Skip to content

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Multiple news sources at #1 place!

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Home - BBC US politics - South Korean worker tells BBC of panic during US immigration raid at Hyundai plant

Posted in
  • BBC US politics

South Korean worker tells BBC of panic during US immigration raid at Hyundai plant

by The editor•8 September 2025•Posted inBBC US politics

Some 400 US agents took part in the immigration raid on the Hyundai facility, detaining hundreds of workers, many South Korean nationals.

The editor
More by The editor

You might also like

Videos show impact of Trump’s crackdown in one Washington DC neighbourhood

Watch: Slurry of mud and hot water erupts from Yellowstone pool

‘We knew the family’: Utah town in disbelief after local resident accused of killing Charlie Kirk

Post navigation

Previous Article Previous article:
Trump to visit Museum of the Bible on Monday
Next Article Next article:
South Korean officials will travel to US to secure return of detained workers

The Atlantic

  • Secrets of a Radical Duke

    How a lost copy of the Declaration of Independence unlocked a historical mystery

  • The Insurrection Problem

    Violence has marred the American constitutional order since the founding. Is it inevitable?

  • Whose Independence?

    The question of what Jefferson meant by “all men” has defined American law and politics for too long.

  • The Moral Foundation of America

    The idea that everyone has intrinsic rights to life and liberty was a radical break with millennia of human history. It’s worth preserving.

  • Retribution Is Here

    The president’s threats of revenge are no longer bluster.

Talking Points Memo

  • Come See Us Live on Nov. 6

    If you’ve never had a chance to meet the TPM crew in person, please join us on November 6th in...

  • Jury Refuses To Indict Chicago ICE Protesters In Latest Revolt Against Trump Overreach

    A grand jury Tuesday night declined to indict two protesters in the Chicago area accused of assaulting law enforcement, the...

  • A Shortlist of Federal Data the Trump Administration Has Tampered With or Destroyed

    The scale and scope of federal data and statistics that have been completely removed or otherwise compromised by President Donald...

  • Top Trump Education Officials Are Dismantling Public Schools: ‘We’re Going to Have a Lot of Empty School Buildings’

    ProPublica is a Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative newsroom. Sign up for The Big Story newsletter to receive stories like this one...

  • Election Denier Tries To Make It Easier For Candidates To Challenge Voting Rules

    Rep. Mike Bost (R-IL), who voted in 2020 to overturn the presidential election results, leads a case the Supreme Court...

Fox News

  • White House brutally mocks Kamala Harris' 'cackle' after former VP drops F-bomb, suggests admin is 'crazy'

    Former Vice President Kamala Harris uses profanity to suggest the Trump administration was "crazy" during Los Angeles event where she promoted her new book.

  • Two Republicans vote with Dems as Senate GOP spikes bid to block Trump's strikes on drug-smuggling boats

    Two Republican senators voted with Democrats for a motion to discharge a joint resolution to block Trump's unilateral strikes against vessels allegedly trafficking drugs.

  • Federal judge undercuts Trump's executive order on 'radical gender ideology'

    U.S. District Judge Beryl Howell blocked Trump administration rules requiring teen pregnancy prevention grant recipients to avoid gender ideology content.

  • Senate GOP resists 'nuclear option' as Dem shutdown standoff deepens

    Senate Republicans need Democratic support to reopen the government, but they aren't ready to change Senate rules to eliminate the filibuster to turn the lights back on.

  • ‘Getting desperate’: Governor debate gets personal after Democrat is mocked for cheating scandal

    The New Jersey gubernatorial debate got tense on Wednesday night after candidate Jack Ciattarelli mocked his opponent for her involvement in a U.S. Naval Academy cheating scandal.

The Hill

  • CSPAN caller presses Johnson over looming military pay lapse: 'My kids could die'

    Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) on Thursday said the onus for the looming lapse in military pay falls squarely on Democrats for their refusal to support a GOP spending package. In a rare CSPAN appearance, the first for a sitting Speaker since 2001, Johnson took an emotional call from a woman who said her husband serves...

  • Vance hits Schumer over 'vile' shutdown comment

    The White House and Republicans in Congress are seizing on comments from Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) in which the Democratic leader argued the party's position gets better "every day" amid the ongoing government shutdown. White House officials blasted Schumer's comments in an interview with Punchbowl News as insensitive and tone deaf as the...

  • AI won’t just take jobs. It will topple governments.

    AI displacement is creating educated, capable revolutionaries with nothing left to lose, threatening governments and creating an existential threat to the social order.

  • Watch live: House Republicans give remarks as shutdown stretches into second week

    House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) and Republican leaders will give remarks as the government shutdown stretches into a second week following six failed votes in the Senate on stopgap funding bills. Johnson canceled House votes for this week as the GOP vowed to make the lapse in funding painful for Democrats as a way to...

  • New Jersey GOP governor nominee breaks with Trump on wind farm, Tylenol

    New Jersey’s GOP nominee for governor, Jack Ciattarelli, broke with the Trump administration Wednesday on two topics during the final gubernatorial debate before Election Day.  Ciattarelli said he disagrees with the president’s decision to support the completion of an almost-finished offshore wind farm project in the area surrounding the Garden State and criticized the leader’s...

Categories

  • Adventure
  • Architecture
  • Astronomy
  • BBC US politics
  • Beauty
  • CNN
  • Democracy matters – defending democracy
  • Fashion
  • Featured articles
  • FiveThirtyEight
  • Food
  • Fox news
  • Just security
  • Movie Stuff
  • NPR
  • Painters Matter
  • Politico
  • Politics Matters
  • Real Clear Politics
  • Talking Points Memo
  • The Atlantic
  • The Guardian
  • The Hill
  • Travel

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

Find Us

This is a good place to read all your sources at just one stop.

Address
123 Main Street
New York, NY 10001

Hours
Monday–Friday: 5:00AM–5:00PM
Saturday & Sunday: Only urgent matters

The abouve looks good so I left it there, like I would be running a regular physical operation as well ,-)

You can reach me at editor@thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

The Guardian

  • National guard troops ‘protecting’ ICE and other federal property in Chicago area – US politics live

    Move comes as Donald Trump calls for imprisonment of Brandon Johnson, Chicago’s mayor, and JB Pritzker, the Illinois governorThe president has spent much of Thursday morning thanking his allies on Truth social for praising his diplomatic efforts in Gaza. “I would like to thank Republican Congressman Brian Mast, of Florida, for his brilliant words and analysis on the return of the Hostages, and Peace in the Middle East, this morning on Fox & Friends. Thank you Brian!!!,” Trump wrote in a post. Continue reading...

  • Why is the US House speaker refusing to seat an elected Democrat? | Moira Donegan

    Adelita Grijalva won a landslide election for her Arizona seat. But Mike Johnson is defying the will of the votersThe people of Arizona’s seventh congressional district – a vast territory extending across the state’s south, along the Mexican border – have been denied representation in Congress for weeks. That’s because Mike Johnson, the Republican House speaker, has refused to swear in Adelita Grijalva, their representative-elect, who won a special election to fill the seat vacated by her father, the late Raúl Grijalva, in a landslide late last month. Grijalva, a Democrat, has been largely ignored by the speaker. Unlike sworn representatives, she has to go around the Capitol with an escort. There’s an office with her name on the door, but she hasn’t been allowed inside, and has worked instead out of a conference room on another floor.It is an unprecedented abuse of procedural power on the part of the speaker, one that has had the effect of silencing a political opponent and denying representation to the citizens of her district. In refusing to seat Grijalva, Johnson has defied the will of Arizona’s voters, and effectively nullified, at least for the time being, a legitimate congressional election. He has persisted in this even in defiance of his own promises, after saying on Friday he would seat her this week once the House returned to session – and then telling lawmakers they wouldn’t reconvene this week after all. Last week, Grijalva showed up to a three-and-a-half-minute pro forma session, hoping to be sworn in then. (Johnson has sworn in other representatives at pro forma sessions in the past.) But the Republican presiding over the session, Morgan Griffith, ignored the effort. On a weekend talkshow, Grijalva said she had heard “absolutely nothing” from the speaker about the timing of her swearing in.Moira Donegan is a Guardian US columnist Continue reading...

  • Alarm as CDC calls for separate MMR vaccines despite measles outbreak

    Concerns that three separate shots would be more costly and time-consuming, and keep kids from being vaccinatedThe measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine is undergoing more scrutiny by the Trump administration in their ongoing reassessment of vaccines despite the worst measles outbreak in decades.Jim O’Neill, the deputy secretary of the US Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) and the acting director of the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), called on Monday for new vaccines to replace the current MMR shots. Continue reading...

  • Democratic candidates can win Rust Belt voters by … attacking the Democratic party | Jared Abbott and Bhaskar Sunkara

    Voters support progressive economic populism, our survey shows. They just don’t trust Democrats to deliver itIf anyone could have broken through as a progressive in red America, it was Sherrod Brown. For decades, the Ohio senator railed against corporations for shipping good-paying jobs overseas and pleaded with Democrats to take the struggles of deindustrialized communities seriously. Yet in 2024, even Brown, a model economic populist, fell to a Republican challenger.Does that prove, as writers such as Jonathan Chait have argued, that the idea of winning back the working class with progressive economic policies has been tried and has failed?Jared Abbott is the director of the Center for Working-Class Politics. Bhaskar Sunkara is the president of the Nation magazine and the founding editor of Jacobin Continue reading...

  • National guard remains in Chicago area as judge to rule on Trump deployment

    President attacks Chicago mayor and Illinois governor as extra troops at army training site south-west of cityHundreds of national guard troops remained in the Chicago area as city and Illinois officials awaited a judge’s decision to stop Donald Trump’s aggressive immigration enforcement operation in the nation’s third-largest city.It was still unclear where specifically the Trump administration would send the troops who reported to an army training site south-west of Chicago, which was laden with extra fencing and tarps put up to block the public’s view of the facility late on Wednesday evening. Continue reading...

Politico

  • Vance heads to Indiana after Republicans warn White House of stalled redistricting push

    It marks the vice president's second trip to the Hoosier State over the remapping effort.

  • DNC briefs top Democrats on audit of 2024 White House loss

    The Democratic National Committee is reading Democrats into its election takeaways, though an aide cautioned it does not represent the full report.

  • El-Sayed calls Oct. 7 fundraising email a mistake

    Michigan Democratic Senate candidate Abdul El-Sayed called a fundraising email that went out on the anniversary of Hamas' Oct. 7 attack on Israel a mistake in a statement provided first to POLITICO. “That email mistakenly went out yesterday. Abdul has been clear and consistent: he holds equally valuable the lives of all innocent people and condemns violence against them," said spokesperson Roxie Richner. The fundraising email from El-Sayed's campaign started by marking that "Two years ago this month, Netanyahu’s military launched a ground invasion of Gaza. Since then, the world has watched tragedy unfold in real time." It drew condemnation from many on the right and some Democrats, who criticized it for omitting any mention of Hamas' attack on Israel at the outset of the war. El-Sayed put out a separate statement on the two-year anniversary of the conflict Tuesday condemning Hamas' "heinous attack on Oct. 7" and also condemning Israel's "horrific genocide on Gaza." The Israel-Hamas war could become a major flashpoint in the Michigan Senate race, with Democrats believing the influential American Israel Public Affairs Committee could intervene in the contest. The group's political arm has previously backed Rep. Haley Stevens, who's also vying for the Senate nomination, during her time in Congress. State Sen. Mallory McMorrow, the third major candidate in the race, recently staked out a new stance on the conflict and said she believed Israel's war in Gaza was a genocide. El-Sayed had been a backer of Michigan's "uncommitted" movement during the 2024 election, though he'd said he would still support Democrats over Donald Trump. He ultimately endorsed Kamala Harris' presidential bid.

  • Pam Bondi's effusive praise of Trump

    Pam Bondi's effusive praise of Trump lead image

  • Kevin O'Leary: US stake in Intel is 'waste of taxpayer dollars'

    Kevin O'Leary: US stake in Intel is 'waste of taxpayer dollars' lead image

NPR

  • Senate to hold 7th vote as government shutdown drags on

    After six failed attempts, the Senate will vote again Thursday to end the shutdown, as both parties continue to trade blame over who is stopping the government from reopening.

  • Illinois Sen. Dick Durbin on the shutdown and the National Guard troops in his state

    NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., about the government shutdown and the Trump administration's deployment of National Guard troops to the Chicago area.

  • In Utah, a group that helped prompt the redistricting says it's acting on faith

    Mormon Women for Ethical Government was one of the plaintiffs in a lawsuit that could overturn Utah's Republican-leaning map for U.S. House seats. That could matter in next year's elections.

  • 59% of Americans disapprove of RFK Jr.'s moves as health secretary, a new poll says

    A new poll shows trust in federal health policies is plummeting, and what — or who — people believe increasingly depends on their politics.

  • What are your holiday shopping plans? NPR wants to hear from you

    Is this the season of cutbacks or splurges? As we prepare to cover holiday shopping and deals, NPR wants to hear from you, whatever your plans may be.

Five Thirty Eight

  • What Americans Think Of The Biden Impeachment Inquiry

    Welcome to Pollapalooza, our weekly-ish polling roundup. It’s officially impeachment season again. On Tuesday, House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy announced that he’s directing three House committees to start investigating whether President Biden benefited from his son Hunter’s business dealings overseas. McCarthy accused the Biden family of “a culture of corruption,” saying that the Biden administration

  • The Second GOP Debate Could Be Smaller, With Or Without Trump

    The second Republican presidential primary debate is less than two weeks away, so time is running out for GOP contenders to meet the Republican National Committee’s qualification criteria. To make the Sept. 27 debate, each candidate must have at least 3 percent support in two qualifying national polls, or at least 3 percent in one

  • The Senate Is Losing One Of Its Few Remaining Moderate Republicans

    On Wednesday, Utah Sen. Mitt Romney announced he would not run for reelection in 2024. On the surface, the electoral impact of Romney’s decision is minimal — his seat should stay safely in Republican hands. But it’s still notable because it represents the departure of one of the few remaining Republican senators who had a

  • Why ‘Bidenomics’ Isn’t Working For Biden

    Welcome to FiveThirtyEight’s politics chat. The transcript below has been lightly edited. nrakich (Nathaniel Rakich, senior elections analyst): For a long time, the economy has been seen as a big liability for President Biden in his reelection bid. Inflation soared in 2021 and 2022, culminating at a rate of 9.1 percent last June. The same

  • Why Biden Is Losing Support Among Voters Of Color

    Among the most politically tuned-in, last week saw the kind of hand-wringing and accusations of bias surrounding the polls that you’d usually expect from the final two months of a campaign, not the final year and two months of a campaign. The focus was largely on general election polls: Whether a Wall Street Journal poll

Painte

Paul Klee

Paul Klee

24 April 202330 December 2024
Michael Parkes

Michael Parkes

24 April 202312 July 2025
Wassily Kandinsky, 1903, The Blue Rider (Der Blaue Reiter)

Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky

20 December 202012 July 2025
Copyright © 2025 thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org.
Powered by WordPress and HybridMag.
  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

thatsthewaythecookiecrumbles.org

Multiple news sources at #1 place!

  • About us
  • Trusted sources
  • Democracy matters
  • Trump’s decisions

bladibla

Scroll Up