "panic".

"A week ago, everything was peaceful," she told a news conference on Wednesday.

"Things began to be difficult on Friday when raids took place."

Bass suggested Los Angeles was "part of a national experiment to determine how far the federal government can go in taking over power from a local government, from a local jurisdiction".

She has previously called on the administration to end the raids.

Overnight on Tuesday into Wednesday, Los Angeles police said they made "mass arrests" after a fifth day of protests over the immigration action.

In a series of statements, the city's police department said that those detained included 203 people arrested for failure to disperse, 17 for curfew violations, three for possession of a firearm, and one for assault with a deadly weapon on a police officer.

Two officers were injured in the skirmishes, the statement added.

On Tuesday, Bass declared an overnight curfew within a relatively small area of the city's downtown district, saying businesses were being vandalised and looted.

After the LA curfew came into force at 20:00 local time on Tuesday, police moved through downtown areas, firing rubber bullets to try to disperse crowds.

Explaining the curfew on Tuesday, Bass said she wanted "to stop the vandalism, to stop the looting", saying the city had reached a "tipping point".

The curfew order affects an area of about one square mile in the second-largest city in the US.

Police chief Jim McDonnell said: "Some of the imagery of the protests and the violence gives the appearance as though this is a city-wide crisis, and it is not."

Pam Bondi, the US Attorney General, told reporters at the White House on Wednesday that the curfew "helped a bit".

Elsewhere, the immigration raids have continued, alongside the National Guard troops.

The National Guard and Marine forces deployed to Los Angeles do not have the authority to make arrests, only to detain protesters.

"They are strictly used for the protection of the federal personnel as they conduct their operations and to protect them to allow them to do their federal mission," said Maj Gen Scott Sherman, who is leading the deployment, on Wednesday.

Some 500 National Guard troops have already been trained to accompany agents on immigration raids and some troops have already temporarily detained people in LA protests, Sherman told US media outlets.

Those troops are authorised to detain people until police are able to arrest them, he said.

Trump's row with state officials ramped up after he deployed troops to LA. The president has now vowed to "liberate" the city, but he has been accused by California Governor Gavin Newsom of an "assault" on democracy.

Trump earlier this week defended his decision to send troops, saying it was to prevent the city being "conquered by a foreign enemy".

Newsom hit back at the president: "He again chose escalation; he chose more force."

The California governor, who is seen as a potential presidential contender for the Democratic Party, warned that "other states are next".

On Wednesday, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth backed Trump's move, telling a Senate hearing that sending the troops to Los Angeles was "lawful and constitutional".

The military deployment to the LA area will cost $134m (£99m), the Pentagon said.

Trump described the protests as a "full-blown assault on peace and public order" while addressing troops at the Fort Bragg military base in North Carolina.

The Republican president said he plans to use "every asset at our disposal to quell the violence".

Meanwhile, Trump's political row with state officials has intensified. The president has described the protesters as "animals" and vowed that "this anarchy will not stand".

He urged troops to boo the names of Newsom and Joe Biden, his presidential predecessor, during his Fort Bragg speech.

In televised remarks of his own on Tuesday night, Newsom again criticised the president's rare deployment of the US military without a request from state officials. He accused Trump of a "brazen abuse of power".

"California may be first – but it clearly won't end here," he said. "Other states are next. Democracy is next. Democracy is under assault right before our eyes."

Trump has set a goal for border agents of at least 3,000 daily arrests as he seeks to ramp up mass deportations, a signature pledge of his re-election campaign.

Since assuming office, the president has drastically reduced illegal crossings at the US-Mexico border to historically low levels.

A CBS News/YouGov poll conducted in early June, before the protests kicked off, found 54% of Americans saying they approved of Trump's deportation policy, and 50% approved of how he was handling immigration.

That compares with smaller numbers of 42% who gave approval to his economic policy and 39% for his policy on tackling inflation.

BBC
 
During operation I predicted 3rd world war will gonna happened between Islamic nations and rest of world…. But the way Trump is behaving nowdays, most likely Third World War will happened between Trump Vs rest of the world
 
Trump administration blocked from deploying National Guard to LA

A federal judge has blocked the Trump administration's deployment of California's National Guard to Los Angeles and called the move illegal.

The judge's order to return control of the troops to California Governor Gavin Newsom will not go into effect immediately and the administration has filed an appeal.

The state sued President Donald Trump on Monday over his order to deploy the troops without Newsom's consent.

Trump said he was sending the troops - who are typically under the governor's authority - to stop LA from "burning down" in protests against his immigration crackdown. Local authorities have argued they have the situation in hand and do not need troops.

US District Judge Charles Breyer said the question presented by California's request was whether Trump followed the law set by Congress on the deployment of a state's National Guard.

"He did not," the judge wrote in his decision. "His actions were illegal... He must therefore return control of the California National Guard to the Governor of the State of California forthwith."

But the judge stayed the order until Friday afternoon to give the Trump administration time to appeal against it. The administration did so almost immediately after the order was issued.

Newsom posted on social media on Thursday afternoon that "the court just confirmed what we all know — the military belongs on the battlefield, not on our city streets".

The Trump administration has said it took over California's National Guard to restore order and to protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents as they swept up people in Los Angeles who were believed to be in the country illegally.

Despite Newsom's objections, Trump ordered a total of 4,000 National Guard troops and 700 Marines to help quell the unrest. Some of the Guard troops are now authorised to detain people until police can arrest them.

A president last deployed the National Guard without a governor's consent more than 50 years ago - during the civil rights era. It is more common for a governor to activate troops to deal with natural disasters and other emergencies, and then ask for federal assistance.

Before a packed courtroom on Thursday, a justice department attorney told Judge Breyer that Newsom did not need to be consulted when Trump issued his order.

"Governor Newsom was fully aware of this order…he objected to it," Attorney Brett Shumate said. "There is one commander-in-chief of the US armed forces."

"No," Judge Breyer, the younger brother of former Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer, responded.

"The president isn't the commander -in-chief of the National Guard," he said but added there were times and situations where the president could become the head of the troops.

Breyer, who had donned a light blue bowtie, invoked the Constitution multiple times during the hearing, holding up a booklet copy of the document at one point.

"We're talking about the president exercising his authority. And the president is, of course, limited in his authority," he said. "That's the difference between a constitutional government and King George.".

The Trump administration used a law that allows the president to call the National Guard into federal service when a "rebellion" is happening.

But California said in its lawsuit that the protests that have spanned nearly a week in LA - and included more than 300 arrests and the shutting down of a major freeway - did not rise to that level.

"At no point in the past three days has there been a rebellion or an insurrection. Nor have these protests risen to the level of protests or riots that Los Angeles and other major cities have seen at points in the past, including in recent years," the lawsuit read.

BBC
 
US Marines deployed to Los Angeles after Trump wins court battle

U.S. Marines were deployed to Los Angeles on Friday, the military said, a rare domestic use of its forces as protests over President Donald Trump's immigration raids spread nationwide.

On Thursday, a court ruled in favor of Trump's bid to retain the National Guard in L.A. in reaction to the growing backlash against his immigration policy since his return to power in January.

About 200 Marines will be protecting a federal building in Los Angeles, Army Major General Scott Sherman, said on Friday. The administration has authorized a total of 700 Marines to be deployed in the city.

Neither the Marines nor the National Guard troops in the city had temporarily detained anyone, he added.
"I would like to emphasize that the soldiers will not participate in law enforcement activities," he said during a briefing.

It is uncommon for active duty troops to be used domestically during civil disturbances.
The last time the military was used for direct police action under the Insurrection Act was in 1992, when the California governor at the time asked then President George H.W. Bush to help respond to Los Angeles riots over the acquittal of police officers who beat Black motorist Rodney King.


 
US Marines make first detention in LA as more protests expected

U.S. Marines deployed to Los Angeles made their first detention of a civilian on Friday, part of a rare use of military force to support domestic police and coming ahead of national protests over President Donald Trump's military parade in Washington.

The detention of a the man, a U.S. Army veteran and an immigrant who obtained U.S. citizenship, punctuated a series of highly unusual events that have appealed to Trump supporters but outraged other Americans who are demonstrating discontent in the streets.

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Trump ordered the Marines to Los Angeles in response to street protests over immigration raids, joining National Guard forces already deployed to the city over the objection of California's governor. Trump said troops were necessary to quell the protests - a contention that state and local officials dispute.

About 1,800 protests are scheduled across the U.S. on Saturday in opposition to the Washington military parade that marks the 250th anniversary of the U.S. Army and coincides with Trump's 79th birthday.

Both the military parade and domestic use of active duty troops are uncommon for the United States, as was the military detention of a U.S. citizen on American soil. It was also unusual when federal agents forcibly removed and handcuffed a U.S. Senator on Thursday as he interrupted a press conference by Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem.

Trump has thrived politically on unconventional tactics.

But Democratic opponents are starting to push back. Fifteen protests are expected in Los Angeles alone, Mayor Karen Bass said, urging people to remain peaceful.

"We are here today because the raids have caused fear and panic," Bass said, joined by two dozen elected officials to oppose the raids and military presence. "Can the federal government come in and seize power from a state and from a local jurisdiction? How much will the American people put up with?"

About 200 Marines were assigned to protect the Wilshire Federal Building in Los Angeles, part of a battalion of 700 Marines sent to support the National Guard, said Army Major General Scott Sherman, who is in command of both the National Guard and Marine forces.

The Marines and National Guard deployed in Los Angeles are assigned to protect federal property and personnel and may temporarily detain people, but they are required to turn them over to civilian law enforcement for any formal arrest.

ARMY VETERAN DETAINED

Reuters witnessed Marines detain one person at the Wilshire Federal Building. Reuters images showed Marines restraining his hands with zip ties and then handing him over to civilians from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) nearly two hours later.

U.S. military confirmed the detention after being presented with Reuters images, in the first known detention by active duty troops.

The detained man, Marcos Leao, 27, an immigrant and a U.S. Army veteran, said after he was released that he was told to get on the ground upon venturing into a restricted area, as he crossed a line of yellow tape to avoid walking around the building.

Leao, who said he is Portuguese and Angolan and became a U.S. citizen through the military, said he complied with all commands and that the Marines apparently mistook him for a protester when he simply had business with the Veterans Administration office inside the building.

"They treated me very fairly," Leao said, adding that he was told, "Understand, this is a whole stressful situation for everybody, and we all have a job."

Asked about the incident, the U.S. military's Northern Command spokesperson said active duty forces "may temporarily detain an individual in specific circumstances," and that the detention would end when the person is transferred to civilian law enforcement.

DHS referred press queries to the Northern Command.

Meanwhile, Los Angeles demonstrations continued for an eighth straight day, after they were sparked last Friday by a series of immigrations raids.

The demonstrations have been concentrated in the downtown area, and fewer than 1% of those present have caused problems, Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said.

Some people have been charged with assaulting a police officer, looting, or damaging property.

There was a "big difference" between legitimate protesters and "people who are coming out to cause problems," Luna said at a press conference in which law enforcement officers said they welcomed peaceful protests on Saturday but warned they would arrest those who harm others or damage property.

Bass implemented a curfew over one square mile (2.5 square km) of the downtown area, which officials said has been useful for maintaining order.

Bass said there was "no termination date" for the curfew.

"We are hoping that if the cause of the turmoil ends, which is stopping the raids, then I can almost guarantee you the curfew will go away in short order," Bass said.

 
Dodgers say immigration agents denied entry to Los Angeles stadium

The Los Angeles Dodgers say they blocked federal agents from entering their stadium on Thursday, as protests against immigration enforcement continue in the city.

In a post on social media, the baseball team said "ICE agents came to Dodger Stadium and requested permission to access the parking lots", and were subsequently turned away.

Los Angeles is among the cities where Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents have ramped up raids to find and deport undocumented migrants.

ICE responded to the Dodgers statement on X: "False. We were never there."

The Department of Homeland Security too issued a statement saying the agents' presence at the stadium "had nothing to do with the Dodgers".

"CBP vehicles were in the stadium parking lot very briefly, unrelated to any operation or enforcement," DHS said. It is unclear why the officials were at the stadium.

This comes as Dodgers are expected to announce that they will assist immigrants who have been impacted by the raids in the city, US media report.

No details have been disclosed, but it would be the team's first official response to the raids.

Dodgers player Kiké Hernández took to Instagram to voice his criticism of the raids on Los Angeles, saying he is "saddened and infuriated by what's happening in our country and our city".

"This is my second home. And I cannot stand to see our community being violated, profiled, abused and ripped apart," he said.

The crackdown in Los Angeles is part of President Donald Trump's policy to be tougher on immigration.

The move has sparked massive protests, prompting Trump to send 700 US Marines and 4,000 National Guard troops to the Los Angeles area to support the federal response to the unrest.

The raids in America's second-biggest city are unfolding against the backdrop of an aggressive push to raise arrest and deportation numbers, as the administration has been disappointed with its current pace.

Meanwhile, White House border czar Tom Homan said on Thursday that the Trump administration will resume immigration raids at worksites.

"The message is clear: we're going to continue conducting worksite enforcement operations, including on farms and in hotels, but on a prioritised basis. Criminals come first," Homan told reporters.

The statement comes days after DHS announced reversing recent guidance that called for a pause on operations at those places.

BBC
 
Trump visits 'Alligator Alcatraz', the next step in his immigration crackdown

US President Donald Trump has visited the new Florida detention centre dubbed "Alligator Alcatraz", where around 3,000 migrants are expected to be held as part of his crackdown on illegal immigration.

While touring the facility in the Florida Everglades, Trump said it will soon hold the most "menacing migrants, some of the most vicious people on the planet".

The administration said alligators, crocodiles and pythons in the surrounding wetlands would keep detainees from escaping.

Some state lawmakers, the local mayor, environmental groups and neighbours oppose its construction, saying it could harm an important ecosystem.

"We're surrounded by miles of treacherous swampland and the only way out is, really, deportation," Trump said on the tour.

He added that he "wouldn't want to run through the Everglades for long" and that anyone who attempted to do so would be met by "a lot of cops in the form of alligators".

The facility is designed to hold 3,000 detainees, with the first expected to arrive as soon as Wednesday. A second facility - meant to house 2,000 people - is going to be built near Jacksonville.

During his visit, amid sweltering heat and humidity, Trump toured a medical facility in the complex, as well as a large air-conditioned tent that will house detainees, with several enclosures surrounded by chain-link fence.

Speaking to reporters, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis said he intends to deputise members of the state's National Guard Judge Advocate Corps, or Jags, to act as immigration judges and facilitate rapid removals from the country.

The president said the facility "could be" a model for future such facilities, adding that his administration was actively working with the governments of several Republican-run states, such as Louisiana, to find other suitable locations.

"They can have their hearings, to get due process and then immediately be flown back home to their home countries," said Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who accompanied Trump on the trip.

Trump said he already approved of the governor's plan.

Both Trump and Noem said they believed the facility would encourage undocumented migrants to self-deport.

Noem claimed one million had already done so, but admitted the government was unsure of the true figure, as some had left the country without using the official Customs and Border Protection app and because their countries of origin had not yet provided data.

The new facility will cost about $450m (£332m) a year to run, according to Noem, and funding will mostly come from a temporary shelter and services programme that the Federal Emergency Management Agency previously used to fund accommodation for undocumented immigrants in US cities.

Local residents who live near the site, like Betty Osceola, a member of the Miccosukee Native American community, have told the BBC they are worried that the temporary facility will become permanent.

"I have serious concerns about the environmental damage," she said, as she stood next to a canal where an alligator was swimming.

Experts warn the damage to area wetlands and endangered species could undo the state's massive effort to restore the Everglades, which has cost Florida billions of dollars. It is home to endangered species such as the Florida panther and the West Indian manatee.

Elise Pautler Bennett, an attorney at the Center for Biological Diversity, described the Everglades as "the most sensitive place in Florida", making development of a detention centre there "risky".

"Any other project that would have been proposed in the Everglades would have gone through an intense environmental approval process, I'm convinced this one didn't get that because it's a political stunt," Ms Bennett told the BBC.

The move to build a new centre comes as human rights organisations warn detentions centres are becoming overcrowded.

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) currently has a record 59,000 detainees in custody nationwide, 140% above its capacity, according to data obtained by CBS, the BBC's news partner.

Like the former prison Alcatraz in the middle of the San Francisco Bay, which Trump has said he wants to reopen, the facility will be hard to reach.

It will be situated on the Dade-Collier Training and Transition Airport, a public airport around 58km (36 miles) from Miami.

BBC
 
Relentless immigration raids are changing California's way of life

When immigration agents came to the farm where he worked, Jaime Alanis tried to hide.

Climbing to the roof of a greenhouse, while agents rounded up and arrested dozens of his coworkers below, Mr Alanis hoped to stay out of sight.

Then he fell.

His neck was broken and skull fractured. He died later in hospital.

Meanwhile, immigration agents fired teargas at a crowd of some 500 protestors, who had gathered to stop the raids outside two legal cannabis farms. Some threw rocks, and the FBI says one fired a gun at federal agents.

Mr Alanis's death, and the violent clashes that ensued at those cannabis farms, are the latest examples of the kind of chaos that has swept across Southern California since the beginning of June, when immigration raids began to intensify in the region.

Those crackdowns sparked protests, which led to US President Donald Trump deploying the National Guard and US Marines, to protect federal officers from the demonstrators and to ensure that his mass deportations, which he had long promised, were carried out.

While many Americans support President Trump's tough immigration policies, the relentlessness of the raids in the region has also triggered a fierce backlash from neighbours and activists. Southern California is home to an estimated 1.4 million undocumented immigrants, many of whom have been forced into hiding - too afraid to go to work, school or even the grocery store.

In so doing, the raids have altered the landscape of one of the country's most populous regions. Businesses are shuttered, cities have cancelled community events - including Fourth of July fireworks celebrations.

"Everyone's looking over their shoulders," says a "raspado" vendor in Los Angeles on a recent Sunday, where normally crowded soccer fields and picnic tables were mostly deserted. As she prepared the shaved ice with sweet strawberry syrup, she seemed wary of questions but grateful for a customer.

"It's never like this," she said.

The raids at the two cannabis farms are now being touted as the largest immigration operation since President Trump took office.

Of the 361 migrants detained during those raids, four had "extensive" criminal records, including rape, kidnapping, and attempted child molestation, media reported. Immigration officers also found 14 migrant children, who the administration claims have been "rescued from potential exploitation, forced labor, and human trafficking".

While the administration frequently highlights the convicted rapists, murderers and drug dealers they have arrested in operations, scores of immigrants - many with no criminal convictions who have spent decades building businesses, families and homes - have been caught in the crosshairs.

"They just kidnap you," says Carlos, who didn't want his full last name used out of fear that he could be deported to his native Guatemala. He has been too afraid to go to work since his sister, Emma, was detained while selling tacos outside a Home Depot last month. "If I'm brown, if I'm Hispanic, they just come and catch you and take you."

The Trump administration says claims that people are being targeted because of their skin colour are "disgusting" and false.

Carlos says he feels a bit safer since a federal judge in California ordered the Trump administration to stop "indiscriminately" detaining people with "roving patrols" of federal agents. But he doesn't trust that they will stop, and he needs to go back to work.

"How am I going to pay my rent," he says. "I'm stuck inside."

Churches and immigrant rights groups have been organising food delivery for people in hiding. They have also been training people to protect immigrants out on the streets using apps, text chains and social media to alert people when federal agents are nearby.

When dozens of armed agents in camouflage descended on MacArthur Park on horseback and in armoured vehicles earlier this month, few were surprised.

Word had spread quickly of the operation – and rumours had swirled that "la migra" was coming hours before the troops arrived. Dozens of protesters swarmed in to greet the troops – including LA Mayor Karen Bass, who demanded they leave the park.

Witnesses say no arrests were made and no one was seen running to escape. By the time troops arrived – with professional looking camera crews recording the overt show of force – the only people in the park were protesters, some kids at a summer camp, and some homeless people asleep in the grass.

"It's been gut wrenching," says Betsy Bolte, who lives near the park and had showed up to protest and yell obscenities at the agents.

"It's war against the people – the heart and soul of the economy. And it's all intentional. It's part of the plan," she said, crying while showing reporters her footage.

Activists accuse the government of terrorising its own people.

"This is part of a programme of terror. From Los Angeles to the Central Coast, the Trump administration is weaponising the federal government and military against Californians," says the advocacy group CAUSE.

But not all Californians agree.

President Trump won 38% of the ballots in November. Recently, the BBC featured the story of one woman who is still devoted to the president and his mass deportation plans, even while she's locked up as an illegal immigrant.

And a lone Trump supporter showed up at the protest at the cannabis farm last week, only to be beaten and jeered at and spit on by protesters.

Perhaps ironically, the architect of many of President Trump's deportation policies, is an Angeleno himself. Senior White House aide Stephen Miller was raised in liberal Santa Monica where even as a teenager he was known on conservative radio for condemning the use of Spanish in his school.

He told Fox News this week that California's "violent" Democratic politicians who show up to protest were inciting violence against federal immigration agents.

"No city can aid and abet an invasion of this country over the will of the American people and the law enforcement officers empowered to enact the American people's wills," he said.

President Trump's "border czar" Tom Homan says Los Angeles has itself to blame because LA's sanctuary laws prevent local law enforcement from cooperating with immigration agents inside jails, where they could detain immigrant offenders outside of the public eye.

"We're going to double down, triple down on sanctuary cities," Mr Homan told reporters, adding that they do not have such overt public raids in Florida because all the sheriffs there let immigration agents into the jails to detain immigrants.

"If they don't let us arrest the bad guy in the county jail, they're going to arrest them in the community. We're going to arrest them at a work site."

In Los Angeles, the impact of the month of raids is noticeable. In parks and neighbourhoods once bustling with shoppers, foot traffic, music and street vendors, the absence of familiar sounds is eerie.

There are 88 cities in LA County and many of them have cancelled public summer events due to the ongoing immigration enforcement activity.

"Many residents have expressed fear and uncertainty, leading them to remain indoors, refrain from work, and withdraw from daily public life," the city of Huntington Park said in a statement about cancelled events. "Our priority is and will continue to be the safety and peace of mind of our community.

Now some immigrants are afraid to turn up for their scheduled hearings, because they are being detained outside court.

Pastor Ara Torosian of Cornerstone Church in West LA said the bulk of his Persian language congregants were asylum seekers. One couple with a three-year-old daughter were detained outside court when they showed up for what they thought was a "routine" hearing. Now they are in Texas at a family detention centre.

Five members of his congregation were detained in June – two of them on the street as Pastor Torosian filmed and begged the agents to stop.

"The are not criminals," he said. "They were obeying everything, not hiding anything."

BBC
 
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