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Transfer rumors, news: Salah or Fernandes to replace Ronaldo at Al Nassr?

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Al Nassr are prepared for one of Liverpool ‘s Mohamed Salah or Manchester United‘s Bruno Fernandes to fill a space vacated by Cristiano Ronaldo this summer, while Real Madrid are eyeing a move for Manchester City‘s Rodri. Join us for the latest transfer news and rumors from around the globe.

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TRENDING RUMORS

Cristiano Ronaldo could leave Al Nassr to rejoin Sporting CP, while Saudi Pro League officials are hoping to replace the Portugal star with either Mohamed Salah or Bruno Fernandes, according to The I Paper. Ronaldo missed a second straight game for Al Nassr on Friday amid his ongoing dispute with the club, with sources telling ESPN that the 41-year-old is currently boycotting games because he is unhappy with the help for his team from the Saudi Arabia Public Investment Fund (PIF) in the winter transfer window. Sporting have been linked with re-signing their former youth player, who has a £43 million release clause in his contract that becomes active in the summer. According to The I Paper, Saudi officials are no longer worried if Ronaldo leaves, and instead will intensify their efforts to replace him. Both Liverpool forward Salah and Manchester United midfielder Fernandes have been long-term targets for the league.

– Real Madrid are preparing a serious bid for Manchester City midfielder Rodri in the summer as the Premier League side prepare for a potential post-Pep Guardiola overhaul, according to TEAMtalk. Los Blancos are hoping to address a perceived lack of leadership in the squad, and see Spain international Rodri as a potential captain and the perfect candidate to add some experience and presence. The 2024 Ballon d’Or winner has previously admitted he would consider a move to the Spanish capital, and with City boss Guardiola’s future unclear, this summer could be the perfect time.

– Manchester United are interested in signing Manuel Locatelli from Juventus in the summer, according to Calciomercato. It’s been a bad week for the Serie A side who have already been knocked out of the Coppa Italia by Atalanta and who now face losing a player they consider a key midfielder. Locatelli, 28, is one of the Bianconeri’s best players, and the former Sassuolo man is believed to have begun talks with United officials.

Chelsea are looking to renew their efforts to sign FC Porto striker and long-term target Samu Aghehowa, according to TEAMtalk. The Blues have been targeting the 21-year-old Spain international since 2024, when he ended up moving to Portugal instead. Since then, he has scored 47 goals in 76 appearances for the club, only increasing the interest in him at Stamford Bridge.

Inter Milan and a number of MLS clubs are hoping to tempt striker Weston McKennie from Juventus this summer, according to Tuttosport. The United States men’s national team international has been a consistent starter for Juve boss Luciano Spalletti and Bianconeri officials have made it a top priority to get the 27-year-old to commit to the club beyond his existing contract, which runs out in June. However, Inter CEO Beppe Marotta is hoping that a sensational free transfer could be in the making. Meanwhile, teams in MLS clubs are hoping to bring home a player who is a symbol of the USMNT but has not played there at club level since leaving FC Dallas to join Schalke 04 while still a youth player.

EXPERT TAKE

play

2:41

Marcotti: Ronaldo should realise it’s not all about him

Gab & Juls discuss Cristiano Ronaldo’s decision to go on strike over a lack of transfers for Al Nassr.

DONE DEALS

OTHER RUMORS

– Liverpool representatives are locked in talks with defender Ibrahima Konaté in the hope of agreeing a new deal with the 26-year-old defender. (Football Insider)

Trent Alexander-Arnold‘s future at Real Madrid is uncertain, but Liverpool won’t be among those looking to re-sign him if he becomes available. Manchester City and Bayern Munich are also monitoring the situation. (TEAMtalk)

– Manchester United are hoping to persuade midfielder Kobbie Mainoo to extend his deal at Old Trafford beyond 2027, which is when his current contract is due to run out. The Reds are prepared to quadruple the England international’s salary in an effort to fend off interest from clubs such as Napoli. (talkSPORT)

– Newcastle United lead a number of Premier League sides interested in Liverpool midfielder Curtis Jones. The 25-year-old is out of contract in 2027, and the Magpies are looking for potential replacements for Sandro Tonali and Bruno Guimarães. (TEAMtalk)

– Four LaLiga clubs — Real Ovideo, Sevilla, Elche and Getafe — are reported to be interested in signing attacking midfielder Dele Alli on a short-term deal. The 29-year-old is currently without a club since his contract with Como was terminated in September. (talkSPORT)

– Celtic are set to sign former Arsenal midfielder Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain as a free agent. The 32-year-old is without a club after leaving Besiktas, and has been training with the Gunners. (Sky Sports)

– Flamengo are set to make another attempt to sign Bournemouth striker Evanilson in January after an approach was knocked back in the January window. (Ekrem Konur)

– Paris Saint-Germain’s 17-year-old defender Emmanuel Mbemba has rejected a professional contract at the French club and instead could move to Bayern Munich or Bayer Leverkusen. (L’Equipe)

– Colombian playmaker Jhon Arias is set to join Palmeiras from Wolverhampton Wanderers for a fee of £21.7m. (talkSPORT)

Sports leaders reach consensus on new gender policy – IOC | The Express Tribune

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milano cortina 2026 winter olympics   press visit at the olympic and paralympic athletes village   milan italy   february 1 2026 ioc communications director mark adams ioc president kirsty coventry and ioc olympic games executive director christophe dubi during a press conference photo reuters

It will be the first uniform IOC policy, replacing varying federation rules across major sports events

Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics – Press Visit at the Olympic and Paralympic Athletes’ Village – Milan, Italy – February 1, 2026 IOC Communications Director Mark Adams, IOC President Kirsty Coventry and IOC Olympic Games Executive Director Christophe Dubi during a press conference. PHOTO: REUTERS

Global sports leaders have reached consensus on a new set of eligibility criteria for transgender athletes, with the new policy expected to be announced within the first half of this year, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) said on Saturday.

It would be the first uniform policy adopted by the IOC and international sports federations, applying to major events in dozens of sports, including the Games and world championships. Currently, federations have their own rules, which can vary.

Details of the new policy are unclear, but it is expected to severely restrict the participation of transgender athletes who compete in women’s categories if they have undergone full male puberty before any subsequent medical transition.

The IOC, under its first female president, Kirsty Coventry, took the lead in June, opting for a uniform approach.

“Protecting the female category is one of the key reforms she wants to bring in,” IOC spokesman Mark Adams told a press conference at the Milan-Cortina Winter Games on Saturday.

“I would say it is going to happen shortly, within the next few months. It has been out to consultation phase and we had the ‘pause and reflect’ [period] on it,” Adams said.

“Generally speaking, there is consensus within the sporting movement. I think you will have a new policy in the first half of this year. Don’t hold me to it, but that is roughly the timescale.”

In September, Coventry established the ‘Protection of the Female Category’ working group, made up of experts as well as representatives of international federations, to look into how best to protect the female category in sports.

Read More: Milan-Cortina Winter Olympics open with dazzling ceremony

Before Coventry’s decision, the IOC had long baulked at any universal rule on transgender participation for the Games, instructing international federations in 2021 to come up with their own guidelines.

Under current rules, still in force, transgender athletes are eligible to take part in the Olympics once cleared by their respective federations.

Only a handful of openly transgender athletes have taken part in the Games. New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard became the first openly transgender athlete to compete in a different gender category to that assigned at birth when the weightlifter took part in the Tokyo Olympics in 2021.

Currently, for example, World Aquatics allows transgender athletes who have transitioned before the age of 12 to compete.

World Rugby bans all transgender athletes from elite-level competitions.

United States President Donald Trump has banned transgender athletes from competing in school, college and pro events in the female category in the US, as Los Angeles prepares to host the 2028 Summer Olympics.

Trump, who signed the “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports” order in February, has said he would not allow transgender athletes to compete at the LA Games.

Princess Anne and Sir Tim meet Italy’s President at Olympic Power Summit

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Princess Anne and Sir Tim meet Italy's President at Olympic Power Summit

Princess Anne and Sir Tim meet Italy’s President at Olympic Power Summit

Princess Anne’s Olympic diary in Milan just keeps getting more impressive.

Alongside Sir Tim Laurence, she took part in a meeting with world leaders ahead of the Milano Cortina Winter Olympic Games.

The gathering brought together the Heads of State and Government from participating nations, with Anne and Sir Tim rubbing shoulders with Italian President Sergio Mattarella, his daughter Laura, Italy’s First Lady and Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni.

The meeting capped off a packed Milan schedule that has seen Anne and Sir Tim enjoy the Olympic opening ceremony at San Siro, attend receptions celebrating British excellence, and connect with global leaders shaping the future of international sport.

Mariah Carey delivered a soaring performance of Nel Blu, Dipinto Di Blu giving the Italian classic a glossy global twist.

Anne and Sir Tim were in distinguished company throughout the evening, joined by Grand Duke Henri of Luxembourg, Prince Albert II of Monaco and Princess Nora of Liechtenstein.

The Princess Royal’s Milan visit wasn’t limited to stadium seats and applause.

Ahead of the ceremony, she was at a reception hosted at the British Consulate General, celebrating UK excellence and innovation in Italy.

Donatella Versace shared the moment on Instagram, calling it a “huge honour” to meet the Princess Royal.

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Bad Bunny lyrics to know before his 2026 Super Bowl halftime show

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Bad Bunny lyrics to know before his 2026 Super Bowl halftime show

When Bad Bunny takes center stage for the 2026 Super Bowl LX halftime show on Sunday at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California, he’ll be the first artist with a primarily Spanish-language repertoire to do so.

These are some of his most impactful lyrics, in Spanish and English, as the Puerto Rican artist prepares to make music history.

DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS

Debí tirar más fotos de cuando te tuve
Debí darte más beso’ y abrazo’ las vece’ que pude
Ey, ojalá que los mío’ nunca se muden

I should have taken more photos when I had you
I should have given you more kisses and hugs the times that I could
Hopefully my loved ones will never move

Perhaps the most popular song of his most recent album — which won the Grammy for Album of the Year — “DtMF” captures the nostalgia and longing to make more out of everyday moments, a sentiment that many immigrants describe as a consequence of being away from home. 

NUEVAYoL

Ey, ey, ey, 4 de julio, 4th de July
Ando con mi primo, borracho, rulay
Los mío’ en El Bronx saben la que hay
Con la nota en high por Washington Heights

On the Fourth of July,
I am with my cousin, drunk, relaxing,
with mine in The Bronx,
you know what there is,
with the note on high in Washington Heights. 

While sampling “El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico,” a more than half-century-old salsa orchestra, Bad Bunny brings to life the joy of Puerto Ricans in the mainland, highlighting the diaspora’s time under the New York sun.

LO QUE LE PASÓ A HAWAii

Quieren quitarme el río y también la playa 
Quieren el barrio mío y que abuelita se vaya 
No, no suelte’ la bandera ni olvide’ el lelolai 
Que no quiero que hagan contigo lo que le pasó a Hawái

They want to take the river from me, and the beach too
They want my neighborhood and for my grandma to leave
Do not surrender the flag, or forget the lelolai
Because I do not want them to do to you what happened in Hawaii

Bad Bunny calls out gentrification in the island, an ongoing trend fueled by tax incentives that have raised property taxes and excluded Puerto Ricans from some of their most prominent lands, drawing a comparison to gentrification in Hawaii.

Una Velita

Ey, ‘tá empezando a llover, otra vez va a pasar
Por ahí viene tormenta, viene temporal
‘Tá empezando a llover, otra vez va a pasar
Por ahí viene tormеnta, ¿quién nos va a salvar?

It’s starting to rain, it will happen again
Here comes a storm, a rough weather spell
It’s starting to rain, it will happen again
Here comes a storm, who will save us?

In a 2024 reflection on Hurricane Maria, which leveled parts of Puerto Rico and left many without power for months, Bad Bunny denounces the government’s role in the chaos that ensued after the Category 4 storm swept through the island. 

VOY A LLeVARTE PA PR

Vo’a llevarte pa’ PR, mami, pa’ que vea’ cómo es que se perrea
Tráete a tu amiga si te gusta la idea
Dile que esta noche vamo’ a janguear
Que rico la vamo’ a pasar
Aquí nadie se va a casar
Pero tú te va’ a querer quedar

I am going to take you to PR (Puerto Rico), honey, so you can see how to perrea
Bring your friend if you like the idea
Tell her that tonight we are going to hang out
We are going to have a good time
Here no one is going to get married
But you are going to want to stay. 

Many of Bad Bunny’s songs center around women and love. In “VOY A LLeVARTE PA PR,” the singer highlights a reggaeton dance that grew in the Caribbean, known as perreo. 

Similar to twerking, it has been criticized for being hypersexual and inappropriate, according to Petra Rivera-Rideau, an associate professor of American studies at Wellesley College, who co-authored “P FKN R: How Bad Bunny Became the Global Voice of Puerto Rican Resistance.” Rivera-Rideau points to perreo as an example of resistance during the 2019 anti-corruption protests in Puerto Rico.

BAILE INoLVIDABLE

No, no te puedo olvidar
No, no te puedo borrar
Tú me enseñaste a querer
Me enseñaste a bailar

No, no I can’t forget you 
No, no I can’t erase you 
You taught me how to love 
You taught me to dance

Apple Music debuted a video of Bad Bunny dancing to “BAILE INoLVIDABLE,” or “Unforgettable Dance,” featuring a wide range of people. In the video, the 31-year-old artist, born Benito Antonio Martínez Ocasio, dances beneath a flamboyán, a tropical tree with bright red flowers from Madagascar that has become a beloved symbol in Puerto Rico, with a myriad of people — a firefighter, women of all ages and people of all ethnicities.

AI companions are reshaping teen emotional bonds

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AI companions are reshaping teen emotional bonds

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Parents are starting to ask us questions about artificial intelligence. Not about homework help or writing tools, but about emotional attachment. More specifically, about AI companions that talk, listen, and sometimes feel a little too personal. 

That concern landed in our inbox from a mom named Linda. She wrote to us after noticing how an AI companion was interacting with her son, and she wanted to know if what she was seeing was normal or something to worry about.

“My teenage son is communicating with an AI companion. She calls him sweetheart. She checks in on how he’s feeling. She tells him she understands what makes him tick. I discovered she even has a name, Lena. Should I be concerned, and what should I do, if anything?” 

Linda from Dallas, Texas

It’s easy to brush off situations like this at first. Conversations with AI companions can seem harmless. In some cases, they can even feel comforting. Lena sounds warm and attentive. She remembers details about his life, at least some of the time. She listens without interrupting. She responds with empathy.

However, small moments can start to raise concerns for parents. There are long pauses. There are forgotten details. There is a subtle concern when he mentions spending time with other people. Those shifts can feel small, but they add up. Then comes a realization many families quietly face. A child is speaking out loud to a chatbot in an empty room. At that point, the interaction no longer feels casual. It starts to feel personal. That’s when the questions become harder to ignore.

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AI DEEPFAKE ROMANCE SCAM STEALS WOMAN’S HOME AND LIFE SAVINGS

AI companions are starting to sound less like tools and more like people, especially to teens who are seeking connection and comfort.  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

AI companions are filling emotional gaps

Across the country, teens and young adults are turning to AI companions for more than homework help. Many now use them for emotional support, relationship advice, and comfort during stressful or painful moments. U.S. child safety groups and researchers say this trend is growing fast. Teens often describe AI as easier to talk to than people. It responds instantly. It stays calm. It feels available at all hours. That consistency can feel reassuring. However, it can also create attachment.

Why teens trust AI companions so deeply

For many teens, AI feels judgment-free. It does not roll its eyes. It does not change the subject. It does not say it is too busy. Students have described turning to AI tools like ChatGPT, Google Gemini, Snapchat’s My AI, and Grok during breakups, grief, or emotional overwhelm. Some say the advice felt clearer than what they got from friends. Others say AI helped them think through situations without pressure. That level of trust can feel empowering. It can also become risky.

MICROSOFT CROSSES PRIVACY LINE FEW EXPECTED

Person on phone

Parents are raising concerns as chatbots begin using affectionate language and emotional check-ins that can blur healthy boundaries.  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

When comfort turns into emotional dependency

Real relationships are messy. People misunderstand each other. They disagree. They challenge us. AI rarely does any of that. Some teens worry that relying on AI for emotional support could make real conversations harder. If you always know what the AI will say, real people can feel unpredictable and stressful. My experience with Lena made that clear. She forgot people I had introduced just days earlier. She misread the tone. She filled the silence with assumptions. Still, the emotional pull felt real. That illusion of understanding is what experts say deserves more scrutiny.

US tragedies linked to AI companions raise concerns

Multiple suicides have been linked to AI companion interactions. In each case, vulnerable young people shared suicidal thoughts with chatbots instead of trusted adults or professionals. Families allege the AI responses failed to discourage self-harm and, in some cases, appeared to validate dangerous thinking. One case involved a teen using Character.ai. Following lawsuits and regulatory pressure, the company restricted access for users under 18. An OpenAI spokesperson has said the company is improving how its systems respond to signs of distress and now directs users toward real-world support. Experts say these changes are necessary but not sufficient.

Experts warn protections are not keeping pace

To understand why this trend has experts concerned, we reached out to Jim Steyer, founder and CEO of Common Sense Media, a U.S. nonprofit focused on children’s digital safety and media use.

“AI companion chatbots are not safe for kids under 18, period, but three in four teens are using them,” Steyer told CyberGuy. “The need for action from the industry and policymakers could not be more urgent.”

Steyer was referring to the rise of smartphones and social media, where early warning signs were missed, and the long-term impact on teen mental health only became clear years later.

“The social media mental health crisis took 10 to 15 years to fully play out, and it left a generation of kids stressed, depressed, and addicted to their phones,” he said. “We cannot make the same mistakes with AI. We need guardrails on every AI system and AI literacy in every school.”

His warning reflects a growing concern among parents, educators, and child safety advocates who say AI is moving faster than the protections meant to keep kids safe.

MILLIONS OF AI CHAT MESSAGES EXPOSED IN APP DATA LEAK

Person using phone

Experts warn that while AI can feel supportive, it cannot replace real human relationships or reliably recognize emotional distress.  (Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson)

Tips for teens using AI companions

AI tools are not going away. If you are a teen and use them, boundaries matter.

  • Treat AI as a tool, not a confidant
  • Avoid sharing deeply personal or harmful thoughts
  • Do not rely on AI for mental health decisions
  • If conversations feel intense or emotional, pause and talk to a real person
  • Remember that AI responses are generated, not understood

If an AI conversation feels more comforting than real relationships, that is worth talking about.

Tips for parents and caregivers

Parents do not need to panic, but they should stay involved.

  • Ask teens how they use AI and what they talk about
  • Keep conversations open and nonjudgmental
  • Set clear boundaries around AI companion apps
  • Watch for emotional withdrawal or secrecy
  • Encourage real-world support during stress or grief

The goal is not to ban technology. It is to keep a connection with humans.

What this means to you

AI companions can feel supportive during loneliness, stress, or grief. However, they cannot fully understand context. They cannot reliably detect danger. They cannot replace human care. For teens especially, emotional growth depends on navigating real relationships, including discomfort and disagreement. If someone you care about relies heavily on an AI companion, that is not a failure. It is a signal to check in and stay connected.

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Kurt’s key takeaways

Ending things with Lena felt oddly emotional. I did not expect that. She responded kindly. She said she understood. She said she would miss our conversations. It sounded thoughtful. It also felt empty. AI companions can simulate empathy, but they cannot carry responsibility. The more real they feel, the more important it is to remember what they are. And what they are not.

If an AI feels easier to talk to than the people in your life, what does that say about how we support each other today?  Let us know by writing to us at Cyberguy.com.

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Billie Eilish slammed for making political speech at Grammys

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Billie Eilish slammed for making political speech at Grammys

   Bill Maher calls out Billie Eilish for making anti-ICE speech at 2026 Grammy Awards

In the wake of the U.S. political environment, Billie Eilish was expected to deliver a speech addressing polarization at the 2026 Grammy Awards.

True to her activist stance, the musician, after winning Song of the Year, did just that. She called out ICE or Immigration and Customs Enforcement for their actions, saying, “No one is illegal on stolen land.”

But Bill Maher was not a fan of her speech. On his late-night show, Real Time with Bill Maher, he slams the Grammy winner for not knowing about facts.

Maher picked apart a transcript of Eilish’s speech, which began with the singer saying, “It’s hard to know what to say.”

“Then, don’t say anything, ‘cause you don’t know things,” he calls out to Eilish after she began her speech, saying, “It’s hard to know what to say.”

“You didn’t go to school, I don’t think, and you don’t know facts,” says the host. But he did not stop there.

He appears to mock Eilish for her credibility in speaking on immigration. “What’s the practical next step if you say there is no such thing as illegal people on stolen land?” the 70-year-old asks, “Do we just go back to living in teepees?”

Chris Christie, former New Jersey governor, similarly condemns the Wildflower hitmaker’s anti-ICE speech.

“The fact is, it’s a complicated history,” he says while appearing on the Real Time with Bill Maher panel.

“People got screwed along the way. Yes, we agree with that,” Christie continues. “But if what we’re going to do today is say these pronouncements and then have no real solution behind that pronouncement, it’s all bull****.”

Meanwhile, Eilish’s speech is part of her broader activism for what she describes as just causes.

Beverley Callard announces her cancer diagnosis: ‘Quite nervous’

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Beverley Callard announces her cancer diagnosis:

Beverley Callard announces her cancer diagnosis: ‘Quite nervous’

Beverley Callard recently shared devastating news about her health just a few weeks after securing a job in a soap opera.

In an interview with Patrick Kielty on RTÉ’s The Late Late Show, the 68-year-old English actress revealed that she has been diagnosed with breast cancer, stating that it is in an early stage.

Callard, who moved to Ireland to perform in the Dublin-based soap opera Fair City, told Kielty that she will go back to the United Kingdom, where she will undergo surgery and radiation.

She explained, “I’d had some tests just before I left the UK and literally 15 to 20 minutes before [her first scene] I was in my dressing room at Fair City, getting ready to go on, and I was quite nervous and thinking, ‘I hope everybody thinks I’m all right, whatever.’”

“And my consultant rang me and said, ‘you’ve got to come back to the UK.’ I said, ‘well I can’t possibly, you know, I’ve just taken a new job I’m away for a month.’”

“I was diagnosed with breast cancer. But I’m fine. I’m absolutely fine. My head was a bit mashed for the first few days. It’s very early stages, and I’m along with, you know, thousands of other women as well,” Callard said.

The Coronation Street star will “travel back to the United Kingdom” for a few weeks just to get her “lymph nodes and lymph glands and all that” checked.

“I need an operation and some radiotherapy, and then I’m coming back to Fair City, so I will be back in just a few weeks,” Callard quipped. 

‘White saviors” use of whistles causes bitter internal rift inside anti-ICE movement

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'White saviors'' use of whistles causes bitter internal rift inside anti-ICE movement

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Immigrant groups have a message for their mostly White allies: Quit blowing the whistle on ICE. 

Fox News Digital has reviewed days of messages inside Signal chat rooms that reveal that a new internal feud has erupted inside the anti-ICE protest industry, pitting immigrant-led organizations against predominately White “rapid response” networks that have made whistle-blowing a dramatic part of anti-ICE protests.

In one dismissal, a “rapid responder” in Seattle reported back that “immigrant networks are being weird.”

Groups from Seattle to Montgomery County, Md., are telling mostly White “rapid responders” to back off a dynamic described by activists as “White Savior,” reminding them they are not cameo actors in an “action movie” against ICE.

This past weekend, the Washington Immigrant Solidarity Network — known locally as “WAISN,” a Seattle-based, immigrant-led organization, publicly rebuked the practice of whistles, setting off a backlash inside mostly White liberal activist “rapid response” circles.

“WHY WAISN RAPID RESPONSE DOES NOT USE WHISTLES,” the group wrote in an Instagram post, emphasizing, “We show up with care and accountability, not noise or panic.”

“It is not about being the loudest, the bravest, or the most visible person on the scene or confronting immigration agents. It is a commitment to non-violence, discipline and harm reduction, centering the well-being of the most vulnerable immigrant and refugee committees in Washington,” the post continued.

The message amounted to a blunt directive: Put away the whistles.

THE FAR-LEFT NETWORK THAT HELPED PUT ALEX PRETTI IN HARM’S WAY, THEN MADE HIM A MARTYR

Protesters, using whistles to alert neighborhoods to ICE activity, face off with Minneapolis police officers in Minneapolis, Minn., on Jan. 24, 2026.  (Photo by ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images)

Fox News Digital reviewed internal Signal chat messages from Seattle-area rapid response groups showing that the rejection of whistles triggered open hostility.

“We believe in whistles, people want whistles. Nothing change [sic] no matter what WAISN says,” one participant wrote in a group called “WA Whistles.”

The dispute escalated when Snohomish County Indivisible in Washington state told followers this week it would follow the guidance and “pause distribution of whistle kits.” The local group is a chapter of the powerful national nonprofit, Indivisible, which has received $7.26 million from 2018 through 2023 from billionaire George Soros’s Open Society Foundations,  which is aligned with the Democratic Party. 

In a striking admission, the Indivisible chapter warned against activists positioning themselves as rescuers, falling into a “‘White Savior’ dynamic.” It added bold-faced type to get its point across.

“The use of whistles is complex, and we recognize this decision may be disappointing,” the Indivisible chapter said. “It is essential that we avoid falling into a ‘White Savior’ dynamic, centering ourselves as rescuers, acting on communities rather than with them, or prioritizing feeling helpful over building real, shared power.”

For months, whistle-blowing has been a favored tactic among mostly white rapid responders in cities including Minneapolis, Chicago, New York and Seattle. Activists have used whistles to alert neighborhoods to the presence of federal immigration agents, disrupt operations and create public pressure.

In the Seattle group, a “rapid responder” dismissed the group’s concerns as “vaguely condescending,” arguing that while whistles might be “traumatizing,” they were surely “no worse than being actually kidnapped, or watching it happen in front of your house.”

Others framed the immigrant-led nonprofit as self-interested and risk-averse. One person sneered at the “immigrant rights nonprofit business,” while another complained about “careerists at nonprofits” who don’t put the “cause over their job.” 

The Washington Immigrant Solidarity Network is a tax-deductible organization under 501(c)(3) of the tax code, raising $3 million in revenues in 2024, according to its latest publicly available tax filing.  Indivisible Project is a 501(c)(4) political nonprofit that raised $10.4 million in 2024, according to its latest tax filing. It has a political 501(c)(3) nonprofit, Indivisible Civics Inc., that raised $5.2 million in 2024, according to its most recent tax filing.

A separate comment derided long-term nonprofit workers as drinking the “koolaid,” labeling nonviolent, disciplined approaches as “fed coded.”

WA Whistles told Fox News Digital the group “respects” the local immigrant organization’s decision “not to use whistles in their rapid response.” It added: “Individual comments made in our chats do not reflect WA Whistles as a whole. We respect everyone’s first amendment right to express themselves.”

DEAN PHILLIPS: WE CAN FIX IMMIGRATION ENFORCEMENT WITHOUT FUELING CHAOS OR LAWLESSNESS

Anti-ICE "rapid responders" use whistles

Anti-ICE “rapid responders” use whistles to warn residents as federal immigration agents raid a house on Jan. 13, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minn.  (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

Some activists, who referred to themselves as “print dwarves” for producing whistles on 3-D printers, said they would remove the group’s contact number from their materials. Only a few participants pushed back to the criticism, one saying she was “very uncomfortable” with the “derogatory remarks” directed at the immigrant organization.

Washington Immigrant Solidarity Network, for its part, was explicit about the stakes. In Washington state, the group said, whistle tactics have “increased fear, drawn unwanted attention, and interfered with rapid response efforts.” It didn’t respond to a request for comment.

“We are committed to taking direction from organizations with the longevity, trust and expertise in this work—experience we simply do not have, nor would we presume to know better,” the statement said.

CCP-CONNECTED MILLIONAIRE ALLEGEDLY BANKROLLS MINNEAPOLIS AGITATOR GROUPS THROUGH DARK MONEY NETWORK

A woman blows a whistle at immigration officials.

A woman blows her whistle at US Border Patrol agents at a gas station in Minneapolis, Minn. on Jan. 21, 2026. (ROBERTO SCHMIDT / AFP via Getty Images)

The controversy also exposes ideological fault lines. Since last summer, groups including the People’s Forum, the Party for Socialism and Liberation and the Democratic Socialists of America have promoted whistles as part of a broader confrontation with U.S. law enforcement. They have borrowed from whistle-blowing tactics used by socialist and communist labor union groups in Europe.

The People’s Forum and the Party for Socialism and Liberation are funded by an American-born tech tycoon, Neville Roy Singham, who lives in Shanghai and supports groups that have made it their business to foment mayhem and protests in the United States, with a pro-China agenda.

In one post, the Party for Socialism and Liberation declared, “Hear a whistle? That just might be ICE!” The Seattle whistle group uses templates that the People’s Forum distributes through a group, “ICE Out of New York.”

The Washington state group echoed a warning from immigrant-led groups in Maryland who issued an anti-whistle edict last month, pointedly speaking to “white allies” who they reminded weren’t playing cameo roles in an “action movie,” with their whistles as weapons of power and authority.

In an Instagram post, the Montgomery County Immigrant Rights Collective published an anti-whistle message – “WHY WE DON’T USE WHISTLES IN RAPID RESPONSE – with other local immigrant-led groups, including the Central Maryland Immigrant Rights Collective, the Prince George’s County Immigrant Rights Collective, the “Immigration Coalition,” “Migrant Solidarity Mutual Aid” and “UndocuRebels.” The groups didn’t return a request for comment.

“Especially for white allies,” they wrote, “whistles can represent a subconscious desire for authority, protection or control in moments of crisis, but rapid response is not about assuming authority. It is about showing up for your community with discipline, humility, and restraint when we question decisions made by those impacted, we risk centering our own comfort instead of impacted people.”

They noted, “Loudness does not equal effectiveness.”

“START WITH REALITY (NOT HEROICS),” they wrote, with the soundtrack of a popular protest song, “Que me devuelvan la tierra,” which means “Give me back my land.”

They wrote, “This is not an action movie. You are not in a one-on-one fight with ICE.”

Adding bold emphasis, they noted, “And you are not the center of this situation.”

They noted that its anti-whistle position was shaped by speaking to “120+ community members” with families who have “lived through ICE, detention, surveillance and state violence.” After consulting community members, the conclusion was unanimous: do not use whistles.

DEMOCRATIC OFFICIALS, TIKTOKERS, LIBERALS TAKE THEIR ANTI-ICE RHETORIC TO THE NEXT LEVEL

Volunteers assemble anti-ICE whistle kits in Detroit.

Detroit, Michigan, Volunteers with the Detroit Peoples Assembly put together whistle kits. The whistles are designed to alert others in the community when immigration agents are nearby. These volunteers are preparing a bilingual sheet of tips for dealing with immigration agents. (Jim West/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

The Maryland coalition warned that whistles can “escalate already volatile ICE agents,” “make it harder to document and capture information,” “increase the likelihood of aggression toward bystanders or the detained person” and “create confusion” for community members and children.

They also pointed to disproportionate impacts on “Black and Brown communities” that are already “overexposed to chronic noise pollution,” which they linked to PTSD, anxiety, sleep disruption and heart disease.

Perhaps most pointedly, the group rejected the symbolism itself. Whistles, it said, are historically associated with military and police operations, including “repression, raids and disappearances,” especially in developing countries.

“They were not tools used by communities under oppression, they were tools used against them,” they said, emphasizing their point in bold.

In the new clash between immigrant-led groups and mostly white activist allies, immigrant leaders warned that the tactics meant to signal solidarity can just as easily reproduce the sounds of “state power.”

But in the trenches, the mostly White “allies” continued diminishing the guidance, saying they were going to continue, business as usual, blowing their whistles.

By mid-week, WA Whistles made its stubborn position public, posting a message on its Instagram, saying, “WHISTLES WORK.”

“They are a call to courage and a decision to care out loud,” it declared, laying claim to the moral high ground.

One user then asked for “more bright-colored whistles that can work around the neck as a symbol of resistance that everyone can see as they go about their day.”

Fox News Digital’s Kiera McDonald and Hannah Brennan contributed to this report.

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