| ◼ That escalated slowly.
◼ A man who sought to instill “real terror” in Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents orchestrated a targeted attack on an ICE facility in Dallas on Wednesday. Suspect Joshua Jahn, 29, sat atop a building adjacent to the facility and shot at an unmarked van that was transporting ICE detainees. Jahn, who died of a self-inflicted gunshot, killed one detainee and injured two others. But it was clear he meant to assassinate federal immigration agents. Authorities found shell casings with anti-ICE messages next to Jahn’s body. The FBI also determined after a search of Jahn’s devices and personal writings that the shooter searched for apps that track ICE activity and hoped federal agents would be left looking over their shoulders. This week’s attack is the latest in a string of anti-ICE incidents in Texas—including a planned ambush on an Alvarado ICE facility in July, a targeted shoot-out at a McAllen Border Patrol annex in July, and a bomb threat at a Dallas facility in August. ICE agents are doing jobs that are lawfully given to them by our elected government. The rules and regulations guiding their activity provide for humane treatment of their detainees. Proceedings in our courts are generous to a fault. The terror campaign against ICE is a threat to the American system.
◼ For months, the Trump administration has defied federal law requiring it to ban ByteDance from operating TikTok in the United States unless President Trump grants the company a one-time, 90-day extension if an imminent deal includes “binding legal agreements” to divest ByteDance’s ownership. Trump has granted multiple extensions without complying with these conditions. By executive order Thursday afternoon, Trump approved a deal he says has been approved by Xi Jinping and will make TikTok “American operated all the way.” Reportedly, the company will be sold to an American investor consortium, including Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison and other big tech and media names. The devil is in the details, and there is plenty of devilry to suspect here. Formal U.S. control—a majority of shares and an American board—is good. But will the algorithm, once licensed from ByteDance, be exclusively controlled and modified from the United States—as the law requires? Would the new U.S. entity be barred from sending user data back to China? ByteDance took the position, in challenging the law, that the algorithm simply cannot work unless it is continually given feedback from American user data, and that this function cannot be relocated out of China. If so, then this deal is a sham. If not, then the law should have been enforced months ago. More oversight will be needed. Congress should ask some hard questions.
◼ A packed football stadium in Glendale, Ariz., heard Erika Kirk say she forgives her husband’s killer in a stark, moving statement of Christian faith. The memorial service was part revival meeting, part political convention—and all MAGA. President Trump and other MAGA luminaries remembered Kirk at an event that featured Turning Point USA’s characteristically high production values. The overwhelming sense of the memorial was that an act of destruction and hate would result in a greater commitment to build and to love. This sentiment was heartening and admirable, even if the usual suspects found reason to cavil (the event was supposedly an expression of “Christian nationalism” or alien to American traditions). The memorial cemented Kirk’s status as a legend on the right. It is now up to those he inspired to ensure that the galvanizing moment lasts.
◼ In his address to the mourners who gathered on Sunday to celebrate the life and work of Charlie Kirk, Trump veered off course. “I think we found an answer to autism,” the president told the bewildered crowd. “I think you’re going to find it to be amazing.” It was, indeed, amazing. The following day, the president announced that Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Department of Health and Human Services would allege that taking acetaminophen, the active ingredient in over-the-counter pain medicines such as Tylenol, could result in a “very increased risk” of neurodevelopmental disorders like autism in children. “Don’t take it,” Trump exclaimed. But the clinical evidence that the administration produced to support this conclusion was scant, and it was met with skepticism from those who are familiar with the research into this thoroughly studied molecule. “HHS should release the new data that it has to support this claim,” wrote Senator Bill Cassidy (R., La.). “The preponderance of evidence shows that this is not the case.” He added that, given the guidance that recommends pregnant women avoid other pain relievers like aspirin or ibuprofen, this new initiative would leave expectant mothers with no relief from the everyday pain they so often experience. And it’s unclear whether this abstemious directive is warranted. Given RFK Jr.’s lifelong quest to find the autism’s cause in the trappings of modern life, Americans should be skeptical.
◼ A Florida federal jury swiftly convicted Ryan Routh of attempting to assassinate Trump in September 2024 while the then-candidate was playing golf at his West Palm Beach club. The attempt came only a few weeks after Trump was nearly killed by an assassin’s bullet at a rally in Butler, Pa. The evidence against Routh was overwhelming. A Secret Service agent spotted Routh pointing a rifle through a fenced area and opened fire at Routh, who fled. The loaded rifle was recovered with a scope, spare ammunition, and the safety off. Routh tried to get away in a car he’d parked nearby but was apprehended after a chase. Cellphone records showed that he’d surveilled the site, and he wrote a letter confessing intent to kill Trump. Routh represented himself at the trial, which he tried to use as a soapbox and to convey instability (suggesting the matter be settled by a golf match against the president). Judge Aileen Cannon reined in these antics but couldn’t prevent Routh from trying to stab himself in the neck with a pen when the jury announced its verdict. He is scheduled for sentencing in December and faces life imprisonment without parole. |