Charlize Theron speaks out on immigration policies that have ‘destroyed the lives of families, not criminals'
At her annual Africa Outreach Project Block Party over the weekend, Theron thanked attendees for 'taking the time to be a part of this, especially when the world feels like it's burning because it is.'
'Here in Los Angeles, in the US and across the globe, we're moving backwards fast. Immigration policy has destroyed the lives of families, not criminals; women's rights are becoming less and less every day; queer and trans lives are increasingly being erased; and gender-based violence is on the rise,' Theron said, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
The issue of immigration is very personal to the star, who immigrated from South Africa to the United States and became a US citizen in 2007.
Her block party is held to raise funds to help youth in Africa. Theron spoke out against US aid 'cuts [that] have brought HIV and AIDS programs in my home country of South Africa to an absolute standstill.'
'All of this is not just detrimental, it's dangerous; people will lose their lives — many have already, unfortunately, and at a frightening rate,' she said. 'It's absolutely heartbreaking to see this kind of unnecessary suffering.'
'But what we also see, what we cannot miss, is the resistance. There is hope,' Theron added. 'There is power in all of us standing up, organizing, protesting, voting, and caring for each other, and refusing to accept that this is the new normal.'
The event is part of the star's nonprofit the Charlize Theron Africa Outreach Project.
Hashtags

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

Business Insider
15 minutes ago
- Business Insider
Idris Elba says 'grim' memories of his pre-Hollywood job help keep him motivated
At 52, Idris Elba has made a name for himself as an actor, a producer, and even a DJ who played at Coachella this year. He says he gets his drive from not forgetting what his pre-Hollywood life was like. During an interview on the " Good Hang with Amy Poehler" podcast published on Tuesday, "The Wire" actor spoke about his career and how the challenges he faced before fame continue to motivate him. Elba told host Amy Poehler that he didn't find success until he was around 35 and that life before that was often difficult. "There were some very tough times," he said. Coming from a working-class family, Elba said he grew up without having much "at all," adding that he had spent more of his life being poor than he has been famous or successful. Part of what drives him is the fear of losing the success he's worked so hard to achieve: "There's part of it which is like, 'I don't want to let this go, so I just keep chucking for it,'" Elba said. But the main thing that keeps him going is the memory of his pre-Hollywood job, he said. He used to work the "night shift" at the Ford Motor Company in Dagenham, East London. "That is grim. It's a grim job, all right," Elba said. "Nothing compares to doing that, so when I get an opportunity to come and work with you, to come and work on a set, it doesn't even feel like work." While it may seem to others that he's working incredibly hard now that he's famous, he doesn't see it that way. "Actually, it's not that hard," he said. Moreover, his Hollywood career allows him to try his hand at many different things, unlike his factory job. "You know, in a job like that, I did the same thing every night. Every night for two straight years. My dad did the same job for 25 years, so I consider this a privilege. This ain't work," Elba said. In a 2019 interview with The Hollywood Reporter promoting his then-partnership with the automobile manufacturer, Elba said he worked at Ford in the '80s because of his dad. "My dad didn't want me to be a broke actor," Elba told The Hollywood Reporter. In a 2022 SiriusXM interview, the actor said he also used to work as a security guard at a comedy club in New York City, and even sold weed to some comedians, including Dave Chappelle. In a 2023 podcast, Elba said that he started going to therapy because he was "an absolute workaholic." "It's just because I have some unhealthy habits that have really formed. And I work in an industry that I'm rewarded for those unhealthy habits," he said. Elba isn't the only actor who has spoken about their less-than-glamorous jobs before becoming famous. Christopher Walken used to work in a circus when he was a child, while Nicole Kidman used to be a massage therapist, and Hugh Jackman was a physical education teacher at a high school before getting his big acting break.


Gizmodo
5 hours ago
- Gizmodo
‘The Old Guard 2' Is a Tender Sophomore Stretched Thin by Sequel Syndrome
After years of production delays, Netflix and Skydance are finally poised to release The Old Guard 2, the Charlize Theron-led sequel to the 2020 adaptation of Greg Rucka and Leandro Fernández's Image Comics series. Directed by Victoria Mahoney, the sequel reunites its immortal mercenary found family for another globe-trotting mission. Unfortunately, this time around, their greatest threat isn't its new immortal big bad and its long-awaited grudge match. It's the sequel's narrative inertia that's crushed under the weight of putting the cart before the horse to build a franchise. Set several years after the events of the first film, The Old Guard 2 finds Andy (Theron) reckoning with her newfound mortality. Alongside Nile (KiKi Layne), Joe (Marwan Kenzari), Nicky (Luca Marinelli), and James Copley (Chiwetel Ejiofor), Andy's team now faces a formidable new threat in Discord, a shadowy figure played by Uma Thurman, who claims to be the world's first immortal. Wielding knowledge that could unravel the very fabric of their eternal existence, Discord aims to dismantle everything Andy and her comrades have fought for over centuries to safeguard humanity. In a bid to stop her, the team turns to an old comrade, Tuah (Henry Golding), hoping his insight into the mythos of their immortality will hold a key to ending Discord's plan. Understandably, the film presents itself as a blockbuster showdown between Theron and Thurman—a battle between two of Hollywood's legendary action heroines that reads like a pop-culture fan fiction come to life. However, their showdown, while serviceable, ultimately feels like the undercard, both in terms of spectacle and emotional weight. The real main event is the long-awaited reunion between Andy and Quynh (Veronica Ngô), her once-intimate comrade who spent centuries entombed in an iron maiden at the bottom of the sea and finds herself aligned with Discord. While Andy's confrontation with Discord brings sparks, it's her reconciling with Quynh's festering fury and unresolved emotional damage that ignites the film's most compelling tension—in the form of a vendetta five centuries in the making. The Old Guard 2's action sequences—ostensibly the franchise's calling card—are strangely limp this time around. Despite some inventive staging in its early goings, the film's momentum quickly fades, giving way to jittery editing and disjointed camera work that rob pivotal immortal-versus-immortal fights of their impact. The much-touted showdown between Theron and Thurman, along with the emotionally charged clash between Nile and Quynh, bears the brunt of this breakdown. Instead of crescendoing into operatic spectacle, these battles fumble with continuity lapses and what feels like competing takes that were either left in the editing bay or arbitrarily stitched together. The film's entire final act, rather than delivering catharsis, plays like a placeholder for whatever might come next—an unfinished bridge to a sequel that's still a pitch rather than a promise. And therein lies The Old Guard 2's biggest flaw: it's too preoccupied with laying track for a hypothetical third chapter to finish the one it's actually telling. Instead of delivering a fully realized, emotionally satisfying sequel, the film plays like a feature-length prologue that constantly signals its meditative importance without doing the necessary groundwork to earn it. Subplots, such as the friction between Nicky and Joe or the reintroduction of excommunicated team member Booker (Matthias Schoenaerts), function less as meaningful drama and more as artificial bloat, highlighting the film's uneven narrative urgency. Even the film's most promising emotional arc with Andy and Quynh's fraught reunion, which simmers with centuries of silence, betrayal, and unresolved longing as a proverbial layup for the sequel to slam dunk, hits like a technical free throw, hobbled by the inflated lore drops and aggressive sequel baiting that foul up the film's pacing. What could've been a tight, character-driven sequel instead dissolves into a middling bridge to a trilogy that laughably hasn't earned its next step despite how visibly proud the film is of its cliffhanger. What lingers after The Old Guard 2 are fragments of stronger ideas—moments of grisly body horror from its immortal brawls, inventive flashes of choreography, and themes of mortality, guilt, and redemption that shimmer faintly before drifting out of focus. The film seems too anxious to complete a thought before pivoting to unravel and undo the previous film's climax, all in service of constructing a grander narrative that never actually materializes in its presentation. Long before the credits roll, it's painfully clear the film has no intention of delivering any semblance of resolution found in its final act, but a rough sketch of what the film aspired to be is tucked away in what's either studio exec meddling or, worse yet, a script that failed to rise to the occasion. In its eagerness to pave the way for what comes next, The Old Guard 2 forgets to finish the act it's in, leaving fans parsing microexpressions, filling story gaps with headcanon, and wondering whether the real climax got lost in edits or outsourced to fix-it fanfiction. The Old Guard 2 streams on Netflix on July 2. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.

Yahoo
6 hours ago
- Yahoo
The US says 'little to show‘ for six-decade aid agency. Supporters point to millions of lives saved
WASHINGTON (AP) — Some staffers of the U.S. Agency for International Development raced against the moment their computer access would be shut off, before the Trump administration's dismantling of the six-decade-old foreign assistance agency took near-final effect Tuesday. With only a tiny fraction of the 13,000 staffers and institutional contractors who ran U.S. aid and development slated to keep their jobs by Tuesday's latest round of cuts, some described laboring to push out what promised funding they could before Tuesday, to the small slice of programs worldwide that have survived the administration's purge of foreign assistance. President Donald Trump and Elon Musk's government-cutting Department of Government Efficiency dismantled USAID within weeks of Trump's taking office, accusing the agency, with little evidence, of waste and fraud and supporting a liberal agenda. 'That ends today,' Secretary of State Marco Rubio said in a social media posting Tuesday. American taxpayers would no longer 'pay taxes to fund failed governments in faraway lands," Rubio vowed. Supporters say USAID has fundamentally improved health systems and humanitarian networks around the world, promoted democracy and boosted countries and people out of poverty in a way that has saved lives, stemmed refugee crises and wars, and built markets and trading partners for the United States. In a Lancet medical study published Monday, USAID's last day as an independent agency, researchers credited USAID programs with preventing 91 million deaths in the first two decades of this century alone. Staffers sign off with tributes, solidarity — and some anger Globally, some staffers planned online meetups for their last hours, where they would simultaneously cut up their government IDs as they said the Trump administration had demanded. In a show of support and gratitude, rock star Bono, Republican former President George W. Bush and Democratic former President Barack Obama filmed video tributes to staffers. 'They called you crooks. When you were the best of us,' Bono said. In the days before staffers lost their log-in access, State Department official Kenneth Jackson sent an email, obtained by The Associated Press, thanking them for their 'professionalism' in a 'successful transition" amid 'challenges.' Staffers shared emails some colleagues sent back, calling their firings illegal and the elimination of U.S. foreign assistance a threat to national security. They wrote that the lives they had saved would be their legacy. The change was hitting a hospital in central Liberia where USAID over decades had built up maternal and child care and funded out-of-reach HIV medication, until the Trump administration slashed funding without warning earlier this year. The hospital had no advanced notice that 'after five months or a year or so, you say we'll no longer be able to be funding the health care services in Liberia," said Dr. Minnie Sankawulo Ricks, a pediatrician, of the cuts to USAID programs. "We just woke up one day and boom." 'No one ever saw it coming." Rubio says USAID created a bureaucracy with 'little to show' Secretary of State Marco Rubio had ordered USAID and its remaining programs absorbed into the State Department by Tuesday. 'Beyond creating a globe-spanning NGO industrial complex at taxpayer expense, USAID has little to show since the end of the Cold War,' The Trump administration's new slimmed-down aid system would cut bureaucracy to respond more quickly to crises, empower diplomats out in the field at a reduced number of regional bureaus, and emphasize U.S. trade, not aid, Rubio wrote. The Trump administration has asked Congress for $17 billion for foreign assistance for next year, less than half the previous amount. Asked for comment about the last days of USAID as an independent agency, the State Department said it would be introducing this week its foreign assistance successor, America First. 'The new process will ensure there is proper oversight and that every tax dollar spent will help advance our national interests,' the department said. Objections by USAID and State Department staffers to the slashing of foreign assistance and other changes resulted in an unprecedented 700 dissent cables, a traditional internal way of registering concerns to secretaries of state, said Andrew Natsios, a former USAID administrator who still has ties to both agencies. The State Department did not immediately respond when asked if the figure was correct or to provide details on its new foreign aid plans. In South Africa, dread is building as the world's largest HIV program begins resorting to cutting doses, dragging out waiting time for appointments and missing testing targets. The USAID cuts have stripped more than $400 million a year from South Africa's program through the President's Emergency Relief Plan for AIDS Relief, an initiative started by the George W. Bush administration credited with saving more than 25 million lives in Africa and beyond. A complex system — that works President John F. Kennedy and Congress started USAID in the early 1960s. It was part of an emphasis on foreign aid as a tool of diplomacy and a belief that helping other countries become more stable and prosperous benefited the United States in kind. Kennedy had complained that State Department diplomats weren't nimble enough at that. He wanted operations experts. A study published in the Lancet medical journal on Monday gave an idea of its impact more recently: USAID helped prevent 91 million deaths worldwide between 2001 and 2021, researchers based in Spain, the U.S. and elsewhere estimated. That was led by more than halving of the number of deaths from HIV/AIDS, malaria and tropical diseases. The study projected that USAID's dismantling and deep funding cuts would lead to more than 14 million additional deaths by 2030, including 4.5 million children. Natsios, the USAID administrator under Bush, ticks off a list of fundamental, systematic, and measurable improvements made by USAID around the world: USAID support played a vital role for agriculture's Green Revolution, credited with saving 1 billion lives around the world, including by developing and providing improved crops. USAID's building of a famine early warning system and other developments have sharply reduced the number and severity of famines. USAID rapid response teams have scrambled to shut down epidemics before they spread, including in a 2014 Ebola outbreak that killed thousands in Africa. USAID work with other global partners has strengthened health systems around the world, contributing to reducing deaths among children under 5 by 69% since 1990. Funding for many of those programs has been cut off or reduced under Trump. USAID and U.S. foreign assistance had been 'a massive and very complex system, that works. That works,' Natsios said. 'And now that system has been destroyed." ___ Pronczuk reported from Dakar. Evelyne Musambi in Nairobi and Mogomotsi Magome in Johannesburg contributed.