The solution to all of this: Send hundreds of ICE agents to these airports to … well, it's not clear what they were meant to do in this situation, and by all accounts they aren't improving things at all. (Though Lauren Boebert did claim that ICE was making things great again at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport before it was pointed out to her that ICE had not been deployed to that airport.) Because this is ICE we're talking about, there was mayhem to be had: San Francisco travelers were witness to a particularly horrific arrest this week. But as Defector's Barry Petchesky reported, the agents are mostly just standing around, diddling on their phones, and begging for a coffee shop manager to hit them with a classic, "If there's time to lean, there's time to clean."
The origin story of the plan to send Immigration and Customs Enforcement thugs to the airport truly is nutty. As CNN reported, this all began when "Linda from Arizona" called in to The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show last week to make her pitch: "I think I have a solution to the TSA problem." She said, "We need to bring in ICE agents." Travis took the idea to Fox News to make a direct appeal to the president. Per the report, "CNN searched TV transcript databases and found no other mentions of the idea on major networks until Travis brought it up." Naturally, Trump ended up insisting that the idea was his. Look, I know this has been a bad week for the AI industry (or as I call it, the "use-up-all-the-energy-to-build-soulless-data-centers-to-steal-the-whole-of-human-endeavor-and-creativity-in-order-to-make-shittier-facsimiles-of-things-people-already-do" industry), but for all the talk of AI slop, here we have some human slop that is substantially worse.
ICE deployments have caused no small amount of harm to the American people. Besides the terror they cause, they are one of the big drivers of the affordability crisis in the United States. Just this week, the Financial Times reported how ICE crackdowns have essentially broken the home-building industry in Texas's Rio Grande Valley. So the decision to make ICE agents—who are a sort of sprawling reminder of how Trumpism isn't working—more visible to the public is an odd one.
While no one wants to encounter Trump's brownshirts on the streets of their town, their presence has proven to be oddly galvanizing to the growing dissident movement against Trump. It takes the stupidity and ineptness of authoritarianism and shifts it from a theoretical concern to something local and tangible. It gives people the opportunity to perceive misrule for themselves, and provides a target for their ire. And it keeps people well brined in the salty swirl of everything being politicized.
I personally don't know if the wreckage of Trump's own policy stupidity is evident to him. He is, after all, fighting a daily battle with his flagging cognitive abilities. He may perceive the economy as great solely because his many avenues to personal self-enrichment are all paying off. We learned this week that his daily Iran war briefing consists of two-minute montages of stuff blowing up. The barriers between Trump and information awareness, in other words, remain strong. But with his approval ratings tanking, the economy cratering, and the undistilled chaos of his presidency spreading, Republicans might rue the day Trump decided to send a potent reminder to your local airport about how he's making everything suck.