
"We always say it's hard to hate up close, Ana Navarro began, continuing: So, I think the theoretical idea of undocumented immigrants is one thing, but when you realize that it's the woman you know, it's the woman who's been serving you waffles in Wisconsin for decades, the woman who's been doing your nails in the Hamptons for decadesthe kid who plays with your kid at school when you put names and faces, when you see those little children on their knees praying and begging the I.C.E. agents not to take away their parents, I dare any Christian American not to feel brokenhearted."
"But I don't even think it's meeting the humanity, Haines said. I think there were so many Americans that agreed this is a broken system. And what he said, I don't believe he ran on what he's doing. He absolutely said, I will deport the worst among us. There will be criminals.' I don't think everyone needed to see the person next to them to think that person wasn't at risk. This is just not what he said."
Co-hosts examined immigration enforcement and promises to deport criminals while highlighting family separations carried out by ICE. Navarro emphasized personalizing undocumented immigrants by naming familiar roles—waffle servers, nail technicians, and schoolchildren's friends—to provoke compassion among Christian Americans witnessing parents detained. Haines and Alyssa Farah Griffin noted ICE prioritizes criminals and that due process complicates enforcement. Joy Behar suggested some MAGA figures are distancing from Trump on issues like Epstein and healthcare. Critics argued the current actions exceed campaign promises to remove only dangerous criminals and described the system as broken.
Read at www.mediaite.com
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