Want to Stop ICE? Go After Its Corporate Collaborators
ICE can’t function without help from the private sector. So we should force the private sector to stop helping.
ICE can’t function without help from the private sector. So we should force the private sector to stop helping.
Recently, Representative Ro Khanna has distinguished himself as one of the few prominent Democrats with ambition, initiative, or really any virtues at all. Along with his Republican ally Representative Thomas Massie, Khanna has been at the forefront of the push to release the full Epstein files and expose any co-conspirators the wealthy pedophile may have had in U.S. political circles. In the lead-up to the Trump administration’s criminal assault on Venezuela, Khanna was one of the loudest and most consistent voices opposing U.S. aggression, going back to 2019. He has called for the arrest of the ICE agent who murdered Renee Good, which is more than Mayor Jacob Frey or Governor Tim Walz have done. Unlike a lot of Democrats, Khanna also understands how to engage people online, appearing on everything from the Adam Friedland Show to the Revolutionary Blackout Network in a sweeping tour of independent media. He makes no secret of the fact that he wants to take a leadership role in the House, and there’s growing speculation that he may even run for president in 2028. But it’s his latest economic move, endorsing a five percent tax on the wealth of billionaires, that really has people riled up.
Trump claims he wants to lower credit card interest rates. His regulators are doing the opposite.
It turns out that Perplexity’s $34.5 billion unsolicited bid for Google Chrome last year was not a publicity stunt. The company explains why.
The president promised during the 2024 campaign to reverse price increases, but he has failed to deliver.
Tech titans also have an eye on plundering the country for resources that are crucial to the AI boom.
The company plans to spend $132 million this year to launch what would become Zimbabwe’s largest gold mine.
Oman’s technocratic reforms stand out in a region where others often favor “megaprojects and moonshots.”
The deal will see Washington cap tariffs on Taiwanese imports in return for a $250 billion investment to expand chipmaking on American soil.