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Friday, September 12, 2025

ICE detainees arriving at former prison in Tennessee

 Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainees recently started arriving at a former prison in Tennessee, prison firm CoreCivic told The Hill on Thursday.

“We have begun receiving U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detainees at our West Tennessee Detention Facility (WTDF) in response to an immediate need from the federal government for safe, humane and appropriate housing and care for these individuals,” CoreCivic spokesperson Ryan Gustin told The Hill in an emailed statement.

Last month, officials in a tiny Tennessee town voted in favor of reopening the West Tennessee Detention Facility to be an immigration detention facility. The leaders in Mason, Tenn., backed the revitalization of the former prison to be a site to detain immigrants who are in the country illegally via the management of CoreCivic, The Associated Press previously reported.

Since the beginning of his second term earlier this year, President Trump and his administration have heavily cracked down on immigration. 

Earlier this week, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) launched an immigration crackdown targeting Chicago.

“DHS is launching Operation Midway Blitz in honor of Katie Abraham who was killed in a drunk driving hit-and-run car wreck caused by criminal illegal alien Julio Cucul-Bol in Illinois,” the DHS said on the social platform X.

“This ICE operation will target the criminal illegal aliens who flocked to Chicago and Illinois because they knew Governor Pritzker and his sanctuary policies would protect them and allow them to roam free on American streets,” DHS added, referencing the Prairie State’s governor, JB Pritzker (D).

In response to a DHS post about the operation launch, Pritzker said it was not “about fighting crime.”

“That requires support and coordination — yet we’ve experienced nothing like that over the past several weeks. Instead of taking steps to work with us on public safety, the Trump Administration’s focused on scaring Illinoisians,” he added in a post on X Monday.

The Hill has reached out to ICE for comment.

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/5499489-ice-detainees-arrive-tennessee-prison/

Lessons from Doha: Eject Hamas now

 Israel’s strike on Doha shattered the illusion that Hamas’s leaders could hide safely behind Gulf skylines. But a look further back shows this immunity had gaps.  

The Mossad’s botched 1997 attempt to kill Khaled Meshaal in Jordan and the 2010 assassination of Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai had already shown Israel’s long arm. However, what is striking is not Israel’s reach or boldness, but the folly of Arab states that continue to shelter and facilitate a movement that has brought them nothing but ruin. Hamas has exported conflict and invited chaos into these states. The correct lesson for Arab states to learn from the Doha airstrike is that none of them should welcome Hamas onto their soil. 

A course correction can take the form of expelling Hamas and delegitimizing it.  

Jordan previously had hosted Hamas since 1992, using the group as a tool to antagonize Amman’s long-time rival Yasser Arafat. During its time in Jordan, Hamas exploited its sanctuary to facilitate terror operations in Israel. However, Amman’s calculus shifted after Israel’s failed assassination attempt on Meshaal. Harboring Hamas brought more danger than benefit, and two years later, the Kingdom cracked down on the group, closed its offices and expelled its leaders.  

Nevertheless, Jordan still tolerates public demonstrations in Hamas’s favor; Egypt has taken a similar approach. Despite its bitter clashes with the group during the peak of the Sinai insurgency between 2013 and 2017, Cairo has accommodated Hamas delegations throughout the years and ignored weapons smuggling into Gaza.  

Worse are the Arab states that provide Hamas with political and logistical havens. Qatar is the clearest example. Doha has hosted the group’s leaders, including those who planned the October 7 atrocities like Khalil al-Hayya. Hamas has used Qatar as a logistical hub for coordination,  planning and financing. Prior to October 7, Doha had been providing roughly $30 million per month to the Hamas regime in Gaza. 

Lebanon is no different. Beirut has long provided shelter to Hamas leaders, and since October 7, Israeli strikes have repeatedly targeted them on Lebanese soil, including one that eliminated Hamas’s deputy leader, Saleh al-Arouri. However, Lebanon has shown no sign of moving to expel Hamas’s leadership.  

Arab states are unlikely to acknowledge that Hamas, not Israel, is responsible for the current devastation. The wave of condemnation that followed the strike shows that many in the region continue to view Israel as the destabilizing force. But this narrative is challenged by the simple fact that Hamas itself seeks an endless war that entails the destruction of the Jewish State. 

It was Hamas that started this war, and it is Hamas that refuses to end it. Its fighters are no different from its external leadership. In Gaza, they exploit civilians as human shields, and externally, they use Arab capitals as political shields to protect themselves from Israeli attacks. Arab states must recognize that isolating and expelling Hamas would eliminate the need for Israeli strikes on Hamas offices within their borders.  

The most significant objection these Arab states will raise is predictable: the fear of domestic unrest if they abandon Hamas. However, Arab leaders should remind their people that breaking with Hamas is both in their interest and that of the Palestinians, to whom Hamas has brought far greater misery. 

In private, Arab leaders are much more candid about the necessity of getting rid of Hamas. Shortly after October 7, the veteran diplomat and peace negotiator Dennis Ross observed, “Over the past two weeks, when I talked to Arab officials throughout the region whom I have long known, every single one told me that Hamas must be destroyed in Gaza. They made clear that if their local populations perceive Hamas as winning, it will validate the group’s ideology of rejection … and put their own governments on the defensive.” 

Encouragingly, Qatar’s prime minister has now signaled that the emirate will reconsider Hamas’s presence in the country. While Doha has made similar pledges in the past without following through, this moment presents an opportunity for the U.S. to hold it accountable.  

The U.S. should push its Arab partners to bar Hamas from establishing any presence within their borders, whether through offices or political activity. Isolating Hamas regionally can both delegitimize the movement in Arab eyes and reinforce the reality that it is the source of instability in the region.  

Ahmad Sharawi is a research analyst at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, where he focuses on Middle East affairs and the Levant. 

https://thehill.com/opinion/international/5501145-israel-hamas-arab-states/

Corporations are trying, and now failing, to hide job openings from US citizens

 Should Americans be prohibited from sharing open job opportunities with each other? The food-delivery platform Instacart seems to think so.

Step back in time for a moment to former President George H.W. Bush, who signed the Immigration Act of 1990 — a bill championed by the late Sen. Ted Kennedy (D-Mass.). He promised that it would “dramatically” increase the number of immigrants to America and encourage migration by “exceptionally talented people.” 

Several new visa categories were created with that aim in mind, including the H-1B for foreign nationals working in “specialty occupations.” Companies such as Instacart can sponsor employees on H-1B visas to reside in the U.S. for up to six years. They can also sponsor them for permanent residence. (In fact, companies must sponsor their employees if they want to keep them around for more than six years.)

However, in order for applications for permanent residency to be successful, companies must certify their inability to find a suitable American candidate to take the position they’re looking to fill with a foreign national. Unsurprisingly, that means some companies have been incentivized to hide job openings from U.S. citizen and resident applicants.

As part of the permanent labor certification process that enables employers to convert migrants into permanent residents, companies are required to advertise the jobs in question, which a migrant has been performing, for at least 30 days.

What does it mean to “advertise”? Some companies have encountered trouble by getting too creative in probing that question. Meta, for example, had to shell out $13 million in 2021 to settle allegations that it discriminated against American applicants. It also includes Apple, which paid $25 million in 2023 to settle similar allegations.

According to the Justice Department, the companies absurdly required applicants to submit applications by mail, despite using an online process for positions they genuinely wanted to fill. In its settlement with Apple, the Justice Department noted that the requirement “nearly always resulted in zero or very few mailed applications that Apple considered” for these positions.  How many 20-something software engineers even know how to use a post office in 2025?

But these settlements haven’t been enough to deter hundreds of other companies from engaging in similar questionable practices. And this has given rise to a cottage industry of chronically-online types — in other words, typical tech workers — seeking to expose them. 

“We’re personally aware of major companies that have significant immigrant workforces, but that are laying off and firing American citizens,” a spokesperson for Jobs.now, one group involved in the effort, told me. “We think it’s unfair when many Americans are struggling to find work.”

The group claims that it has posted more than 3,800 jobs since it launched at the beginning of the year from companies including Meta, Stripe, and other companies that seemingly took unusual measures to conceal job opening. Those measures might include unusual application instructions — such as the guidance by online-learning platform Udemy to submit applications to “Immigration@Udemy.com” — or instructions to exclusively send paper applications, something that no serious employer has done in decades. 

Offenders in the latter basket include Instacart, which became notable this month for becoming unusually aggressive in fighting to keep job openings out of public view.

In a Sept. 4 cease-and-desist delivered to Jobs.now by Instacart and shared with The Hill, the company claimed that unfettered sharing of its job openings constitutes “a misappropriation and violation of the rights of Instacart.” The letter also takes the unusual step of asking the group to “suspend” its website, while adding that “damages” it has incurred by the apparent influx of applicants “entitle Instacart to various forms of relief, including monetary compensation.”

Instacart didn’t respond to my request for comment. 

Jobs.now said it was complying with the demand to stop posting Instacart’s job openings while it examined legal options. In a statement, the group called the letter an “an intimidation tactic” to “silence free speech promoting job openings to American citizens.”

So at least Instacart is still creating jobs for the legal community. Who would have guessed that trademark laws would become a vehicle for concealing job openings from American citizens?

While we’re asking questions, maybe we should ask whether it makes sense for U.S. immigration policy to confer citizenship upon millions of foreign nationals only if their employers can hide job openings and prevent Americans from objecting. Should the system rely so heavily on asking out-of-work Americans to act as goalies — if or when they happen to have the time?

Policymakers should consider updating the Immigration Act of 1990. Perhaps companies should be made to look for qualified U.S. workers before they hire foreign nationals. Congress could also remove U.S. residency as an option for the foreign employees under this program. These are measures that should have been in place from the start, and they would reduce frustration for all parties involved.

Rudy Takala has served as an editor for Fox News and The Hill and as a reporter for the Washington Examiner.

https://thehill.com/opinion/finance/5498346-corporate-america-has-been-trying-to-hide-job-openings-now-it-is-failing/

Mamdani refused to back Biden or Harris — he’s not entitled to Democrats’ backing now

 Supporters of Zohran Mamdani continue to pressure Democratic leaders, insisting that their candidate is entitled to the endorsement of party leadership.

But their sudden commitment to “vote blue no matter who” rewrites Mamdani’s own recent history. They would like to paper over his efforts to actively undermine Democrats in America’s most consequential moment.

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) proclaimed last week that if “an individual doesn’t want to support the party’s nominee [now], it complicates their ability to ask voters to support any nominee [later].” 

Precisely. This is the very same logic that disqualifies Mamdani from seeking these endorsements today.

Mamdani didn’t just fail to support Democratic presidential nominees Vice President Kamala Harris and President Joe Biden in last year’s existentially urgent campaign, he spoke out and organized against them. In March of 2024, Mamdani urged voters to withhold their vote from Biden.

“As proud Democrats and elected officials and New Yorkers,” Mamdani declared, “we endorse the Leave it Blank campaign.” 

Last summer, as the world watched the Democrats make history by nominating the first Black woman on a major party ticket, Mamdani proudly platformed the Uncommitted Movement, which protested her convention.

This was not passive disagreement. It was an intentional and successful effort to sabotage the Democratic ticket in a general election — when the risks could not have been more clear, when every vote mattered, when Democrats were working tirelessly to defeat an authoritarian megalomaniac who had already incited a violent insurrection to stop the peaceful transfer of power. 

Mamdani helped reelect the person responsible for the most devastating setbacks for civil rights, civil liberties, social justice and democracy in American history.

The consequences are dire. We are losing so much, so fast. Our democracy is rapidly backsliding, with the judiciary being tested every day. 

Marginalized communities — women, Black and brown Americans, immigrants, LGBTQ people, the working class and working poor — are under siege. America’s military is being deployed against American citizens on American streets.

Trump has aggressively politicized everything from the Federal Reserve to the history of slavery to public health. 

With the stakes this high, Democrats must project clarity, cohesion and seriousness — especially heading into a high-risk 2026 midterm cycle. 

Democratic and independent voters nationwide have shown a clear preference for moderate policies and tone, and a rejection of the left-wing caricatures that Republicans have successfully painted and turned into politically losing culture war issues. 

Mamdani’s positions — on policing, the free market, immigration, Jewish safety and even the legitimacy of the Democratic Party — are wildly out of step with the broader national electorate.

Mamdani won a hyperlocal primary against a laughably weak field of opposition, in the bluest parts of the bluest city, driven by a narrow, ideologically uniform slice of the electorate. 

Treating this outcome as a template for the national Democratic Party would be political malpractice — alienating the very constituencies Democrats need to win back the swing states and competitive districts.

Endorsing Mamdani would send the signal that this is the direction of the party, which risks blowback not just in the crucial 2026 midterms, but in high-stakes gubernatorial races in Virginia and New Jersey this fall. 

Our party championing Mamdani would be a massive gift to Trump, who will seize the opportunity every day to brand all Democrats as “radical anti-American leftists.” 

Meanwhile, Mamdani’s Democratic Socialist comrades are openly plotting to primary sitting Democratic members of Congress, undermining the urgent fight to retake the House and check Trump’s unimaginable abuse of power. 

Declining to endorse Mamdani doesn’t mean rejecting populist energy, or abandoning important progressive ideas like universal childcare, food security, investment in affordable housing or significantly hiking the minimum wage — especially in cities with the unconscionable wealth gap of New York. 

I want all of these policies, in our city and our country — but I know we’ll never have them if we don’t hold the line to defend the Democratic Party from the extremes, handing another victory to MAGA next fall. We need stability, not spectacle — experience, not intifada. 

We cannot allow our party’s fringe to define its future, as Republicans did in 2016. Are we going to be the party of principled and coherent leadership, or will we follow the Republican Party into a cult of personality — and drive America off the polarization cliff? 

If Mamdani becomes the next mayor of New York, every Democrat, every New Yorker and every American should wish him success, and partner with him to advance safety, prosperity and opportunity across our city. 

But for now, the Democratic Party owes Mamdani nothing — and owes its constituents a majority in Congress next fall.

Amanda Berman is founder and executive director of Zioness Action Fund.

https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/5498690-democratic-party-mamdani-endorsement/

'Teachers, firefighters, officials on leave or fired over Charlie Kirk posts'

  Teachers, firefighters, elected officials and even a cable news contributor have lost their jobs or are under investigation after comments they made about the assassination of conservative influencer Charlie Kirk.

Reports of teachers and school administrators around the country being put on leave proliferated Thursday less than 24 hours after Kirk’s death. School employees in TennesseeNorth CarolinaPennsylvaniaVirginiaMississippiOhio were all being investigated for posts made on social media.

At least one teacher in South Carolina was fired for a post about Kirk’s death that read: “Thoughts and prayers to his children but IMHO America became greater today. There I said it.”

A teacher and city councilor in Cornelius, Oregon, wrote the assassination “really brightened up my day,” landing him in hot water.

public relations employee for the National Football League’s Carolina Panthers was terminated, according to The Athletic, after reportedly posting on his personal Instagram account: “Why are yall sad? Your man said it was worth it,” with an image of the Wu-Tang hit “Protect Ya Neck.”

Matthew Dowd, an MSNBC contributor, was also fired by the network for comments he made on the air during breaking news coverage on Wednesday.

“He was constantly pushing this sort of hate speech aimed at certain groups,” Dowd said, according to The Hill. “And I always go back to: Hateful thoughts lead to hateful words, which then lead to hateful actions. … You can’t say these awful words and not expect awful actions to take place.”

While Dowd’s comments were made live on-air with a large audience, some were made in more private channels but have been brought to light by right-wing activists, WIRED reports.

Laura Loomer, a conservative media personality with a large following, posted on X, “I will be spending my night making everyone I find online who celebrates his death Famous, so prepare to have your whole future professional aspirations ruined if you are sick enough to celebrate his death. I’m going to make you wish you never opened your mouth.”

Her social media feed Thursday was filled with the names, pictures and job titles of people who she said should be fired for comments they made following Kirk’s death.

Another far-right social media influencer, who posts under the account Libs of TikTok, was also on the case. A firefighter in New Orleans had posted an Instagram comment, which she later deleted, suggesting Kirk deserved to die and the bullet was “a gift from god.” But the deleted comment had been screenshotted and shared on Libs of TikTok, drawing the attention of the fire department’s superintendent and the Louisiana attorney general.

https://thehill.com/homenews/5499708-why-are-yall-sad-teachers-firefighters-officials-on-leave-or-fired-over-charlie-kirk-posts/

'Naval Academy midshipman shot by security during lockdown'

 A midshipman at the U.S. Naval Academy was injured Thursday after mistaking law enforcement for an active shooter due to online misinformation. 

After concerns of an active shooter were posted anonymously on a chat platform, the campus in Annapolis, Md. was placed on lockdown shortly after 5 p.m. and security officials began clearing buildings, CNN reported.

Even as communications from the school’s commandant seen by CNN showed that there was no active shooter on campus, two midshipmen mistook security personnel for a potential shooter and refused to open their door. 

The security then forced the door open, prompting one student to hit one official in the head with the butt end of a parade rifle, and was then shot in the arm in the struggle, a senior Department of Homeland Security official confirmed. 

“In response to reports of threats, the Naval Academy was placed on lockdown. Naval Support Activity Annapolis, in coordination with local law enforcement, responded to those threats,” according to the DHS official.

“During the lockdown, two midshipmen refused to comply with an order to open their door. The security personnel forced the door, and one was struck in the head with the butt end of a parade rifle. During the struggle, security personnel opened fire, striking one midshipman in the shoulder,” they added.

Both injured individuals were taken from the campus to receive medical care, they said.

The midshipman was medevaced to the hospital by Maryland State Police and was in stable condition, ABC News reported.

The incident comes amid heightened concerns in the U.S. over political and gun violence after the Wednesday killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. 

Kirk was shot in the neck as he spoke at a Utah college campus event and was later announced dead. The suspected shooter, Tyler Robinson, a 22-year-old resident of Utah, has been arrested.

https://thehill.com/policy/defense/5501588-naval-academy-midshipman-injured-shooting/

ChatGPT being trained to flag suicidal youths to authorities following teen death: CEO

 Amid a rash of suicides, the company behind ChatGPT could start alerting police over youth users pondering taking their own lives, the firm’s CEO and co-founder, Sam Altman, announced. The 40-year-old OpenAI boss dropped the bombshell during a recent interview with conservative talk show host Tucker Carlson.

It’s “very reasonable for us to say in cases of young people talking about suicide, seriously, where we cannot get in touch with the parents, we do call authorities,” the techtrepreneur explained. “Now that would be a change because user privacy is really important.”

The change reportedly comes after Altman and OpenAI were sued by the family of Adam Raine, a 16-year-old California boy who committed suicide in April after allegedly being coached by the large language learning model. The teen’s family alleged that the deceased was provided “step-by-step playbook” on how to kill himself — including tying a noose to hang himself and composing a suicide note — before he took his own life.

It’s “very reasonable for us to say in cases of young people talking about suicide, seriously, where we cannot get in touch with the parents, we do call authorities,” Altman (pictured) explained.WILL OLIVER/POOL/EPA/Shutterstock

Following his untimely death, the San Francisco AI firm announced in a blog post that it would install new security features that allowed parents to link their accounts to their own, deactivate functions like chat history, and receive alerts should the model detect “a moment of acute distress.”

It’s yet unclear which authorities will be alerted — or what info will be provided to them — under Altman’s proposed policy. However, his announcement marks a departure from ChatGPT’s prior MO for dealing with, which involved urging those displaying suicidal ideation to “call the suicide hotline,” the Guardian reported.

Under the new guardrails, the OpenAI bigwig said that he would be clamping down on teens attempting to hack the system by prospecting for suicide tips under the guise of researching a fiction story or a medical paper.

Altman believes that ChatGPT could unfortunately be involved in more suicides than we’d like to believe, claiming that worldwide, “15,000 people a week commit suicide,” and that about “10% of the world are talking to ChatGPT.”

OpenAI reps claim that the tech’s safeguards often become less effective the longer the conversation goes.Thaspol – stock.adobe.com

“That’s like 1,500 people a week that are talking, assuming this is right, to ChatGPT and still committing suicide at the end of it,” the techtrepreneur explained. “They probably talked about it. We probably didn’t save their lives.”

He added, “Maybe we could have said something better. Maybe we could have been more proactive.

California teen Adam Raine took his life in April 2025 after allegedly being coached by ChatGPT.Raine Family

Unfortunately, Raine isn’t the first highly publicized case of a person taking their life after allegedly talking to AI.

Last year, Megan Garcia sued Character.AI over her 14-year old son’ Sewell Setzer III’s death in 2024 — claiming he took his life after becoming enamored with a chatbot modeled on the “Game of Thrones” character Daenerys Targaryen.

Meanwhile, ChatGPT has been documented providing a tutorial on how to slit one’s wrists and other methods of self-harm.

AI experts attribute this unfortunate phenomenon to the fact that ChatGPT’s safeguards have limited mileage — the longer the conversation, the greater the chance of the bot going rogue.

“ChatGPT includes safeguards such as directing people to crisis helplines,” said an OpenAI spokesperson in a statement following Raine’s death. “While these safeguards work best in common, short exchanges, we’ve learned over time that they can sometimes become less reliable in long interactions where parts of the model’s safety training may degrade.”

This glitch is particularly alarming given the prevalence of ChatGPT use among youths.

Some 72% of American teens use AI as a companion, while one in eight of them are turning to the technology for mental health support, according to a Common Sense Media poll.

To curb instances of unsafe AI guidance, experts advised measures that require the tech to undergo more stringent safety trials before becoming available to the public.

“We know that millions of teens are already turning to chatbots for mental health support, and some are encountering unsafe guidance,” Ryan K. McBain, professor of policy analysis at the RAND School of Public Policy, told the Post. “This underscores the need for proactive regulation and rigorous safety testing before these tools become deeply embedded in adolescents’ lives.”

https://nypost.com/2025/09/11/tech/chatgpt-could-begin-alerting-authorities-over-suicidal-users/