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Norms Impact

White House sparks backlash for posting dehumanizing ‘ASMR’ deportation video

The White House turned a shackling-and-deportation operation into viral “ASMR” content, collapsing the boundary between lawful enforcement and official humiliation.

Executive

Feb 19, 2025

Sources

Summary

The White House posted a video on X depicting ICE officials placing immigrants in chains and handcuffs for a deportation flight, captioned “ASMR: Illegal Alien Deportation Flight.”
The executive branch used an official communications channel to frame an immigration enforcement operation as entertainment and then amplified a mocking reaction from a presidential adviser with sweeping influence over the federal workforce.
The practical consequence is the normalization of dehumanizing state messaging around coercive power, lowering the barrier to broader abuses in detention and removal.

Reality Check

When the government’s highest communications platform mocks people being put in chains, it conditions the public to accept coercion as entertainment—and that erosion of restraint is how rights get narrowed for everyone. The conduct described is not clearly criminal on its face, but it is a stark breach of governance norms: the state’s monopoly on force is being paired with public humiliation and amplification by a presidential adviser, inviting retaliation, profiling, and rougher treatment as policy culture. Even without a clean statutory fit, this is the kind of weaponized messaging that corrodes due process expectations in detention and removal—especially as the reporting notes detentions of people without convictions and allegations that U.S. citizens have been ensnared.

Detail

<p>On Tuesday, the White House posted a video on X showing what appears to be ICE officials placing immigrants in chains and handcuffs before they board a plane for deportation. The post was captioned, “ASMR: Illegal Alien Deportation Flight,” invoking a social-media genre centered on pleasurable sensory sounds.</p><p>The video was filmed during an operation at King County International Airport-Boeing Field in Seattle about two weeks earlier, as reported by The Seattle Times citing a volunteer with an immigrant rights group that monitors weekly deportation flights there.</p><p>Elon Musk reposted the video and wrote “Haha wow,” using a troll and a medal emoji. The White House later shared Musk’s repost. By Wednesday afternoon, the White House’s original post had more than 68 million views on X, and many responses criticized it as “disgusting” and “cruel,” as reported by CNBC.</p><p>NBC News data cited in the report indicated that 41% of people detained by ICE in the first two weeks of February had no prior criminal conviction or had a pending criminal charge.</p>