He made a fake ICE deportation tip line. Then a kindergarten teacher called.

What began as a comedy routine has become one of the most viral pieces of social satire during President Donald Trump’s mass-deportation campaign.

He made a fake ICE deportation tip line. Then a kindergarten teacher called.

Etienne Note: More examples of why “Government” is the worst way of organizing society and how it leads to bitch-ass snitches like this kindergarten teacher trying to get a six year old’s parents deported. This woman wouldn’t hold the gun on the kids parents herself, but has no problem letting the “government” hold the gun for her and is actively trying to do it.


He made a fake ICE deportation tip line. Then a kindergarten teacher called.
He made a fake ICE deportation tip line. Then a kindergarten teacher called.© Illustration by Natalie Vineberg/The Washington Post; Screenshots from Ben Palmer's YouTube and reportaliens.us; iStock

by Drew Harwel

Ben Palmer, a stand-up comic in Nashville, has built a following online with his signature style of elaborate deadpan pranks, stumbling his way onto court TV shows and pyramid-scheme calls to poke fun at the latent absurdities of American life.

Then in January of last year, he had an idea for a new bit: He’d set up a fake tip line that people could use to report anyone they thought was an undocumented immigrant. It was darker than his other stunts, but it felt topical, the kind of challenge he wanted to try. At the very least, he thought, he might get a few calls he could talk about at his next show.

Instead, his tip line has received nearly 100 submissions from across the country: people reporting their neighbors, ex-lovers, Uber drivers, strangers they saw at the grocery store. One tip came from a teacher reporting the parents of a kindergarten student at her school.

“I mean, they seem like nice people or whatever,” the woman told Palmer on the call. “But if they’re taking up resources from our county, I’m not into illegal people being here.”

What began as a comedy routine has become one of the most viral pieces of social satire during President Donald Trump’s mass-deportation campaign. The kindergarten video has been watched more than 20 million times on TikTok and exploded across Facebook, Reddit and YouTube, where one commenter called it “one of the most creative, nonviolent and effective acts of resistance” they’d ever seen.

Palmer’s methods have fueled anger among some conservatives who argue his deception threatens to obstruct how immigration laws get enforced. While he does not claim to be Immigration and Customs Enforcement, his webpages, which use the same submission form and appear in Google search results for ways to report immigrants, use words like “official report” and include a logo resembling the U.S. seal.

Will Johnson, a pro-Trump podcaster and content creator in Texas, said Palmer is “leading people on who think they’re reporting a crime,” and that he could go to prison for impersonating law enforcement.

“He’s making people who are reporting people taking advantage of the system look like just bad human beings,” Johnson said in an interview. In cases like the kindergarten video, he added, it may “look bad, but at the same time we are a nation of laws.”

A Department of Homeland Security spokesperson said it was “aware of a fraudulent YouTube page falsely representing ICE” and that the agency “strongly [condemns] any actions intended to mislead the public or impersonate official government entities.”

But neither Palmer nor the websites claim to represent a government agency, and the sites’ privacy policies include disclaimers at the bottom saying they’re intended only for “parody, joke purposes and sociological research.” (Palmer spoke on the condition that The Washington Post not name the websites, so as not to ruin the bit.)

His supporters have argued the strategy is worth it because it has helped reveal the horrors of America’s immigration crackdown, exposing the moral contradictions and hidden inhumanities of deportation politics — and has reached viewers, through TikTok and Instagram feeds, who might otherwise be politically disengaged. One commenter said the teacher video showed the “banality of evil personified.”

Matt Sienkiewicz, a Boston College professor who studies political comedy and saw the video on social media, said Palmer’s satire has been effective because he plays the conversations as straight as possible, letting the caller deliver an unimpeded justification that slowly crumbles under its own weight.

“It creates this uncomfortable irony, where he’s letting the person deliver the argument and it just beats itself, because it’s so morally problematic or hypocritical or wrong,” he said. “You can kind of sense that they think they’re doing the right thing, and then he just repeats what they said, and they kind of realize they’re doing something terrible.”

Palmer’s project, Sienkiewicz said, feels especially distinctive in the short-video era because he does not copy the style of many social media ideologues by “rage-baiting” viewers into an immediate emotional response.

“So much of contemporary internet culture is showing something offensive and telling people how to feel about it,” he said. “It’s his refusal to act enraged that allows the audience to then choose their own level of anger.”

Since Palmer and a web designer launched the sites last year, Palmer has regularly reviewed the filed reports and called the tipsters of any that seem notable. He never claims to work as a federal agent or with ICE, he said.

“If they ask, I just start rambling,” he said. In one call posted online, he told a tipster he is affiliated “in a nonaffiliated way with the government,” and that he works “coherently and cohesively with the ISIS.”

After reading dozens of reports, he said he was stunned by how many people seemed driven by personal annoyance. One woman reported the new girlfriend of her ex-husband. Another person reported his neighbor for using his trash can.

One tipster called after she went to Publix and the worker who helped her find the water didn’t speak English. “And then she did help you find the water?” Palmer asked on the call, to which the woman responded, “Right, she walked me right to it.”

Many of the tipsters spoke as if the government was “their own personal army,” Palmer said. “If these are the calls I’m getting as a fake, not legitimate person, imagine what’s happening at the actual ICE.”

In the kindergarten call, the teacher said she’d decided to report the student’s parents after looking them up in school files and seeing that they were born in Honduras and El Salvador. She said the student was born in New York and was 5 or 6 years old, but that she didn’t like people “taking up resources from our country.”

When Palmer read the caller’s report back to her in a flat tone, she scoffed. “You make it sound terrible,” she said. Later in the call, she asked to speak to Palmer’s supervisor after saying she didn’t like his attitude.

“I can’t help that they have a 6-year-old. That’s on them,” she said.

Palmer’s videos do not identify the tipsters. The Washington Post contacted the woman after Palmer shared her contact information, but she declined to comment.

The call sparked a firestorm on social media, with some saying they were horrified by what one Reddit commenter said was the “genuine lack of empathy and dehumanization so many people display.”

“There is a mirror being placed in front of her, but she doesn’t seem to understand or accept who’s looking back at her,” one Facebook commenter wrote. “The most terrifying part is that ‘polite’ tone she uses the entire time,” a YouTube viewer said.

Dannagal Young, a political communication professor at the University of Delaware, said Palmer’s videos could help reach Americans who are turned off by politics and uninformed about how deportations work. She noted that immigration, once one of Trump’s most popular policy issues, has become the area where he’s lost the most support.

“There’s something really powerful about witnessing someone have to reckon with their own moral judgment in the moment, especially because they think they’re calling a welcome receiver, and they think they’re going to be applauded,” Young said.

“He is describing to them the reality of what they’re requesting as though it is completely fine and desirable, and through that calm, matter-of-fact representation, it reveals itself to be absolutely inhumane,” she added. “The greatest nightmare for this administration is [ordinary people] paying attention.”

Palmer has not traditionally performed political comedy in his live shows, where the crowd sometimes skews conservative and he tries not to lean “one way or the other.” But he said he has struggled to come to grips with what the calls have shown him: ordinary people who, while going about their daily business, decided to potentially upend a stranger’s life.

They tell him they call because they care about documentation, but “that’s not why you’re doing it,” he said. “That’s just the thing you’re telling yourself to make you feel better.”


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