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The Dictatorship

Trump’s hope for ‘one of the greatest Easters ever’ doesn’t include these Christians

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Trump’s hope for ‘one of the greatest Easters ever’ doesn’t include these Christians

“This is really — I hope — going to be one of the greatest Easters ever,” President Donald Trump told faith leaders he invited to the White House last week, “because we have something going that I don’t think this country has seen in 100 years. And as we gather with family and friends, we’ll not forget the true source of our joy and our strength: America has put our trust in God.”

Will Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents be at your seder or Easter Sunday service?

While Trump and members of his conservative Christian circle are celebrating Easter, though, some immigrants may be afraid to gather with members of their faith.

It’s likely not a question you’ve ever had to ask before, but will Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents be at your seder or Easter Sunday service?

It’s possible after a federal judge sided with the Trump administration April 11 and gave permission to ICE to conduct enforcement operations at houses of worship. U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich’s ruling lets the Trump administration disregard the Biden administration’s advice not to conduct immigration raids at places including houses of worship, schools and hospitals.

Twenty-seven Christian and Jewish groups had sued the Trump administrationclaiming that a Jan. 20 Department of Homeland Security policy letting ICE enter houses of worship violated their religious freedom under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. Friedrich issued her ruling just in time for Holy Week and Passover. Having this ruling come at such an important religious moment for both groups is cruel.

What this means in practice is that ICE can come into the religious services or outside of houses of worship to take away any immigrant they deem out of compliance. It has already happened several times since Trump was inaugurated. The first recorded instance was ICE arresting a Honduran man at the church he helped plant in Georgia.

Any decline in immigrants’ church and synagogue attendance this week won’t be a surprise. Freidrich, however, dismissed plaintiffs’ reports of reduced attendance at their worship services. The judge said “such limited and conclusory assertions are not enough for the Court to conclude with ‘little doubt’ that the policy rescission has caused the widespread declines in attendance.” She said the plaintiffs didn’t present “any objective statistical evidence showing that religious attendance declines were a predictable effect of the rescission policy.”

The judge may not believe the plaintiffs’ claims, but there will no doubt be fewer immigrants comfortable with attending religious services this week and in the foreseeable future. “One Part of the Body,” a recent survey commissioned by several religious groups, estimates that at the end of 2024, 10 million Christians in the United States were vulnerable to deportation.

A recent survey estimates that at the end of 2024, 10 million Christians in the United States were vulnerable to deportation.

Imagine, then, the impact Trump’s deportation policies and Friedrich’s ruling will have. Immigrants will be even more on edge, and religious leaders not following the news may be left wondering why their sanctuaries are emptier than they usually are this religious season.

In America’s not-so-distant past, churches and religious edifices were reliable sanctuaries and refuge for immigrants. The Sanctuary Movementwas started in the 1980s by two Quakers and a Presbyterian minister in Arizona to help people fleeing political repression in Guatemala, El Salvador and Nicaragua. Catholic priests joined the movement on both sides of the border, defying the U.S. government’s refusal to give asylum to these political refugees.

The New Sanctuary Movementa 21st-century reboot, is a coalition of faith and community leaders. In New Haven, Yale divinity students have mobilized to help protect immigrants targeted by ICE. Pennsylvania faith leaders built an altar at Philadelphia’s ICE office to protest the administration’s policy allowing immigration arrests at churches.

Trump’s administration is also threateningto withhold federal money from sanctuary cities. Tom Homan, a Catholic, has promisedto increase the presence of federal agents in sanctuary cities to step up arrests. All this from an administration that claims to be very Christian.

There is an increasing rift between religious groups who are supporting immigrants and an administration that believes, wrongly, that it is upholding a Christian worldview. For immigrants, visa holders and green card holders who are fearful of being picked up by ICE, this is an uneasy Easter season. The message of Easter is resurrection, but what Trump is resurrecting is fear among those who never thought they’d be putting themselves at risk during worship.

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The Dictatorship

Trump to ‘kick off’ America’s 250th event after berating artists who backed out

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Trump to ‘kick off’ America’s 250th event after berating artists who backed out

President Donald Trump will join the opening ceremony of the White House-backed “Great American State Fair” on the National Mall, the organizer said Saturday, just hours after Trump excoriated music artists who dropped out of the event.

Danielle Alvarez, a spokesperson for the White House initiative Freedom 250, said in a statement that Trump will “personally kick off this historic celebration on Wednesday, June 24 in an opening ceremony celebrating America’s 250th birthday.”

Earlier in the day, Trump had railed against artists who distanced themselves from the event celebrating the country’s 250th anniversary, saying in a Truth Social post that they “get paid far too much money” and “aren’t happy.” He said he was considering replacing them with the “number one attraction anywhere in the world”: himself.

The artists — many of whom have had successful decades-long careers — are “getting ‘the yips’” about having to perform at the event, he wrote. “So I am thinking about bringing the Number One Attraction anywhere in the World, the man who gets much larger audiences than Elvis in his prime, and he does so without a guitar, the man who loves our Country more than anyone else, and the man who some say is the Greatest President in History (THE GOAT!), DONALD J. TRUMP, to take the place of these highly paid, Third Rate ‘Artists,’ and give a major speech, rallying the Country forward like I have done ever since being President.”

Almost all the artists who were included in the lineup for the two-week event have said they will not perform, citing its political affiliation. Freedom 250 threatens to overshadow programs organized by America250a nonpartisan organization established by Congress in 2016 to organize events this year commemorating the 250th anniversary of the founding of the United States. The newly founded Trump-backed group has caused confusion for celebrities and corporate sponsors who intended to participate in the official semiquincentennial group.

“We’ve got incredible momentum,” a spokeswoman for America250 said in a statement. “Already, America250 has shown up in some of the biggest moments in culture and sports, from ringing in the New Year in Times Square and appearing in the Rose Parade, to the NFL Playoffs and Super Bowl.”

The artists who have not pulled out the Trump-headlined event — including Vanilla Ice and Flo Rida — have been roundly criticized for their participation.

Clarissa-Jan Lim is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW. She was previously a senior reporter and editor at BuzzFeed News.

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The Dictatorship

Trump’s doctor declares him ‘fully fit’ and blames ‘frequent handshaking’ for bruising

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President Donald Trump’s physician declared him in “excellent health,” but recommended the president lose weight and exercise more following his latest physical exam.

“Cognitive and physical performance are excellent,” Navy Capt. Sean Barbabella wrote in his report released on Friday. “He is fully fit to carry out all duties of the Commander-in-Chief and Head of State.”

Trump —the oldest person to be sworn in as president, who turns 80 next month — showed “strong cardiac, pulmonary, neurological, and overall physical function,” the doctor wrote. “His demanding daily schedule, including multiple high-level meetings, public engagements, and regular physical activity, continues to support his overall well-being.”

The president’s weight was recorded as 238 lbs, 14 lbs heavier than what was reported in his April 2025 physical. Barbabella said he provided guidance to Trump on his diet, as well as advice to take low-dose aspirin, increase physical activity and lose weight.

Trump underwent his annual physical exam on Tuesday at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center. Afterward, he wrote on Truth Social“Everything checked out PERFECTLY.”

In his memo, Barbabella, who previously diagnosed Trump with chronic venous insufficiency, noted swelling in the president’s lower leg “with improvement from last year.” He attributed bruising on Trump’s hands to be “consistent with minor soft tissue irritation related to frequent handshaking.”

The swelling in Trump’s legs and bruising on his hands have been the subject of increasing scrutiny and speculation about the aging president’s fitness for office. The White House has attributed the bruising on the president’s hands to his frequent handshaking, as Barbabella noted in his latest report.

Trump has also appeared to nod off during public appearances. He has dismissed criticism of those incidents, saying he was merely “resting his eyes.”

Trump often boasts about the results of his medical exams, saying he has “aced” cognitive tests and that “the numbers were perfect” on his physical. He has frequently insisted that he is fit to serve as president, but his mental acuity for office has been called into question.

The latest physical, the third of his second term, took place amid mounting questions and public concerns about his health.

Clarissa-Jan Lim is a breaking news reporter for MS NOW. She was previously a senior reporter and editor at BuzzFeed News.

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Just let Knicks fans have this moment, Trump. Stay away.

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In addition to threatening to bomb U.S. ally Oman and declaring that he doesn’t “care about the midterms,” President Donald Trump made a very different sort of surprise announcement at his Cabinet meeting Wednesday: “I think I’ll be going to one of the [NBA Finals] games.”

Specifically, the president said he had been invited by “numerous people,” including New York Knicks owner James Dolanto attend the team’s first finals home game since 1999, the same year Dolan took majority ownership over the franchise.

Although presidents have sporadically attended MLB’s World Series since the early 20th century, no president has appeared at the NBA finals — not even Barack Obama, who famously added a basketball court to the tennis grounds on the White House South Lawn. Trump would be the first to do so, just as he was the first sitting president to attend a Super Bowl in 2025.

The news has, unsurprisingly, provoked strong reactions — most of them missing the point.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul stepped on a metaphorical rake when she implied to reporters Thursday that Trump probably couldn’t name “the starting lineup of the 1993 Championship team” (the last Knicks title was in 1973). MAGA commentariat quickly seized the opportunity, mocking Hochul and amplifying a clip of Trump attending the Knicks’ Game 3 loss in the 1994 NBA Finals. Indeed, New York magazine found Trump has appeared in the “celebrity row” at Madison Square Garden numerous times over the decades, in keeping with his lifelong efforts at social climbing among the city’s elites.

But that’s all this is to Trump: A chance to be the ultimate celebrity in a room packed with them, at the Garden’s hottest ticket in decades.

To Knicks fans like myself, the team’s first Finals appearance in 27 years is a priceless and fleeting moment. It’s for us. To root happily after the mostly miserable decades of Dolan’s ownership, which The New York Times described as “so consistently and convincingly lifeless that perma-despair seemed utterly normal.” To wax nostalgic for the great Patrick Ewing-led teams of the 1990s, who came oh-so-close to hoisting the Larry O’Brien trophy during the decade when Michael Jordan and the Chicago Bulls won six titles. To allow ourselves to believe the impossible dream could happen: watching Jalen Brunson and his teammates parading down the Canyon of Heroes among cascading ticker tape in mid-June.

That’s all this is to Trump: A chance to be the ultimate celebrity in a room packed with them, at the Garden’s hottest ticket in decades.

And while there are surely Trump supporters among the Knickerbockers’ fanbase, I can’t imagine even they’re clamoring to see the president peacocking at the Garden. Knicks fans understand what a precious instant this is and why it should not be drawn into Trump’s toxic orbit for the time it takes to play one best-of-seven series.

The joy surrounding the Knicks’ improbable run has vibes in this city running so high that native New Yorkers in blue and orange are being friendly to one another and making idle chitchat on the streets. It’s weird.

Even The Ringer’s Bill Simmons — typically a New York sports team hater — has cheered on the Knicks’ run as an unambiguously feel-good story for the league and has seemed genuinely happy on his podcast about the giddiness and anticipation among New York’s long-suffering basketball die-hards.

New York City is historically a basketball town. It has produced a disproportionate number of Hall of Famers and a culture of street and playground basketball often emulated but never duplicated. And in a region with almost a dozen major professional sports franchises (some, like the Yankeesare passionately hated by millions of New Yorkers), the Knicks are the only team that unites pretty much everyone. (Sorry, Brooklyn Nets, it just never really caught on.)

Israel Daramola aptly elucidated loyal Knicks fans’ predicament in the Defector: “In between those various eras was a lot of executive mismanagement, beefs, suffering, the worst contracts you’ve ever seen, an arena that has showcased the powers of the surveillance stateand an owner who takes joy in being awful, because no one likes his blues band or whatever. All of which is to say: I know people find the Knicks annoying and New York City insufferable, but dammit, they deserve this moment.”

Win or lose, we know this feeling isn’t meant to last.

Is it too much to ask for the historically unpopular president — who regularly disparages this city, made a big show of departing it and will never forgive it because it never loved him back — to not divert the spotlight, just this one time?

It ultimately won’t change the results on the court either way, and a Secret Service-locked-down Madison Square Garden for one night won’t spoil the party. But the Trumpness in the air would be an unwelcome energy in an atmosphere in which even the most cynical New Yorkers have briefly become wide-eyed, joyful fanatics.

This doesn’t need to be a morality play. Just do us a solid and stay away, Florida Man.

Anthony L. Fisher is a senior editor and opinion columnist for MS NOW.

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