The Headlines

A Surge of Children in ICE Detention, and Meta’s Plans for Facial Recognition

15 min
Feb 13, 20262 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

This episode covers Trump administration immigration enforcement operations winding down in Minnesota after months of aggressive ICE raids, the federal government's erasure of climate change authority through repeal of the endangerment finding, Meta's plans to add facial recognition to smart glasses, and a health study on coffee's cognitive benefits.

Insights
  • Immigration enforcement surge operations are creating lasting psychological and economic trauma in communities even as they are being scaled back, requiring long-term recovery efforts
  • The repeal of the endangerment finding represents a strategic victory for fossil fuel interests who invested $75 million in Trump's campaign and fundamentally weakens future climate regulation authority
  • Meta is attempting to revive facial recognition technology in consumer products despite previous failures and privacy backlash, timing the rollout during political turmoil
  • Federal government is systematically removing LGBTQ+ and historical symbols from national parks and monuments as part of broader language and symbol policing efforts
  • Large-scale immigration enforcement continues across multiple states despite Minnesota drawdown, indicating sustained federal deportation strategy
Trends
Rollback of environmental regulations and climate authority under new administrationExpansion of facial recognition in consumer hardware despite privacy concernsSystematic removal of progressive symbols and historical narratives from federal sitesContinued mass immigration enforcement operations across multiple statesCorporate investment in political influence on energy and environmental policyRevival of previously abandoned surveillance technologies during periods of political changeCommunity-based resistance and mutual aid networks forming in response to immigration enforcement
Companies
Meta
Planning to add facial recognition to Ray-Ban and Oakley smart glasses despite previous privacy concerns and past fai...
Facebook
Parent company Meta is exploring facial recognition features that would identify people on Facebook and Instagram pla...
Ray-Ban
Partner with Meta in manufacturing smart glasses that would incorporate facial recognition technology
Oakley
Partner with Meta in manufacturing smart glasses that would incorporate facial recognition technology
The New York Times
News organization tracking immigration enforcement operations, detention center conditions, and reporting on Meta's f...
People
Tom Homan
Trump's border czar who announced the winding down of aggressive immigration operations in Minnesota after months of ...
Donald Trump
President who concurred with the conclusion of the immigration surge operation in Minnesota and announced climate cha...
Tim Walz
Minnesota Governor responding to ICE surge conclusion announcement, urging residents to remain hypervigilant during t...
Talia Minsberg
New York Times reporter who covered immigration enforcement operations in Minnesota for several months
Quotes
"You could see people volunteering to stand outside of daycares and elementary schools and high schools in neon vests looking out for ice."
Talia Minsberg
"We are cautiously optimistic, but the fact of the matter is they left us with deep damage, generational trauma. They left us with economic ruin in some cases."
"That's all dead, gone, over."
Tracy Mumford (describing climate authority repeal)
"In response to questions from the Times, Meta said it's building products that will help enrich people's lives and wrote that it will take a thoughtful approach if and before we roll anything out."
Meta
"The way that life has been impacted in Minnesota, it can't be overstated."
Tom Homan
Full Transcript
We gave Times employees a preview of Crossplay from New York Times Games, and here's what they had to say. I can finally play with other people. I'm pretty competitive. It's fun to beat friends and co-workers. I have a J for 10 points. I'm guessing tanga is not a word. Let's see. Tanga is a word. Oh. As in English as a second language speaker, I like to learn new words. New York Times Game subscribers get full access to Crossplay, our first two-player word game. Subscribe now for a special offer on all of our games. From the New York Times, it's the headlines. I'm Tracy Mumford. Today's Friday, February 13th. Here's what we're covering. I have proposed, and President Trump has concurred, that this surge operation conclude. A significant drawdown has already been underway this week, and will continue through the next week. In Minnesota, President Trump's border czar, Tom Homan, has announced that the administration is winding down its aggressive immigration operations there. The unprecedented deployment, which started late last year, involved thousands of immigration officers and led to widespread clashes with residents and two fatal shootings by federal agents. The Twin Cities and Minnesota in general are and will continue to be much safer for the communities here because of what we have accomplished under President Trump's leadership. In a press conference, Holman framed the surge as a success, saying 4,000 undocumented immigrants had been arrested, some of whom had been convicted of serious crimes. The way that life has been impacted in Minnesota, it can't be overstated. My colleague Talia Minsberg has been part of the team of Times reporters on the ground in the Twin Cities over the past few months. You could see people volunteering to stand outside of daycares and elementary schools and high schools in neon vests looking out for ice. You would hear these incessant whistles anytime ice vehicles drove by. Sometimes you would see abandoned cars if ice had taken someone very abruptly. And when you go to the grocery store, you see a lot of people with really full carts because a lot of people are grocery shopping for friends, neighbors, people who may be hiding in their homes, who may not feel safe going out to the grocery store themselves. I talked to a lot of people who just as they drove, they just felt that they were looking in their rearview mirror a whole lot. So it's both something you saw visually and something that was really felt for a lot of people for months now. We are cautiously optimistic, but the fact of the matter is they left us with deep damage, generational trauma. They left us with economic ruin in some cases. In response to Homan's announcement yesterday, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said the state was in a trust-but-verify phase, waiting to see if the operations do actually end. He told residents that in the meantime, they should remain, quote, hypervigilant. Even as the White House says it's ending the large-scale deployment in Minnesota, the government's mass deportation efforts are continuing across the country. A few weeks ago, so-called ICE surge teams fanned out across small towns in West Virginia and said they arrested more than 600 people. In Hillsborough, Oregon, local police responded to multiple 911 calls reporting that a group of masked men with weapons drawn had approached a car filled with high school students at a drive-thru. Police later determined the men were federal agents. And at a sprawling detention center in Dilley, Texas, the Times has been tracking how the number of children in federal custody has climbed sharply. Hundreds of kids, usually with a parent, have been detained there in the past year. Some are held for only a few days but others spend months amid the jumble of trailers and tents Families and lawyers tell The Times that there little education and inadequate medical care Children often lose weight and get sick Some have had panic attacks and even become suicidal. The Department of Homeland Security has defended living conditions and education access at the facility and said that families are being offered $2,600 and a free flight to leave the U.S. voluntarily. But many families have refused the offer. Some may have pending cases in immigration court, giving them hope they might be allowed to stay in the U.S. And others fear returning to their home countries. This is a big one if you're into environment. This is about as big as it gets, they tell me. President Trump announced a major policy change yesterday that effectively erases the federal government's authority to fight climate change. That's all dead, gone, over. The move repeals what's called the endangerment finding. It's a scientific determination made under the Obama administration that states that greenhouse gases are a threat to human health. Getting rid of that finding basically ends the federal government's legal authority to cap pollution that's heating the planet. For climate change deniers, this repeal has been seen as a kind of holy grail because it has the potential to stop even future administrations from regulating some pollutants. For now, it clears the way for the White House to roll back limits on emissions from things like cars and power plants. The head of the EPA, who joined Trump for the announcement, said scrapping the finding will stop the American economy from being, quote, strangled by regulations. But the change flies in the face of decades of scientific consensus around climate change, that emissions have supercharged heat waves, droughts, wildfires, and other extreme weather events. It also marks a major success for the oil and gas industry, which has spent years trying to stop the country from transitioning to renewable energy. Leading up to the 2024 presidential election, those groups gave Trump and his allies an estimated $75 million. We need everybody here to make space so that our elected officials can get through with the flag they are going to raise. In Manhattan yesterday, a crowd gathered at the Stonewall National Monument to put a pride flag back up after it was removed following a directive from the Trump administration. Raise your hand up! Raise your hand up! The Interior Department recently issued guidance addressing the display of, quote, non-agency flags in the national park system. And earlier this week, people who work near Stonewall noticed the rainbow flag was gone. Stonewall was designated a national monument almost a decade ago in recognition of the protests and riots that happened there in 1969 between LGBTQ activists and police after police raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay bar. Under Trump, the federal government has carried out a widespread effort to police the language and symbols displayed at parks and monuments. In the last year, the Park Service has ordered multiple sites to take down materials related to slavery and Native Americans. The Times has learned that Meta, the parent company of Facebook, is planning to add a facial recognition feature to its smart glasses after scrapping previous plans amid privacy concerns. The glasses have been around for a few years. They're made with Ray-Ban and Oakley and have a camera built into the frame. According to four people involved with the plans who were not authorized to speak publicly the glasses would be able to identify people and provide information about them via Meta AI assistant The company's still exploring what pool of people the glasses would identify. Options include only IDing people you're connected with on Meta platforms like Instagram, or IDing everyone who has a public account on those sites. This isn't the first time Meta has experimented with this technology. Five years ago, Facebook shut down a facial recognition system for tagging people in photos after it fueled privacy concerns, government investigations, and a class action lawsuit. It also considered putting the tech in one of its first versions of smart glasses back in 2021, but nixed that over technical challenges and ethical questions. Now the company's looking to try again. The Times reviewed an internal document from May, which said that the current political turmoil in the U.S. was good timing for releasing the feature. It said, quote, In response to questions from the Times, Meta said it's building products that will help enrich people's lives and wrote that it will take a thoughtful approach if and before we roll anything out. And finally, if you are having your morning cup of coffee right now, drink up. It might be sharpening your mind. And not just in a making sure you're not a bleary-eyed zombie kind of way, but in the long term. A large new study published this week provides evidence of cognitive benefits from caffeinated coffee and tea. It followed over 100,000 participants for a long time, in some cases more than 40 years, and found that people who consistently drank 2-3 cups of coffee a day, or 1-2 cups of tea, had lower chances of developing dementia than people who drank little to no caffeine. To be clear, it doesn't prove caffeine is what causes those beneficial effects, but scientists say it can reduce inflammation, which might protect brain health, And research also suggests caffeine improves insulin sensitivity, helping protect against diabetes, which is a dementia risk factor. In terms of drinking a lot of coffee, the study found the results pretty much plateau at a certain point. No need to chug more than about two and a half cups a day. Overall, this may be one of those rare moments where you learn something you do every day might not be terrible for you. So enjoy it. Those are the headlines. If you'd like to play the Friday News Quiz, it is just after these credits. Today on The Daily, how the fight over President Trump's immigration policy will almost certainly cause a limited government shutdown starting at midnight tonight. This show is made by Will Jarvis, Jan Stewart, and me, Tracy Mumford. Original theme by Dan Powell. Special thanks to Isabella Anderson, Larissa Anderson, Miles McKinley, Zoe Murphy, and Paula Schumann. Now, time for the quiz. Got a few questions for you about stories The Times has been covering. Can you get them all? Here we go. At the White House this week, President Trump rolled out the red carpet for a group from a specific industry. Some executives in suits, some workers in their safety gear and helmets. At one point... We are going to present you an award, sir. That was great. Thank you very much. One of the execs got up on stage to give the president a trophy, celebrating his commitment to their industry. So to show our appreciation the trophy says the undisputed champion of What did they say Trump is the champion of If you need a hint, they said he's the champ of beautiful, clean what? The answer? The undisputed champion of beautiful, clean coal. The Trump administration has been focused on boosting fossil fuels, including coal. This year, the Interior Department's even been promoting a mascot, an illustrated lump of coal they say will be the, quote, spokespiece of coal for their energy policy. It is named Coley. Really dug deep for that one. Next question. It may be all about the Winter Games right now, but in just a few months in Las Vegas... Our goal is not to break a world record. Our goal is actually to break all the world records. A different competition called the Enhanced Games will pit athletes from all over the world against each other with one major twist. Human potential. What is that potential? Where is the max? Where is the limit? Your question. What makes it the Enhanced Games? The answer? The competitors are allowed to use performance-enhancing drugs. The organizers say they're working closely with doctors to keep athletes safe, but it has sparked widespread condemnation over health concerns. Still, that hasn't stopped dozens of athletes from signing up. They've been promised up to a million dollars for every world record they break. We'll just say branding-wise, enhanced games is descriptive, I guess. But let me throw this one out there. The Swole-lympics? And last question. Tomorrow is Valentine's Day. Don't worry. You absolutely still have time to pretend that you remembered. In honor of the holiday, we're going to test your love song knowledge, but there's a catch. I, an AI bot, will read the lyrics because I cannot feel love. Can you name these famous songs? If I should stay, I would only be in your way. So I'll go, but I know. I'll think of you every step of the way. I will help you out here. The answer? Whitney Houston, I Will Always Love You. Okay, next song. Take it away, bot. Like a river flows surely to the sea, darling, so it goes. Some things, you know, are meant to be. Your clue? The answer? That's Can't Help Falling in Love by Elvis Presley. And last one, which is from This Century. Yellow diamonds in the light. Now we're standing side by side As your shadow crosses mine What it takes to come alive A few notes to help you out That is Brianna's mega hit, We Found Love Wait, maybe Maybe I'm starting to feel something That's it for the news quiz. Our email, as always, is theheadlines at nytimes.com. I'm Tracy Mumford. The show will be back on Monday.