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Kim Kardashian RIPS Donald Trump’s Effed Up Immigration Policy

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Kim Kardashian has once again made her thoughts known when it comes to a certain United States President who is almost definitely racist, elitist and all around idiotic.

Yes, we’re looking at you, Donald Trump.

On Thursday night at Diane von Furstenberg’s DVF Awards, which recognized her work as a prison reform advocate, Kardashian sat down at a roundtable with journalists.

At one point, the mother of four was asked her thoughts on the ongoing ICE raids in the country.

(Photo by ANDREA PATTARO / AFP)

“In the news you hear, ‘Oh, it’s about people who have committed these crimes and they’re trying to help out our country,’” Kim responded, prior to criticizing what she actually believes to be happening.

“But then you hear about all of the people who have worked so hard to build our country, and so many people that are such a part of our country getting affected. People I know. People my friends know.”

Years ago, Kardashian met with President Trump in the Oval Office.

The two sort of worked together to free an Alabama woman named Alice Johnson from jail after she had served many years for a drug-related offense.

But the reality star now appears to see Trump for the ghoul that he truly is.

Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office on August 14, 2025 in Washington, DC. Trump is expected to issue a proclamation on the 90th anniversary of Social Security and highlight his administration’s efforts on the program. (Photo by Andrew Harnik/Getty Images)

“You want to believe that there’s a powerful message in protection, but then you see that it’s not really happening like that,” Kardashian went on.

“It’s really tough, but I think that we have to do what we can to protect the people that have really supported and built our country.”

This has become a common critique of the Trump administration, which appears to be targeting pretty much anyone of color for deportation — not just any violent or dangerous criminals.

To Kardashian’s credit, she really has advocated for criminal justice reform for several years now.

Of late, Kim has called for the release of Erik and Lyle Menendez, who are both serving life sentences after being convicted of murdering their parents in 1989. The brothers were recently denied parole.

Kim Kardashian attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York City.
Kim Kardashian attends SNL50: The Anniversary Special on February 16, 2025 in New York City. (Photo by Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images)

Back in June, Kardashian first leveled this same sort of judgment against Trump.

Amid ongoing tension between protesters and military forces in Los Angeles sent by the President, Kim took to social media to blast what she saw as overreach on behalf of the administration and ICE.

“There HAS to be a BETTER way,” Kardashian wrote this summer to her 356 million followers, adding:

“We’re told that ICE exist to keep our country safe and remove violent criminals. But when we witness innocent, hardworking people being ripped from their families in inhumane ways, we have to speak up. Growing up in LA, I’ve seen how deeply immigrants are woven into the fabric of this city.

“No matter where you fall politically, it’s clear that our communities thrive because of the contributions of immigrants.”

Kim Kardashian RIPS Donald Trump’s Effed Up Immigration Policy was originally published on The Hollywood Gossip.

​The Hollywood Gossip

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Politics

Democratic governors urge Trump to drop plans to send troops to their cities

Democratic governors are urging President Donald Trump to back off his threats to deploy National Guard troops in cities led by his political opponents across the country.

A letter signed by most of the nation’s Democratic governors argues that Trump’s deployment of soldiers ostensibly to aid in civilian law enforcement is unnecessary and illegal.

“Whether it’s Illinois, Maryland and New York or another state tomorrow, the President’s threats and efforts to deploy a state’s National Guard without the request and consent of that state’s governor is an alarming abuse of power, ineffective, and undermines the mission of our service members,” they said in the letter, organized by the Democratic Governors Association.

Trump has deployed troops to Washington and Los Angeles and threatened to send them to Chicago and other cities led by Democrats in what he has portrayed as an effort to address violent crime, though the soldiers have done little in the way of law enforcement and overall criminality has declined in the U.S.

Trump made Washington the face of his crime crackdown in mid-August, taking control of the district’s police force and sending in the National Guard. The president has also floated plans to send the National Guard to Chicago, telling reporters at the Oval Office on Monday that it is “a killing field” and “disaster.”

California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday announced a contrasting plan to send additional California Highway Patrol officers to several cities in the state to assist local law enforcement in addressing auto theft and drug crimes. Trump sent troops to Los Angeles in response to protests over the administration’s deportation agenda in June.

Chicago officials are preparing for the possible arrival of federal troops by dusting off plans they used for last year’s Democratic National Convention.

Four governors — Josh Green of Hawaii, Ned Lamont of Connecticut, Katie Hobbs of Arizona and Tim Walz of Minnesota — did not sign the letter.

“Every American deserves to feel safe in their neighborhood and community,” the governors wrote. “But instead of actually addressing crime, President Trump cut federal funding for law enforcement that states rely on and continues to politicize our military by trying to undermine the executive authority of Governors as Commanders in Chief of their state’s National Guard.”

White House spokesperson Abigail Jackson in a statement accused the Democrats of “doing publicity stunts,” and said their communities would be safer if they focused on combating crime instead of attacking the president.

“They should listen to fellow Democrat Mayor Muriel Bowser who recently celebrated the Trump Administration’s success in driving down violent crime in Washington DC,” she said.

​Politics

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Politics

The nation’s cartoonists on the week in politics

Every week political cartoonists throughout the country and across the political spectrum apply their ink-stained skills to capture the foibles, memes, hypocrisies and other head-slapping events in the world of politics. The fruits of these labors are hundreds of cartoons that entertain and enrage readers of all political stripes. Here’s an offering of the best of this week’s crop, picked fresh off the Toonosphere. Edited by Matt Wuerker.

​Politics

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Politics

Democrats seize on Utah in redistricting war

As Republicans charge forward with their national gerrymandering gambit, Democrats are rushing to take advantage of an unexpected gift in Utah.

All of Utah’s congressional seats are held by Republicans, and the minority party has begun strategizing how to seize a seat in the Salt Lake City metro area — a blue corner of a deep-red state — following a judge’s orders this week for a new congressional map. President Donald Trump, aggressively pushing his party to redraw maps to maintain their slim House majority next year, immediately slammed the ruling.

Should a competitive seat emerge from the state legislature’s required remapping, former Rep. Ben McAdams, a conservative Democrat, would seriously consider entering the race. He has begun phoning donors to gauge interest, according to two people with direct knowledge of his thinking. Other names circulating within Democratic circles include state Sen. Nate Blouin. And some of the state’s Democratic donors say they are eager to back a candidate who would break Republicans’ grip on the state.

Meanwhile Utah Republican Party Chair Robert Axson said he’s had conversations with the White House since the ruling about their shared concerns around the “legislative process being undermined, and courts, rather than the people’s voice, weighing in on determining these maps through the legislative process.”

The legal curveball comes amid a national redistricting battle the GOP has been dominating, with its attempted five-seat pickup in Texas and White House-backed plans for redrawing maps in Indiana and Missouri. And it offers Democrats a slight boost in the national arms race that will determine whether they will regain any power in the midterms next year.

A court hearing is scheduled for Friday in the case that found Utah Republicans unlawfully bypassed voter-approved safeguards against partisan gerrymandering while creating the current map. That hearing will likely reveal how they plan to delay implementation of the ruling until after the midterms. Meanwhile, GOP leaders in the state legislature announced Thursday they will “attempt to redistrict under these unprecedented constraints.”

Democrats’ best hope of regaining power in Washington next year is through the House — increasing pressure on the party to respond to Republicans’ attempt to protect their majority by carving out seats across the country. But Democrats are hamstrung by independent redistricting commissioners and state constitutions, such that even a single seat in Utah would prove meaningful for the struggling party.

Monday’s decision from District Court Judge Dianna Gibson resulted from a lawsuit challenging the legality of the map adopted in 2021, which argues that when Republicans in the state legislature unlawfully ignored recommendations from an independent redistricting commission by cracking Salt Lake City into four districts. Its timing – on the heels of Texas and California engaging in tit-for-tat gerrymandering, and other GOP states following suit – thrusts Utah into the pitched national redistricting war.

“We’ve now finally got this decision years later that conspicuously comes during the conversation around what Texas has done, and that makes it super interesting and very relevant,” said Utah state Sen. Nate Blouin, a Democrat.

The judge found legislators improperly repealed a voter-backed measure that required independent oversight of redistricting and prohibited partisan gerrymandering. She ordered the legislature to submit a new map for her approval within 30 days. The lawmakers are set to convene a special session Sept. 15.

Democrats and aligned groups are gearing up for the possibility of a protracted legal fight and potential delays from the legislature in adoption of a new map. Elizabeth Rasmussen, executive director of anti-gerrymandering group Better Boundaries, said that “whatever the legislature decides to do next, we’re ready to continue to fight for fair maps.”

GOP legislative leaders indicated they will attempt to preserve the current maps’ goal of having districts that represent “both urban and rural voices,” implying that any new map may dilute Democratic voters.

“This race has the potential of of doing exactly the opposite of what you’re seeing in in Texas and California: to take partisan gerrymandering and partisan interests out of the election and get the power back to the voters,” said McAdams, the last Democrat to represent Utah in Congress until he was gerrymandered out of his district in 2021. “[This is] an opportunity, really, for the voters to choose the type of person they want to have represent them, instead of having it as a foregone conclusion.”

Utah Republicans have cast the decision as judicial overreach, a view Trump echoed by calling the ruling “absolutely unconstitutional” and pledging to do “everything possible” to protect the state’s four Republican House members.

State Sen. Scott Sandall, a Republican who chaired the recent redistricting process, called the decision “an attack from the left” and said the judge has “thrown redistricting into chaos.” He added he’s “positive that some kind of delay could be sought. That’s within the purview of the legislature to try to get a stay.”

Former Utah Gov. Gary Herbert, a Republican who appointed Gibson to the bench in 2018, dismissed Trump’s comments as “hyperbole” and called it wrong to “politicize” the judiciary, noting “it should not matter whether you’re a Democrat, Republican, conservative, liberal, it should not matter one iota.”

Any Democratic candidate will receive support from a surprisingly robust donor class composed of executives of Utah’s tech giants and startups who enjoy the state’s business-friendly climate. The business hub, dubbed “Silicon Slopes,” counts Adobe, eBay and Microsoft among the companies with major offices in Utah.

Recently, a group of progressive donors formed the Utah Donor Collaborative to unite Democratic donors and deliver targeted legislative wins throughout the state.

“We’ve got an infrastructure now that is a real positive,” said Jonathan Ruga, a major Democratic donor. “When new people come in that do have a moderate or a left-leaning ideology, I think they’re more apt to participate.”

​Politics

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Health

Here’s The Real Problem With RFK Jr. And Pete Hegseth’s Fitness Challenge

It’s not unusual to attempt viral fitness challenges. But is the “Pete and Bobby Challenge” — 100 push-ups and 50 pull-ups in under 10 minutes — safe to try?

​Health Digest – Health News, Wellness, Expert Insights

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Entertainment

11 Old-School Dishes That Were Once Considered Fancy (But Not Anymore)

Here are some examples of classic dishes that were once luxurious, only to fade from fashion. But, even if they’re not fancy, many of them still taste great.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

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Whatever Happened To Papa John’s Founder John Schnatter?

John Schnatter isn’t the public persona he once was, but he is still around. This is how the Papa John’s founder navigated his next chapter.

​Mashed – Fast Food, Celebrity Chefs, Grocery, Reviews

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The Simple Trick For Making Flavor-Packed Salmon Patties Every Time

If you find that your salmon patties turn out a little bland, don’t blame the fish. Instead, use this trick to amp up the flavor with a single ingredient.

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What Happened To Like Air Puffcorn After Shark Tank?

When the trio of siblings behind the snack brand Like Air Puffcorn when on ABC’s “Shark Tank,” they made quite an impression. Here’s what happened afterwards.

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Are Blueberries With White Spots Still Good To Eat?

When white spots appear on blueberries, people wonder if they are safe to eat. Here are ways to keep blueberries from developing white spots prematurely.

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