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Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go." (Photo: Alex Love/WJTV)
Heartbreaking images and videos of weeping children and loved ones spread rapidly on social media Wednesday night after Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 700 workers at several Mississippi food processing plants in a series of coordinated raids that were described as "the largest single-state workplace enforcement action in U.S. history."
"Days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders."
--Greisa Martinez Rosas, United We Dream
Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go."
"These children," WJTV reported, "were relying on neighbors and even strangers to pick them up outside their homes after school and drive them to a community fitness center where people tried to keep them calm. But many kids could not stop crying for mom and dad."
Among those appearing on local television news cameras was 11-year-old Magdalena Gomez Gregorio, who pleaded that her father, among those missing after the raids, to be returned to her.
"My dad is not a criminal," Gregorio said through tears. Watch:
As ProPublica reporter Dara Lind pointed out on Twitter, young children of immigrants have lived in constant fear of their parents being swept up at any moment by President Donald Trump's deportation force.
"I've spoken to school employees in cities where there were no raids," noted Lind, "saying that sometimes kids came in midday asking to call and see if parents were still home."
\u201cHAPPENING NOW: In Forrest, Mississippi where one of the #ICE raids happened nearby Children of those who were arrested are left alone in the streets crying for help. Strangers and neighbors are taking them to a local gym to be put up for the night. FULL STORY TONIGHT ON @WJTV.\u201d— Alex Love (@Alex Love) 1565225062
\u201cMore images as volunteers try to feed the kids donated food and drinks for dinner tonight. But most children are still devastated and crying for their parents and can\u2019t eat. FULL STORY TONIGHT ON @WJTV. #FocusedOnYou\u201d— Alex Love (@Alex Love) 1565225062
In total, ICE agents carried out raids in six Mississippi cities, leaving outrage and despair in their wake. According to local news reports, workers suspected of being undocumented were rounded up, placed on buses, and sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana.
"Children finished their first day of school with no parents to go home to tonight," reported the Jackson Free Press. "Babies and toddlers remained at daycare with no guardian to pick them up. A child vainly searched a workplace parking lot for missing parents."
Buzzfeed reported the story of a woman named Dianne, whose fiance was arrested in one of the raids on Wednesday.
On Wednesday morning, Dianne received an alarming call. It was her fiance, dialing her from the chicken processing plant in a nearby central Mississippi town where he worked long shifts deboning meat.
"ICE is here!" he yelled. In the background, Dianne could hear other laborers terrified. The panic was palpable. One worker called out in Spanish, "Ayudame! [Help me!]"
Dianne's fiance, who came to the country more than two decades ago from Mexico without authorization, told her he had no way out and would not be able to escape immigration enforcement agents. His voice trembling, he told Dianne that she needed to make a promise before he got off the line: "Take care of my kids."
In a statement Wednesday, Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba condemned the raids as "dehumanizing."
"I'm calling upon faith institutions in our community to become sanctuaries for our immigrant neighbors and protect them from potential harm," Lumumba said. "The City of Jackson strongly objects to the Trump administration's ICE raids."
\u201cToday ICE agents arrested 680 people in Mississippi in the largest single-state raid in their history. 600 agents swept up hundreds at food processing plants in several cities. That which so many dreaded is coming to pass. Don't look away. \nhttps://t.co/6DdsNlu5vB\n#ICEraids\u201d— JemarTisby.Substack.com. (@JemarTisby.Substack.com.) 1565218399
\u201cAt a Mississippi school, the children and family members of immigrants plucked out of their workplaces by federal agents in today\u2019s historic #ICEraids weep, unsure when or if they\u2019ll see their loved ones again. Their back to school week. Shared with permission from Miriam Sanchez\u201d— Ashton Pittman (@Ashton Pittman) 1565221911
Greisa Martinez Rosas, deputy executive director of rights group United We Dream, called the massive raids "an act of terrorism" against immigrant communities and said the "effect of ripping children from their parents at the border or stealing parents away from their children in Mississippi is the same."
"Just days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders," tweeted Rosas. "For anyone who tries to desensitize the situation or blur the connections between the acts of terror this week I call bullshit. Latinx and immigrant kids and families have been terrorized this week."
"It is time for both parties in Congress to stop giving ICE and [Customs and Border Protection] billions of dollars and to hold them accountable," Rosas said. "ICE and CBP are the armed, taxpayer funded extension of Trump's anti-immigrant hate and must be stopped."
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Heartbreaking images and videos of weeping children and loved ones spread rapidly on social media Wednesday night after Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 700 workers at several Mississippi food processing plants in a series of coordinated raids that were described as "the largest single-state workplace enforcement action in U.S. history."
"Days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders."
--Greisa Martinez Rosas, United We Dream
Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go."
"These children," WJTV reported, "were relying on neighbors and even strangers to pick them up outside their homes after school and drive them to a community fitness center where people tried to keep them calm. But many kids could not stop crying for mom and dad."
Among those appearing on local television news cameras was 11-year-old Magdalena Gomez Gregorio, who pleaded that her father, among those missing after the raids, to be returned to her.
"My dad is not a criminal," Gregorio said through tears. Watch:
As ProPublica reporter Dara Lind pointed out on Twitter, young children of immigrants have lived in constant fear of their parents being swept up at any moment by President Donald Trump's deportation force.
"I've spoken to school employees in cities where there were no raids," noted Lind, "saying that sometimes kids came in midday asking to call and see if parents were still home."
\u201cHAPPENING NOW: In Forrest, Mississippi where one of the #ICE raids happened nearby Children of those who were arrested are left alone in the streets crying for help. Strangers and neighbors are taking them to a local gym to be put up for the night. FULL STORY TONIGHT ON @WJTV.\u201d— Alex Love (@Alex Love) 1565225062
\u201cMore images as volunteers try to feed the kids donated food and drinks for dinner tonight. But most children are still devastated and crying for their parents and can\u2019t eat. FULL STORY TONIGHT ON @WJTV. #FocusedOnYou\u201d— Alex Love (@Alex Love) 1565225062
In total, ICE agents carried out raids in six Mississippi cities, leaving outrage and despair in their wake. According to local news reports, workers suspected of being undocumented were rounded up, placed on buses, and sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana.
"Children finished their first day of school with no parents to go home to tonight," reported the Jackson Free Press. "Babies and toddlers remained at daycare with no guardian to pick them up. A child vainly searched a workplace parking lot for missing parents."
Buzzfeed reported the story of a woman named Dianne, whose fiance was arrested in one of the raids on Wednesday.
On Wednesday morning, Dianne received an alarming call. It was her fiance, dialing her from the chicken processing plant in a nearby central Mississippi town where he worked long shifts deboning meat.
"ICE is here!" he yelled. In the background, Dianne could hear other laborers terrified. The panic was palpable. One worker called out in Spanish, "Ayudame! [Help me!]"
Dianne's fiance, who came to the country more than two decades ago from Mexico without authorization, told her he had no way out and would not be able to escape immigration enforcement agents. His voice trembling, he told Dianne that she needed to make a promise before he got off the line: "Take care of my kids."
In a statement Wednesday, Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba condemned the raids as "dehumanizing."
"I'm calling upon faith institutions in our community to become sanctuaries for our immigrant neighbors and protect them from potential harm," Lumumba said. "The City of Jackson strongly objects to the Trump administration's ICE raids."
\u201cToday ICE agents arrested 680 people in Mississippi in the largest single-state raid in their history. 600 agents swept up hundreds at food processing plants in several cities. That which so many dreaded is coming to pass. Don't look away. \nhttps://t.co/6DdsNlu5vB\n#ICEraids\u201d— JemarTisby.Substack.com. (@JemarTisby.Substack.com.) 1565218399
\u201cAt a Mississippi school, the children and family members of immigrants plucked out of their workplaces by federal agents in today\u2019s historic #ICEraids weep, unsure when or if they\u2019ll see their loved ones again. Their back to school week. Shared with permission from Miriam Sanchez\u201d— Ashton Pittman (@Ashton Pittman) 1565221911
Greisa Martinez Rosas, deputy executive director of rights group United We Dream, called the massive raids "an act of terrorism" against immigrant communities and said the "effect of ripping children from their parents at the border or stealing parents away from their children in Mississippi is the same."
"Just days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders," tweeted Rosas. "For anyone who tries to desensitize the situation or blur the connections between the acts of terror this week I call bullshit. Latinx and immigrant kids and families have been terrorized this week."
"It is time for both parties in Congress to stop giving ICE and [Customs and Border Protection] billions of dollars and to hold them accountable," Rosas said. "ICE and CBP are the armed, taxpayer funded extension of Trump's anti-immigrant hate and must be stopped."
Heartbreaking images and videos of weeping children and loved ones spread rapidly on social media Wednesday night after Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested nearly 700 workers at several Mississippi food processing plants in a series of coordinated raids that were described as "the largest single-state workplace enforcement action in U.S. history."
"Days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders."
--Greisa Martinez Rosas, United We Dream
Mississippi's local WJTV reported following the ICE raids that "many children of those arrested across the state are now left homeless with nowhere to go."
"These children," WJTV reported, "were relying on neighbors and even strangers to pick them up outside their homes after school and drive them to a community fitness center where people tried to keep them calm. But many kids could not stop crying for mom and dad."
Among those appearing on local television news cameras was 11-year-old Magdalena Gomez Gregorio, who pleaded that her father, among those missing after the raids, to be returned to her.
"My dad is not a criminal," Gregorio said through tears. Watch:
As ProPublica reporter Dara Lind pointed out on Twitter, young children of immigrants have lived in constant fear of their parents being swept up at any moment by President Donald Trump's deportation force.
"I've spoken to school employees in cities where there were no raids," noted Lind, "saying that sometimes kids came in midday asking to call and see if parents were still home."
\u201cHAPPENING NOW: In Forrest, Mississippi where one of the #ICE raids happened nearby Children of those who were arrested are left alone in the streets crying for help. Strangers and neighbors are taking them to a local gym to be put up for the night. FULL STORY TONIGHT ON @WJTV.\u201d— Alex Love (@Alex Love) 1565225062
\u201cMore images as volunteers try to feed the kids donated food and drinks for dinner tonight. But most children are still devastated and crying for their parents and can\u2019t eat. FULL STORY TONIGHT ON @WJTV. #FocusedOnYou\u201d— Alex Love (@Alex Love) 1565225062
In total, ICE agents carried out raids in six Mississippi cities, leaving outrage and despair in their wake. According to local news reports, workers suspected of being undocumented were rounded up, placed on buses, and sent to an ICE facility in Louisiana.
"Children finished their first day of school with no parents to go home to tonight," reported the Jackson Free Press. "Babies and toddlers remained at daycare with no guardian to pick them up. A child vainly searched a workplace parking lot for missing parents."
Buzzfeed reported the story of a woman named Dianne, whose fiance was arrested in one of the raids on Wednesday.
On Wednesday morning, Dianne received an alarming call. It was her fiance, dialing her from the chicken processing plant in a nearby central Mississippi town where he worked long shifts deboning meat.
"ICE is here!" he yelled. In the background, Dianne could hear other laborers terrified. The panic was palpable. One worker called out in Spanish, "Ayudame! [Help me!]"
Dianne's fiance, who came to the country more than two decades ago from Mexico without authorization, told her he had no way out and would not be able to escape immigration enforcement agents. His voice trembling, he told Dianne that she needed to make a promise before he got off the line: "Take care of my kids."
In a statement Wednesday, Jackson, Mississippi Mayor Chokwe Lumumba condemned the raids as "dehumanizing."
"I'm calling upon faith institutions in our community to become sanctuaries for our immigrant neighbors and protect them from potential harm," Lumumba said. "The City of Jackson strongly objects to the Trump administration's ICE raids."
\u201cToday ICE agents arrested 680 people in Mississippi in the largest single-state raid in their history. 600 agents swept up hundreds at food processing plants in several cities. That which so many dreaded is coming to pass. Don't look away. \nhttps://t.co/6DdsNlu5vB\n#ICEraids\u201d— JemarTisby.Substack.com. (@JemarTisby.Substack.com.) 1565218399
\u201cAt a Mississippi school, the children and family members of immigrants plucked out of their workplaces by federal agents in today\u2019s historic #ICEraids weep, unsure when or if they\u2019ll see their loved ones again. Their back to school week. Shared with permission from Miriam Sanchez\u201d— Ashton Pittman (@Ashton Pittman) 1565221911
Greisa Martinez Rosas, deputy executive director of rights group United We Dream, called the massive raids "an act of terrorism" against immigrant communities and said the "effect of ripping children from their parents at the border or stealing parents away from their children in Mississippi is the same."
"Just days after the El Paso massacre where a gun wielding maniac parroted Trump's anti-immigrant hate, a battalion of ICE agents abducted 680 Latinx and immigrant men and women on Trump's orders," tweeted Rosas. "For anyone who tries to desensitize the situation or blur the connections between the acts of terror this week I call bullshit. Latinx and immigrant kids and families have been terrorized this week."
"It is time for both parties in Congress to stop giving ICE and [Customs and Border Protection] billions of dollars and to hold them accountable," Rosas said. "ICE and CBP are the armed, taxpayer funded extension of Trump's anti-immigrant hate and must be stopped."
"History will not forget," said UN Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese.
The United Nations human rights expert assigned to the Palestinian territories illegally occupied by Israel is calling on countries around the world to send military forces to end the genocidal Israeli assault on the Gaza Strip.
Since March 2024, "I've warned the UN I serve at great personal cost: the destruction of Gaza's health system is clear proof of genocidal intent," Special Rapporteur Francesca Albanese said on social media Wednesday. "I'm in disbelief at its paralysis. States must break the blockade, send NAVIES with aid, and stop the genocide. History will not forget."
Albanese also shared her new joint statement with Dr. Tlaleng Mofokeng, special rapporteur on the right of everyone to the enjoyment of the highest attainable standard of physical and mental health. They said that "in addition to bearing witness to an ongoing genocide we are also bearing witness to a 'medicide,' a sinister component of the intentional creation of conditions calculated to destroy Palestinians in Gaza which constitutes an act of genocide."
"Deliberate attacks on health and care workers, and health facilities, which are gross violations of international humanitarian law, must stop now," the pair continued. "There is a moral imperative for the international community to end the carnage and allow the people of Gaza to live on their land without fear of attack, killing, and starvation, and free from permanent occupation and apartheid."
Their comments came as a growing number of governments are recognizing the state of Palestine or threatening to do so. In a Wednesday interview with The Guardian, Albanese stressed that the renewed push for Palestinian statehood should not "distract the attention from where it should be: the genocide."
"Ending the question of Palestine in line with international law is possible and necessary: End the genocide today, end the permanent occupation this year, and end apartheid," she said. "This is what's going to guarantee freedom and equal rights for everyone, regardless of the way they want to live—in two states or one state, they will have to decide."
As Common Dreams reported earlier Thursday, Israel's finance minister, Bezalel Smotrich, claimed that the Israeli and U.S. governments have approved an expansion of settlements in the West Bank, which he said "finally buries the idea of a Palestinian state, because there is nothing to recognize and no one to recognize."
Meanwhile, in Gaza, the 22-month Israeli assault has left the coastal enclave in ruins and killed at least 61,776 Palestinians and wounded 154,906 others—though experts warn the real figures are likely far higher. Those who have survived so far are struggling to access essentials, including food, largely due to Israeli restrictions on humanitarian aid and killings of aid-seekers.
On Thursday, over 100 groups—including ActionAid, American Friends Service Committee, Médecins Sans Frontières, Oxfam, and Save the Children—released a letter stressing that since Israel imposed registration rules in early March, most nongovernmental organizations "have been unable to deliver a single truck of lifesaving supplies."
"This obstruction has left millions of dollars' worth of food, medicine, water, and shelter items stranded in warehouses across Jordan and Egypt, while Palestinians are being starved," the letter notes. As of Thursday, the Gaza Health Ministry put the hunger-related death toll at 239, including 106 children.
Both the registration process and the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation "aim to block impartial aid, exclude Palestinian actors, and replace trusted humanitarian organizations with mechanisms that serve political and military objectives," the letter argues, noting that Israel is moving to "escalate its military offensive and deepen its occupation in Gaza, making clear these measures are part of a broader strategy to entrench control and erase Palestinian presence."
The coalition called on all governments to "press Israel to end the weaponization of aid," insist that NGOS not be "forced to share sensitive personal information," and "demand the immediate and unconditional opening of all land crossings and conditions for the delivery of lifesaving humanitarian aid."
During an emergency United Nations Security Council meeting on Sunday, Riyad Mansour, the state of Palestine's permanent observer to the UN, formally requested "an immediate international protection force to save the Palestinian people from certain death."
In response, Sarah Leah Whitson, executive director of the US-based advocacy group DAWN, said in a Tuesday statement, "Now that Palestine has formally requested protection forces, the UN General Assembly should move urgently to mandate such a force under a Uniting for Peace resolution."
"Israel has made clear for the past two years that no amount of pleading, pressure, or negotiation will end its atrocities and deliberate starvation in Gaza; only international peacekeeping forces can achieve that," she added.
"Who else sends ICE at the same time while having a conversation like this? Someone who is weak. Someone who's broken. Someone whose weakness is masquerading as a strength," said Newsom.
Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom on Thursday struck a defiant tone during a political rally in Los Angeles aimed at promoting a ballot initiative that would allow the state legislature to redraw the Golden State's electoral maps.
During his speech, Newsom emphasized his preference to having an independent commission draw up districts in California and across the country. However, he said that U.S. President Donald Trump's push to have Texas Republicans redraw their state's map in the middle of the decade to gain five more Republican seats in the U.S. House of Representatives has left him with no choice but to return the favor.
"You have poked the bear, and we will punch back," Newsom said during the speech, addressing Trump directly.
The California governor then explained why doing nothing in response to Trump's pressure on Texas is not an option.
"[Trump] doesn't play by a different set of rules—he doesn't believe in the rules," Newsom said. "And as a consequence, we need to disabuse ourselves of the way things have been done. It's not enough to just hold hands, have a candlelight vigil, and talk about way the world should be. We have got to recognize the cards that have been dealt, and we have got to meet fire with fire!"
Newsom also pointed out that several Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) officials had stationed themselves nearby where California Democrats were holding their rally, which he called a deliberate attempt at intimidation.
However, Newsom said that instead of subduing lawmakers and advocates with the mass deportation force, Trump was only exposing his weakness.
"He is a failed president," Newsom declared. "Who else sends ICE at the same time while having a conversation like this? Someone who is weak. Someone who's broken. Someone whose weakness is masquerading as a strength. The most unpopular president in modern history."
Newsom encouraged voters in his state to approve a ballot initiative this coming November 4 that would allow the redrawing of California's congressional map on a temporary basis before returning to the independent commission that has long been used in the state starting in 2030.
"Trump's back-to-school message to America's families is crystal clear: Don't expect help, just expect less," said one expert.
Families of students across the United States are facing significantly higher prices for basic supplies as the new school year begins, a cost burden that a new analysis blames on President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs and the massive Republican budget package he signed into law last month.
The analysis, conducted by The Century Foundation (TCF) and Groundwork Collaborative, estimates that prices for supplies such as index cards have surged by more than 40% this year.
Lunch staples have also gotten more expensive, with U.S. families set to pay roughly $163 more on average for juice boxes, strawberries, and other such items this year, according to the new analysis, which characterized the higher costs as a "back-to-school tax" imposed by the president.
"President Trump's policies are forcing families to foot higher bills for back-to-school essentials from binders and lunch-box staples to clothes, shoes, and even laptops," said TCF senior fellow Rachel West. "From his reckless tariffs to his budget law slashing food assistance and federal student loans, Trump's back-to-school message to America's families is crystal clear: Don't expect help, just expect less."
The analysis was released just as new economic data further underscored the impact of Trump's tariffs on prices across the economy, with wholesale prices registering their largest monthly gain since June 2022.
TCF and Groundwork's findings align with a recent survey by the research firm Deloitte, which found that nearly half of U.S. parents and caregivers believe lunch costs on school days will be higher this year than in 2024.
Liz Pancotti, Groundwork's managing director of policy and advocacy, said Thursday that "President Trump's tax and tariff policies have turned the back-to-school season into a budgeting nightmare for hardworking American families."
"From lunch boxes and notebooks to juice boxes and pencils, parents are being squeezed at every turn—paying more for the school supplies and meals their kids need to succeed," said Pancotti. "No family should have to struggle to afford the basics while the wealthy and well-connected cash in on massive tax breaks they do not need."
"Trump's tax and tariff policies have turned the back-to-school season into a budgeting nightmare for hardworking American families."
The budget law that Trump signed last month is set to deliver trillions of dollars in tax breaks largely to the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations while making unprecedented cuts to the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) and Medicaid.
Those programs are used in states across the country to determine eligibility for free or reduced-cost school meals, and cuts inflicted by the Trump-GOP law are expected to leave more than 18 million children across the U.S. without access to free school meals in the coming years.
"President Trump's policies—including his erratic, punitive tariffs—are squeezing families' budgets as they prepare to return to school," TCF and Groundwork said Thursday. "Not only has Trump failed to keep his promises to tackle high prices, but his massive budget law will soon drive costs even higher for back-to-school essentials as its cuts to programs that children, families, and college students depend on take hold."