oo. đ˘ LATEST UPDATE: The White Houseâs âCUFFING SZNâ ICE post backfires after SZA publicly torches the administration for âinhumanâ rage-bait tactics đĽ

Cuffing season is supposed to be cute. A little flirty. A little funny.
But in Trumpâs Washington, itâs turned into a full-on political crime sceneâmemes, meltowns, and a government that looks like itâs posting first and thinking never.

It started with the White House leaning into âWE HEARD ITâS CUFFING SZNâ â a social media video promoting immigration enforcement, set to music by SZA, and framed as âbad newsâ for âcriminal illegal aliens.â The clip immediately detonated online, not only because of its tone, but because SZA herself slammed the administration for using her song, calling the tactic ârage baitâ and âinhumanâ in a viral response. Multiple outlets reported the backlash as part of a growing pattern of artists condemning the administrationâs use of pop culture as political weaponry.

Then California Governor Gavin Newsom fired backâhard. Newsom posted an AI-generated video using the same âcuffing seasonâ framing, depicting Trump alongside Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth and White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller in handcuffs, crying. It wasnât subtle, and it wasnât meant to be. It was a direct accusation wrapped in satire: you want âcuffing seasonâ? Fineâhereâs who Newsom thinks belongs in cuffs.

And thatâs the thing: this isnât just about a meme war. Itâs about the feeling that the administrationâs public messaging is drifting into something darkerâand a lot of Americans can see it. The White House didnât just post âcuffing szn.â It also faced renewed blowback for a holiday-themed deportation graphic styled like The Polar Express, rebranded as âThe Deportation Express,â which critics called grotesque and dehumanizing.
Meanwhile, the legal pressure is not theoretical. This week, the Justice Department asked the D.C. Circuit to block a contempt inquiry tied to deportation flights after a judge investigated whether the administration defied an order to stop removalsâan explosive standoff that has become a test of whether courts can meaningfully check executive power when an administration decides ânoâ is just a suggestion.

Layer that over a separate controversy that has been spreading through civil society: lists of âdiscouragedâ or âbannedâ words across government-adjacent programs and grant writingâterms tied to race, disability, trauma, women, and moreâfueling fears that policy is being rewritten not only through laws, but through language itself.
Then comes the money messagingâanother arena where reality and performance blur. Reports have highlighted fundraising-style âtariff rebateâ claims and emails that critics say misleadingly imply checks or rebates are imminent, pushing supporters toward donation pages instead. The result is a familiar Trump-era dynamic: financial promises presented with official-sounding urgency, and the public left to figure out whatâs real, whatâs marketing, and whatâs pure bait.
And yesâTrump is getting booed in D.C. again. Fact-checkers and major outlets have documented booing at high-profile appearances, including at a Washington Commanders game in November and at the Kennedy Center earlier in 2025. Whether you see it as a loud minority or a shifting mood, it adds a soundtrack to the current moment: not applause, not reverenceârestlessness.
Put it all together and you get the picture opponents are trying to paint: an administration acting like itâs in permanent campaign modeâgoverning by meme, dodging accountability with noise, and treating outrage as oxygen.
But the part thatâs hardest to ignore is the escalation. This isnât just âcringe posting.â Itâs a feedback loop: the White House posts something inflammatory, artists and governors respond, the internet explodes, and the actual machinery of governmentâcourts, agencies, public trustâkeeps grinding under the weight of it all.
And in the middle of that storm, one message keeps surfacing from critics and commentators alike: if the administration is so confident, why does it keep performing like itâs running from something?

