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Joe Rogan criticized the Trump administration’s immigration raids at workplaces as “insane” and suggested that the government should focus on targeting “cartel members,” “gang members,” and “drug dealers” instead.
The host of the popular Spotify podcast “The Joe Rogan Experience” expressed his disagreement with the administration’s actions of detaining a green card holder and a graduate student for criticizing Israel during a recent episode.
Rogan shared his views as the Trump administration resumed and intensified its efforts to apprehend undocumented workers after a temporary halt in mid-June, particularly affecting industries such as agriculture, hospitality, and food processing.
Despite earlier assurances that these industries might receive temporary relief, ICE has carried out large-scale enforcement actions — including at meatpacking plants and restaurants — detaining over 100,000 individuals in June.
Business leaders have warned the raids will lead to severe labor shortages.
“It’s insane,” Rogan said during a chat with tech entrepreneur Amjad Masad.
“We were told there would be no — well, there’s two things that are insane. One is the targeting of migrant workers. Not cartel members, not gang members, not drug dealers. Just construction workers. Showing up in construction sites, raiding them. Gardeners. Like, really?”
Masad responded: “Yeah, I don’t know what you think of the new administration. Certainly, there are things that I like about it, some of their pro-tech posture and things like that. But what’s happening now is — it’s kind of disappointing.”
The Jordanian-born software engineer and CEO of coding platform Replit then slammed immigration enforcement actions on college campuses against anti-Israel students.
“Did you see this video of this Turkish student at Tufts University that wrote an essay and then there’s video of like, ICE agents, like –”
Rogan interjected, “Is that the woman?”
Masad replied, “Yeah, yeah.”
Rogan asked, “Yeah. What was her essay about? It was just critical of Israel, right?”
“Just critical of Israel, yeah,” Masad confirmed.
Rogan responded, “And that’s enough to get you kicked out of the country.”
Rumeysa Öztürk, a Turkish doctoral student at Tufts University, was detained by federal officials in Massachusetts in March and held in a Louisiana facility for weeks after the Department of Homeland Security claimed she supported Hamas in an op-ed for the campus newspaper.
In May, a federal judge blocked her deportation, calling the detention baseless. She was released and allowed to return to Tufts while her deportation case proceeds in the courts.
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Rogan also referenced the case of Mahmoud Khalil, the Syrian-born Palestinian and US permanent resident and graduate student at Columbia University.
Khalil, who was a leader of pro-Palestinian protests on Columbia’s campus, was arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement in March after the Trump administration cited alleged false information on his green card application.
The administration, which alleged that Khalil’s campus activities posed a threat to US foreign policy, also invoked a rarely used immigration law to cite as the basis for his deportation.
Khalil was held for more than 100 days at a Louisiana detention facility before he was released on June 20.
Rogan, who commands an audience of roughly 10 million listeners — most of whom are young men — publicly endorsed Trump for president on the eve of the 2024 election, calling Elon Musk’s case for Trump “the most persuasive argument” and stating, “I concur with him at every turn.”
Though once a vocal critic of Trump, Rogan’s support marked a major shift that the Trump campaign touted as a significant win with young male voters.
Last month, Rogan advocated for a path to citizenship for undocumented migrants who live and work in the US without breaking the law.
“Yeah maybe you shouldn’t have snuck in,” Rogan said at the time.
“But you did it, and you’re not breaking any laws and you’re a hardworking person. Those people need a path to citizenship, man. Because if you don’t, then they’re just preyed upon.”
The Post has sought comment from ICE, DHS and the White House.