The Ohio Immigrant Alliance found that data on the White House's "Aliens" site is "inaccurate and unreliable." ...
The White House turned a legal term into a science-fiction spectacle. The real story is not the theatrics. It is how language moves an audience from watching to acting.
The site compares undocumented immigrants to extraterrestrials, refers to people as "it," and says "they do not belong here." ...
The White House launched a website teasing new information on aliens, but it actually delivers immigration arrest data, including hundreds in Kansas.
This new group, which is led by Harvard professor Avi Loeb, aims to advise the Trump administration and the U.S. intelligence ...
Science fiction stories about “alien” invaders are often political allegories for anxieties around immigration. Now, a government website depicts non-citizens as extraterrestrials.
Critics have condemned a new Trump White House webpage that targets immigrants, slamming it as “disgraceful” and “dehumanizing.” The White House spent part of the day teasing online what appeared to ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The site exploits immigration law's use of "alien" to mean non-citizen, spinning legal jargon into sci-fi narrative. But gamifying ...
The White House has launched a new website called Aliens.gov — but the extraterrestrial-themed page isn't for disclosures on unidentified flying objects. Instead, it's an immigration enforcement ...
The White House is mocking the idea of the U.S. retaining secrets involving alien encounters by launching a space-themed website that touts the arrests of immigrants unauthorized to live in the U.S.
“Mr. Chair, the truth is out there.” That’s what Rep. Nate Davidson, D-Cumberland and Dauphin said during a Tuesday Pa. House ...