
Woke Dem lawmaker's unlikely excuse after she called for LA's criminal gangs to stop city's ICE raids
Cynthia Gonzalez, Vice Mayor of Cudahy, gave an unlikely excuse during a city council meeting Tuesday night, weeks after deleting the video that triggered immediate backlash.
In the clip, Gonzalez seemed to encourage the city's well-known criminal gang members to get involved as federal immigration officers swept through Southern California neighborhoods.
She now 'apologized' for her message and claimed the controversial Ti kTok video was merely meant to be 'a short satirical video.'
'The message was not about violence,' she said. 'It was about regular people ... claiming ownership of our streets in a time of great distress and asking others, who I mentioned in my video, in organizing and protesting against the harm and violence being inflicted on our community.'
'Those that inserted a narrative of violence into my video weaponized it in a way that is totally inconsistent with my life's work,' she added.
In the since-deleted video, the councilwoman said: 'I want to know where all the cholosare at in Los Angeles ... you guys tag everything up, claiming hood, and now that your hood's being invaded by the biggest gang there is, there ain't a peep out of you.'
'It's everyone else who's not about the gang life that's out there protesting and speaking up,' she said. 'We're out there fighting our turf, protecting our turf, protecting our people and, like, where you at?'
She was slammed for her comments online.
The Department of Homeland Security labeled her remarks 'despicable,' while the Los Angeles Police Protective League and the LAPD union called for her immediate resignation.
She claimed that her intention was to spark discussion about protecting the community, not to encourage violent retaliation.
'I don't believe violence by anyone is ever the solution to any of our problems,' she said Tuesday.
'I want to apologize to city staff, members of the council and my community that my video took attention away from the pain our communities are experiencing and brought unnecessary attention to our city.
'I also want acknowledge the stress and anxiety that this caused all of you, from getting hate emails to threats to everything else, which is completely uncalled for,' she continued.
'But I also want to assert my constitutionally protected rights to free speech and I'm committed to using my voice in a more responsible and still-powerful manner moving forward.'
The Department of Homeland Security labeled her remarks 'despicable,' while the Los Angeles Police Protective League and the LAPD union called for her immediate resignation.
Her attorney, Damian J. Martinez, also issued a statement defending her actions.
He said she was calling on Latino residents to join peaceful efforts and not encouraging violence.
'Importantly, Dr. Gonzalez in no way encouraged anyone to engage in violence,' he wrote. 'Any suggestion that she advocated for violence is categorically false and without merit.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
3 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Stephen Colbert on Trump's Scotland trip: ‘A grift for the whole family'
Late-night hosts recap Donald Trump using his taxpayer-funded time to open up a golf course in Scotland and an effort to rename the Kennedy Center after him. 'Folks, I read once that if you're a passenger in an auto accident, it helps if you're just a little drunk,' said Stephen Colbert on Tuesday evening. 'Because – and the science backs this up – a drunk passenger is a little loose. And if you're a little loose, you're less likely to get severely injured than if you tense up right before impact.' 'Which brings me to our president,' the Late Show host continued. 'I think at this point, it would help if we were all just a little drunk. Because maybe then it wouldn't be so painful when he drives the world into a telephone pole. 'We all know that he's crazy,' he added, 'but some of the crazy stuff is just to distract us from the crazier stuff. And maybe we should stop trying to stop every crazy, because stopping some of crazy makes the crazy stuff seem less crazy than he could possibly craze. And let's face it – if you think we're going to stop all the crazy, you cray-cray.' The latest 'case of cuckoo' came courtesy of a Republican lawmaker who introduced a bill to rename the John F Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts to the Donald J Trump Center for the Performing Arts. The bill's sponsor claimed that 'Trump is a patron of the arts and a staple of the pop-culture landscape'. 'I'm sorry, but it's true: Trump is a staple of pop culture. Just last week, he was great on South Park,' Colbert quipped, referring to the Comedy Central animated program whose latest season premiere showed a naked Trump in bed with Satan. The center was originally named for Kennedy just months after his assassination, as a living memorial for the slain president. 'You know what they say about those who forget the past: they name stuff after Donald Trump,' Colbert joked. In other presidential news, Trump spent the past few days in Scotland, 'to negotiate trade golf over his golf tariffs on European golf, because he went there to play golf,' Colbert explained. 'He spent your tax dollars to open his new course in Aberdeen', designed by his middle son, Eric – an occasion, as Colbert put it, that celebrated 'a grift for the whole family'. On Late Night, Seth Meyers recapped a recent JD Vance event in Ohio, where the vice-president was asked about the Jeffrey Epstein files still dogging Trump. Vance said Trump has been 'incredibly transparent about that stuff'. 'And I agree – we can absolutely see right through him,' said Meyers. On Monday, Trump said that the baseline tariff rate for the world would be between 15-20%, and added: 'You can't sit down and make 200 deals.' 'I mean, come on, where would he find the time?' Meyers joked. In a post over the weekend on Truth Social, Trump suggested that NBC – Late Night's network – should lose its broadcasting license. 'Oh, come on, the show wasn't that bad,' said Meyers next to an old still from Trump's NBC reality program The Apprentice. And during a media appearance over the weekend, Trump was asked whether he rushed to finish a trade deal with the European Union to 'knock the Jeffrey Epstein story out'. 'Oh yeah, I'm sure all the conspiracy theorists in Maga will stop talking about Epstein now that there's a new trade deal,' Meyers joked. ''So you think Trump was on the list or what?' 'Who cares! We can get cheaper sardines from Portugal!'' It's starting to seem like being president of the United States is Trump's side hustle 'Trump is in Scotland right now, seeing as his favorite island destination has been shut down,' said Daily Show guest host Desi Lydic next to a photo of Trump with Jeffrey Epstein. 'When a president is overseas, it's important for them to project strength and dignity, although an uninvited insect made that a little harder for President Trump,' Lydic said before a clip of Trump freaking out about an apparent bug in his shirt. 'Feels like Trump's accidental dance moves are way more impressive than his intentional ones.' 'I do understand why he was so frantic: that mosquito was also asking Trump about Jeffrey Epstein,' Lydic quipped. 'Now, Trump was not just wasting time playing golf,' she continued. 'He was also wasting time profiting off golf,' as he opened his latest golf course in Aberdeen. Lydic was not impressed. 'Just a reminder, this man is still the president of the United States,' she said. 'There's a lot going on in the world, and he's at a ribbon-cutting ceremony to promote his golf course? Is this his side hustle, or is America his side hustle?' 'We're just used to this now,' she added, 'but imagine if when Obama was still in office, he kept flying on Air Force One to open up Pizza Hut/Taco Bell franchises.'


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Skip Bayless torched for thanking god that Manhattan shooter didn't kill NFL employees: ‘All time stone cold moron'
Polarizing sports pundit Skip Bayless waded into controversy once again this week when he reacted to the horrific mass shooting at a Manhattan skyscraper that left four people dead by expressing relief that the gunman didn't shoot NFL employees in the building. The former ESPN star's hot take on the tragedy predictably sparked backlash and mockery, with critics noting that the outspoken commentator was essentially saying 'thank god other people got killed instead' while wondering 'what the f*ck is wrong' with Bayless. Shane Tamura, a 27-year-old from Las Vegas, entered a Midtown Manhattan office building on Monday evening and began 'spraying' ammunition with his M4 assault rifle. Tamura then took an elevator up to Rudin Management's 33rd-floor office, where he continued shooting before eventually turning the gun on himself. Tamura's victims included Blackstone executive Wesley LePatner, NYPD police officer Didarul Islam, security officer Aland Etienne and Rudin Management associate Julia Hyman. In a note left at the shooting, Tamura – who was a star high school running back – blamed football and his alleged chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) for his actions. The NFL has offices on the lower levels of the skyscraper and local authorities have said they believe that Tamura 'appeared to have gone to the wrong floor' during his rampage and intended to target the league's staff. The NFL has said that one of its employees was seriously injured in the attack. Following the revelations that Tamura was targeting the pro football league and wanted his brain studied for CTE, Bayless took to social media to weigh in on the developing situation. 'Thank God the New York City shooter apparently took the wrong bank of elevators and didn't make it to the NFL floors,' Bayless tweeted on Tuesday. 'He reportedly bizarrely blamed the NFL for what he believed to be his CTE suffered from playing high-school football.' Needless to say, the callous nature of Bayless' tweet – which completely sidestepped the victims of the shooting while breathing a sigh of relief that the NFL was unharmed – led to intense criticism, condemnation and ridicule. 'Truly the all time best rage baiter in history. Even puts goliaths of always being wrong like [Jason] Whitlock to shame,' professional poker player Scott Siever reacted. 'Just an all time stone cold moron or a sociopath with no empathy and thus a brilliant calculating mind for creating misery and anger. Not sure which one is worse.' New York attorney Mark Bederow, meanwhile, mocked Bayless for thanking god 'for the fact that he went to a different floor and killed an innocent woman rather than innocent NFL employees,' all while wondering 'how is this idiot on tv!' Mike Isaac, a tech reporter for The New York Times, responded to Bayless' observation by saying that 'every so often' he encounters a 'tweet in the wild that is so bad' that it makes him 'audibly gasp at my phone.' Meanwhile, others referenced Bayless' contrarian television persona and his habit of tossing out regrettable or downright bizarre tweets. 'NOW STEPHEN A, YOU KNOW I DON'T LIKE SHOOTINGS mmmhmm BUT,' one X user quipped, impersonating a hypothetical exchange between Bayless and his former First Take co-host Stephen A. Smith. This is hardly the first time that Bayless has gotten himself in hot water over a rage-baiting social media post. The then-Fox Sports pundit came under fire in January 2023 when he questioned why the NFL was postponing a football game after Buffalo Bills safety Damar Hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest on the field. Bayless' comments drew rebuke not just from social media critics but also from his Undisputed co-host Shannon Sharpe, who no-showed the following broadcast to avoid a possible confrontation with his colleague. The pair would eventually get into an angry on-air clash later in the week after Bayless defended his refusal to take down the controversial tweet. In the end, Sharpe would end up leaving Undisputed months later over what he later described as a personal attack Bayless made against him, which showed Bayless' level of 'disrespect.' Sharpe went on to join Bayless' old home of ESPN, but was placed on a leave of absence after he was hit with a $50 million civil lawsuit accusing him of sexual assault. The lawsuit was resolved earlier this month. Bayless, who left Fox Sports in August 2024 after eight years with the network, has also found himself embroiled in scandal in recent months. In a lawsuit filed earlier this year, a former Fox Sports hairstylist accused Bayless of making repeated sexual advances and inappropriately touching her after she began working on Undisputed, claiming he allegedly offered her $1.5 million to have sex with him.


The Independent
5 minutes ago
- The Independent
Trump Jr skewered for Instagram post where he referred to his dad's AI parody of Sydney Sweeney ad as ‘so hot'
Social media users have mocked Donald Trump Jr after he shared an AI-generated image of his father in double denim amid the furor surrounding actor Sydney Sweeney's American Eagle campaign. 'That Hanse…. Um, Donald is so hot right now!!!' said Trump Jr on Instagram Tuesday night, seemingly in a reference to the supermodel character played by Owen Wilson in the Zoolander movies, Hansel McDonald. The image shows the president lying down on the floor in a pair of jeans and a denim shirt, looking at the camera. It's an obvious reference to the controversial ad campaign put forward by American Eagl e, which has led to a debate about racism. The campaign shows Sweeney, 27, wearing the brand's denim, along with the words 'Sydney Sweeney has great jeans' — in what some say is a play on the words 'good genes.' American Eagle faced a litany of negative comments regarding the ad campaign, with activist Zellie Imani writing on X that 'The American Eagles [sic] ad wasn't just a commercial. It was a love letter to white nationalism and eugenic fantasies, and Sydney Sweeney knew it.' The pushback led to a backlash from conservatives, with Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas writing on X, 'Wow. Now the crazy Left has come out against beautiful women. I'm sure that will poll well….' White House Communications Director Steven Cheung called it 'cancel culture run amok.' 'This warped, moronic, and dense liberal thinking is a big reason why Americans voted the way they did in 2024. They're tired of this bull****,' he added. American Eagle CEO Jay Schottenstein is part of a family dynasty that has previously faced reports of its public affection for the president. The family has long been members of the Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida, and reportedly has a personal relationship with Trump, The Daily Beast noted. Trump Jr's post received thousands of comments, with many making reference to the Epstein files. 'That's enough internet for the week,' one user said. 'Are you really proudly posting [an] image of your father while he is already an international laughingstock?' another added. 'He looks like a clown,' another Instagram user said. 'Daddy's little golf trip cost Americans $10 million. Trump family are a pack of self-absorbed a**holes,' one account holder argued.