Trump Tryna Change the Rules on Birthright, and the People Ain't Havin' It
Chef José Andrés and De Niro pull up to the Supreme Court to let Trump know we see through the BS 'bout citizenship.

D.C. out here lookin' like a movie, man. Trump done rolled up to the Supreme Court tryna mess with birthright citizenship, and folks ain't playin'. Chef José Andrés and even De Niro showed up to make it clear: this ain't the move.
This Trump v. Barbara case is straight up about whether kids born here to parents without papers should be citizens. Trump want to change the game, sayin' they shouldn't be. But we know what it is: another way to mess with folks tryna build a life, especially Black and Brown families.
Chef Andrés out there speakin' truth to power, tellin' Fox News that Trump is tryna "change the game's rules" on the 250th anniversary of America. But for who? Rich folks always been changin' the rules. Time for a new playbook.
"The argument is that this country, this year, is celebrating 250 years! It's not the time to be changing the game's rules. Those rules have been already done," Andrés said. He right. This ain't about the Constitution, it's about keepin' certain people down.
De Niro showin' face in the courtroom? That sends a message. Even Hollywood seein' the smoke.
The Fourteenth Amendment supposed to guarantee citizenship to everyone born here. That's what they taught us in school. Now Trump tryna rewrite history? Nah, we ain't forgettin'.
This whole thing ain't about laws, it's about power. Trump tryna flex on immigrants, tryna scare folks. But we gotta stay strong and fight back.
This Supreme Court decision gonna affect real lives. Real families. People tryna make a way in this country. We gotta stand up for them.
They say this country was built on freedom and equality. Time to prove it. Protect birthright citizenship. Protect our communities.
Keep it 100. Real talk. No cap.

