'Late Show' host Stephen Colbert faces backlash for 'obscene' attack on ICE agents

Stephen Colbert faced criticism after attacking ICE agents during his show on Monday by suggesting they were even worse than Nazis, who were at least "willing to show their faces."


'Late Show' host Stephen Colbert faces backlash for 'obscene' attack on ICE agents
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Colbert then said, "Yes, do not compare ICE or Border Patrol agents to the Nazis. That's an unfair comparison. The Nazis were willing to show their faces."

"What happened in Minnesota is horrible. But comparing ICE to NAZIS is a vile ridiculous cheap joke," actor Michael Rapaport wrote on X. "What's more offensive, Colbert? Or the crowd laughing?"

Sohrab Ahmari called it "obscene," "ahistorical" and "illiterate."

Radio host Buck Sexton said in reaction to Colbert that a large percentage of ICE agents are U.S. military veterans.

Newsweek opinion contributor Joel Petlin said he was old enough to remember when late-night television was funny. 

He added, "All of them knew the difference between the agents who enforce US immigration law and the Nazis who exterminated six million Jews. Shame on @StephenAtHome for minimizing the Holocaust for a cheap laugh line."

"Five for Fighting" singer John Ondrasik called the remark "evil" in a post on X. 

"An eternal coward and an American disgrace," he added. 

Human Rights lawyer Anne Herzberg, who works for NGO Montior, wrote on x, "So according to @colbertlateshow, ICE are worse than the Nazis? To Stephen Colbert and his snarky self-righteous writers: This is not humor. This is yet another act of whitewashing the worst act of mass extermination in human history and normalizing antisemitism."

Marc Thiessen, a Washington Post columnist, said "Good riddance" to Colbert, as his show is set to end in May.

Liberals have been comparing ICE's presence and deportation efforts in Minnesota to Nazi Germany. Some have also ramped up threats directed at ICE agents.

"We have got children in Minnesota hiding in their houses, afraid to go outside. Many of us grew up reading that story of Anne Frank," Walz said, referring to the German Jewish teenager who documented her life in hiding during the Nazi persecution in World War II.

"Leaders making false equivalencies to her experience for political purposes is never acceptable. Despite tensions in Minneapolis, exploiting the Holocaust is deeply offensive, especially as antisemitism surges."

A representative of "The Late Show" didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.

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