Trump wants only straight white inbred and brainwashed imbeciles in the US, in the country at large as well as in the US armed forces, the administration etc... If he could, he'd BLEACH the country with Chlorox to remove any color from it: Only white anglo-saxon protestants of European descent, who stopped evolving into higher primates when they landed on Amerindian land in the 17th century, should remain and run the country.
Doesn't matter if you prostituted yourself to "serve" in the US armed forces, if you believed the bullshit about patriotism, service, sacrifice and all that jazz. Bob Dylan said it best: Join the army if you fail. And Donald Dumb seconded Dylan when he said that veterans are "losers and suckers".
If you don't "look" white enough, you're fired from this country.
Doesn't matter if you prostituted yourself to "serve" in the US armed forces, if you believed the bullshit about patriotism, service, sacrifice and all that jazz. Bob Dylan said it best: Join the army if you fail. And Donald Dumb seconded Dylan when he said that veterans are "losers and suckers".
If you don't "look" white enough, you're fired from this country.
Read further below about wave of ICE arrest and detention of Iranian Americans.
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Purple Heart Veteran Self-Deports With ICE Breathing Down His Neck
Josh Fiallo
Thu, June 26, 2025

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A Purple Heart recipient who was shot twice while serving in the Army has self-deported to South Korea after Immigration and Customs Enforcement threatened him with arrest.
Sae Joon Park, 55, moved to the United States at the age of seven and joined the Army at 19, deploying to Panama to help topple Manuel Noriega’s regime in 1989. He told Hawaii News Now he narrowly avoided becoming paralyzed after an enemy bullet struck a dog tag near his spine.

Sae Joon Park joined the U.S. Army at 19. He was living in the United States legally on a green card. / Hawaii News Now
Now, President Donald Trump’s migrant crackdown has forced him to abandon his two children and move back to his country of birth, where he has not lived in over four decades.
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Purple Heart Veteran Self-Deports With ICE Breathing Down His Neck
Josh Fiallo
Thu, June 26, 2025
X
A Purple Heart recipient who was shot twice while serving in the Army has self-deported to South Korea after Immigration and Customs Enforcement threatened him with arrest.
Sae Joon Park, 55, moved to the United States at the age of seven and joined the Army at 19, deploying to Panama to help topple Manuel Noriega’s regime in 1989. He told Hawaii News Now he narrowly avoided becoming paralyzed after an enemy bullet struck a dog tag near his spine.
Sae Joon Park joined the U.S. Army at 19. He was living in the United States legally on a green card. / Hawaii News Now
Now, President Donald Trump’s migrant crackdown has forced him to abandon his two children and move back to his country of birth, where he has not lived in over four decades.
Park said he self-deported because immigration officials told him this month that his deferred action, which granted him legal status, had abruptly ended. He said officials ordered him to put on an ankle monitor and gave him three weeks to leave the country. If he did not comply, he was threatened with arrest, ICE detention, and a much less pleasant deportation flight to South Korea.
The veteran said he and his family were shocked. He had been peacefully living in Hawaii, having turned his life around after struggling with drug abuse upon his return from combat. He told Hawaii News Now he was suffering from severe, untreated post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, at the time.

Sae Joon Park in an undated photo. He initially lived in Los Angeles after returning from combat in Panama, but moved to Hawaii in 1995. / Hawaii News Now
Park explained that he turned to marijuana to cope with nightmares and sensitivity to loud noises. However, after moving to Hawaii in 1995, he became addicted to crack cocaine and struggled to get clean. He was convicted of drug and bail offenses in 2009, spending two and a half years in prison.
The conviction caused him to lose his green card, and ICE moved to deport him to South Korea upon his release. However, his lawyers pleaded for an immigration judge to give him a chance at redemption, citing his military service, Purple Heart, and honorable discharge. A judge ultimately granted him protection from deportation, but required him to stay sober and check in with immigration officials annually.
Park said he complied with the required checks, but everything changed at his latest meeting with immigration officials this month. That is when he was ordered to leave the country or risk being arrested and held in an ICE facility indefinitely.

Sae Joon Park, 55, says he was given three weeks to self-deport, or else ICE would arrest and deport him themselves. / Hawaii News Now
Fearing the worst, Park said he decided to leave behind his children, who are in their 20s, as well as his parents, who are in their 80s. He hugged them and told them goodbye at Honolulu’s airport, unsure when he would see them again.
“These last 14 years have been great, like really proud of myself, proud of my kids, how I’ve been acting and how I’ve been living my life,” he told Hawaii News Now.
The thought of missing significant life events is crushing, he said.

Sae Joon Park has two children who are in their 20s. / Hawaii News Now
“Let’s say [my daughter] gets married, I won’t be there,” he said. “Let’s say my parents pass away, I won’t be there. You know, so many things that I’ll be missing. And for sure, things are going to happen, I just can’t be there, which is heartbreaking.”
Department of Homeland Security Spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin confirmed in a statement that Park’s removal is tied to the 16-year-old drug charge that has already been adjudicated. However, she also accused him of “possessing, manufacturing, or selling a dangerous weapon” as well as for “carrying a loaded firearm in a public place.”
“President Trump and Secretary Noem have been clear: Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S.,” McLaughlin said. “If you come to our country and break our laws, we will find you, arrest you, and deport you. That’s a promise.”
Park acknowledged that he broke the law in his interview with Hawaii News Now. Still, he thinks this sort of punishment, over a decade later, is overkill.
“I get it,” he said. “I broke the law and everything, but I think this is a little severe what they’re doing to me after I paid my dues, after I did my time for the offense that I did. I thought I was doing my part to do whatever I have to do to be a good citizen and do everything right to stay in this country.”
The veteran said he and his family were shocked. He had been peacefully living in Hawaii, having turned his life around after struggling with drug abuse upon his return from combat. He told Hawaii News Now he was suffering from severe, untreated post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD, at the time.
Sae Joon Park in an undated photo. He initially lived in Los Angeles after returning from combat in Panama, but moved to Hawaii in 1995. / Hawaii News Now
Park explained that he turned to marijuana to cope with nightmares and sensitivity to loud noises. However, after moving to Hawaii in 1995, he became addicted to crack cocaine and struggled to get clean. He was convicted of drug and bail offenses in 2009, spending two and a half years in prison.
The conviction caused him to lose his green card, and ICE moved to deport him to South Korea upon his release. However, his lawyers pleaded for an immigration judge to give him a chance at redemption, citing his military service, Purple Heart, and honorable discharge. A judge ultimately granted him protection from deportation, but required him to stay sober and check in with immigration officials annually.
Park said he complied with the required checks, but everything changed at his latest meeting with immigration officials this month. That is when he was ordered to leave the country or risk being arrested and held in an ICE facility indefinitely.
Sae Joon Park, 55, says he was given three weeks to self-deport, or else ICE would arrest and deport him themselves. / Hawaii News Now
Fearing the worst, Park said he decided to leave behind his children, who are in their 20s, as well as his parents, who are in their 80s. He hugged them and told them goodbye at Honolulu’s airport, unsure when he would see them again.
“These last 14 years have been great, like really proud of myself, proud of my kids, how I’ve been acting and how I’ve been living my life,” he told Hawaii News Now.
The thought of missing significant life events is crushing, he said.
Sae Joon Park has two children who are in their 20s. / Hawaii News Now
“Let’s say [my daughter] gets married, I won’t be there,” he said. “Let’s say my parents pass away, I won’t be there. You know, so many things that I’ll be missing. And for sure, things are going to happen, I just can’t be there, which is heartbreaking.”
Department of Homeland Security Spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin confirmed in a statement that Park’s removal is tied to the 16-year-old drug charge that has already been adjudicated. However, she also accused him of “possessing, manufacturing, or selling a dangerous weapon” as well as for “carrying a loaded firearm in a public place.”
“President Trump and Secretary Noem have been clear: Criminal illegal aliens are not welcome in the U.S.,” McLaughlin said. “If you come to our country and break our laws, we will find you, arrest you, and deport you. That’s a promise.”
Park acknowledged that he broke the law in his interview with Hawaii News Now. Still, he thinks this sort of punishment, over a decade later, is overkill.
“I get it,” he said. “I broke the law and everything, but I think this is a little severe what they’re doing to me after I paid my dues, after I did my time for the offense that I did. I thought I was doing my part to do whatever I have to do to be a good citizen and do everything right to stay in this country.”
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Similarly,
Iranian woman, who has lived in US for 47 years, taken by ICE while gardening
Marina Dunbar
Fri, June 27, 2025
A 64-year-old Iranian woman, who has lived in the US for 47 years, was detained by immigration agents on Sunday morning while gardening outside her home in New Orleans.
According to a witness, plainclothes officers in unmarked vehicles handcuffed Madonna “Donna” Kashanian and transported her to a Mississippi jail before transferring her to the South Louisiana ICE processing center in Basile, reports Nola.
Kashanian arrived in the US in 1978 on a student visa and later applied for asylum, citing fears of persecution due to her father’s ties to the US-backed Shah of Iran. Her asylum request was ultimately denied, but she was granted a stay of removal on the condition she comply with immigration requirements, a condition her family says she always met.
She has no criminal record but remains in ICE custody.
The timing of Kashanian’s detention came just hours after US airstrikes in Iran. Federal officials did not comment on her specific case, though the DHS released a statement highlighting the arrests of 11 Iranians nationwide over the weekend, according to Nola.
Kashanian had moved to New Orleans as a teenager and built a life over four decades. She often shared Persian recipes on YouTube and was active in her daughter’s schools.
Her family said Kashanian had long feared deportation, especially after Trump’s election. Neighbors told Nola that Kashanian’s arrest lasted less than a minute. Later that day, she briefly called her family during processing. The family didn’t hear from her again until Tuesday.
Since then, her husband and daughter have been scrambling to find legal help, a challenging task due to the high number of detainees and limited immigration attorneys in Louisiana.
ICE also arrested two Iranian LSU students in Baton Rouge at their off-campus apartment earlier this week. Last week, ICE announced that they arrested 84 people during a raid at a south-west Louisiana racetrack. Of the 84, ICE said “at least two” had criminal records.
Statistics from early June, previously reported on by the Guardian, demonstrated an 807% increase in arrests of people without criminal histories since before Donald Trump’s second inauguration this January. Data suggests ICE is holding about 59,000 detainees in facilities across the country.
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