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by The Melting Pod
The Melting Pod brings you stories of our dysfunctional immigration system, and where we go from here. Hosted by three friends who’ve served inside the federal government for two decades and four presidents of both parties, The Melting Pod will give you a deeper understanding of the immigration headlines, without jargon or shallow punditry. Amanda Baran, Doug Rand, and Claire Trickler-McNulty will also bring you extraordinary people with extraordinary stories to tell – about how we got here and where we're going.
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We dive underneath the latest immigration headlines to make sense of the senseless. Why did the Trump administration threaten to shut down U.S. green card processing? Why did the press believe that Markwayne Mullin would be a kinder, gentler DHS Secretary than Kristi Noem? Why is Marco Rubio’s State Department promoting the expulsion of people like Marco Rubio? Plus a 30-second new play and a beautiful story from the steps of the Supreme Court. ==Learn More== Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * Trump’s Insane Green Card Policy Doesn’t Have to Be Legal to Work (w/ Doug Rand) - The Bulwark (May 24, 2026) * Trump on green cards: Speak loudly and carry a little stick - Doug Rand on LinkedIn (May 2026) * Sen. Andy Kim Seeks Changes After Delaney Hall Melee - New Jersey Monitor (May 26, 2026) * What to Know About Protests at New Jersey ICE Facility - Time (May 26, 2026) * Trump's DHS chief rocked by wild rumor about his WIFE - Daily Mail (May 27, 2026) * Stephen Miller in Retreat - The Atlantic (May 11, 2026) * How Trump's Minneapolis Immigration Blitz Hobbled Federal Crime Fighting - Reuters (May 7, 2026) * Under Trump, State Department Language on Migration Echoes That of White Nationalists - NPR (May 15, 2026) * We spend more on ICE and CBP than all other federal law enforcement combined - Doug Rand on LinkedIn (May 2026) * Why MAGA has a problem with Maria [DIGNITY Act] - Politico (April 12, 2026) * The Case for a Different Approach - Lorella Praeli Substack (April 30, 2026) * No More Back Doors: Recapturing the Public's Trust on Immigration - Searchlight Institute (March 2026) * Supreme Court Appears Likely to Side Against Trump on Birthright Citizenship - SCOTUSblog (April 1, 2026) * Haiti & Syria Temporary Protected Status Case at Supreme Court: What You Need to Know - ACLU of Northern California (April 2026) * Trump Secretly Overhauled Citizenship Agency to Focus on Deportations - The New Republic (April 20, 2026) * New Ban Bars Half of Legal Immigrants, Even Citizens' Spouses & Kids - Cato Institute (January 14, 2026) * Press Unpause – USCIS Adjudication Pause Tracker ==Give More== Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you ==Chapters== Intro The Stone of Destiny The green card disaster Do you want to read the little play I wrote? Hunger strike at a New Jersey ICE facility Markwayne Mullin goes bananas Welcome to the new DHS, same as the old DHS Is Stephen Miller “in retreat”? The unspeakable ugliness of “Remigration” Funding battles in Congress The DIGNITY Act Dueling think tanks The Supreme Court and birthright citizenship The Supreme Court and Temporary Protected Status The continuing destruction of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Super-secret easter egg
Enter the parallel universe of ICE deportation officers, who dress up like police but have near-zero criminal enforcement authority. And the vast majority of the people they arrest have no criminal record at all. Jason Houser served as ICE Chief of Staff, is an Intelligence Officer in the Navy Reserve, and helps us sort out truth from fiction. Why is the Trump administration diverting criminal law enforcement agents for civil deportation work – isn’t that defunding the police? How many ICE officers really need to carry a weapon in the first place? And how should we think about the future of an agency that has fallen so far? ==Learn More== Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * Agents with Homeland Security Investigations push to break away from ICE, saying negative reputation hurts their work - Washington Post (December 29, 2021) * ICE Has Diverted Over 25,000 Officers from Their Jobs - Cato Institute (September 3, 2025) * U.S. Unauthorized Immigrant Population Reached a Record 14 Million in 2023 - Pew Research Center (August 21, 2025) * 5% of People Detained by ICE Have Violent Convictions, 73% No Convictions - Cato Institute (November 26, 2025) * What Is a Sanctuary City? - Vera Institute of Justice (April 22, 2025) * One Bovino After Another - The American Prospect (January 27, 2026) * ICE Recruitment Tweets Are So Racist That Cops Feared They Could Incite Neo-Nazi Violence - The Intercept (May 21, 2026) ==Corrections== (1) Border Patrol has expanded checkpoint and search authorities within 100 miles of any land border or U.S. coastline. About two-thirds of the U.S. population live within this area, which includes Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City (but not Minneapolis). Explainer: U.S. Border Patrol Authorities and the 100-Mile Border Zone - National Immigration Forum (March 31, 2026) (2) Alas, the Nicolas Cage character in National Treasure is “an American treasure hunter and cryptologist,” not an HSI agent. But the Harvey Keitel character is an FBI special agent in charge of hunting down antiquities! If the stolen Declaration of Independence crossed an international border, surely he’d pull in HSI… ==Give More== Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you ==Chapters== Intro Meet Jason Houser What does the Chief of Staff of ICE do? What is the purpose of ICE? What is the difference between Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) and Enforcement and Removal Operations (ERO)? When HSI tried to break away from ICE Immigration enforcement is civil, not criminal Indiscriminate deportations vs. enforcement priorities ICE and local law enforcement Chief Bovino’s carnival act Donald Trump defunds the police What is a sanctuary city? Scapegoating immigrants as criminals ICE is mostly desk jobs Why does an ICE officer need a gun? What is the future of ICE?
The H-1B is a white-collar work visa, essentially unchanged by Congress since 1990 – before the birth of the first text message, the first website, and 40% of our population. Is the H-1B program an essential step on the far-too-difficult road from international student to new American? Is it a fair object for good-faith criticism and reform? And is it an increasingly loud dog-whistle for ugly nativist rhetoric? Yes. We’ll also take the shine off Trump’s Gold Card scheme, explain why Elon Musk did not in fact “go to war” on the H-1B issue, and field a few excellent questions from our kids. ==Learn More== Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * 1.8 Million in Employment-Based Green Card Backlog - Cato Institute (Aug. 29, 2023) * Orlando judge tosses Disney IT outsourcing lawsuit - Orlando Sentinel (Oct. 14, 2016) * The Outlook On H-1B Visas And Immigration In 2026 - Forbes (Jan. 26, 2026) * How the Visa Debate for Foreign Workers Fuels Racism Against South Asians - New York Times (Feb. 16, 2026) * Maga v Musk: Trump camp divided in bitter fight over immigration policy - The Guardian (Dec. 27, 2024) * H-1B Hiring Freezes by States Will Endanger Public Health and Hinder Economic Growth - FWD.us (Feb. 24, 2026) * Lawsuit Argues Trump Gold Card Visa Program Prioritizes Wealth Over Ability - New York Times (Feb. 3, 2026) * Did Trump Really Give Nicki Minaj a $1 Million ‘Gold Card’ Visa? - New York Times (Jan. 29, 2026) * Play Frogger! ==Give More== Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you ==Chapters== Intro Remember 1990? “Bringing the best and brightest here” The standard immigration path for white-collar professionals Bottleneck #1: The H-1B cap Bottleneck #2: The green card cap Bottleneck #3: The country cap Immigration is like Frogger “Why does it suck so bad to be on an H-1B?” The plight of H-1B workers’ spouses The plight of H-1B workers’ children The good-faith controversy over IT consulting firms The Disney debacle Ugly rhetoric against immigrants from India MAGA-Musk beef over H-1Bs Trump’s subtler attacks on legal immigration The chaotic rollout of the $100,000 H-1B fee The lawless Gold Card scheme Better ideas for the future Coda: Questions from our kids
You may know about the plight of Dreamers – over 3 million undocumented individuals who were brought here as children and are Americans in every way but immigration status. And you may know about DACA, the Obama-era policy that has allowed 800,000 Dreamers to pursue higher education, military service, and life out of the shadows. But a quarter-century after the DREAM Act was first introduced, Congress still hasn’t provided permanent relief for Dreamers, and DACA is under threat. Felicia Escobar Carrillo was Special Assistant to the President for Immigration Policy in the Obama White House, and tells the story of how DACA was created – after intensive organizing by Dreamers who continue to carry the torch today. Learn More Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * Dreamers in the United States: An Overview of the Dreamer Community and Proposed Legislation - National Immigration Forum (Dec. 2, 2025) * My Life as an Undocumented Immigrant by Jose Antonio Vargas - New York Times (June 22, 2011) * Astrid Silva: Meet the woman delivering the Democratic response to Trump in Spanish - ABC News (Feb. 27, 2017) * How Democracy Works Now (2013) - free to watch with a library card Give More Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you Chapters Intro Who is Felicia Escobar Carrillo? Doug does his best Simpsons Teenager voice Felicia cuts her teeth in Texas “It’s very easy to testify at a state hearing” Plyler v. Doe and the right to education Organizing for the DREAM Act The bravery of undocumented youth speaking up The tenacity of Sen. Dick Durbin How to work in the White House while finishing law school The nailbiter DREAM Act vote of 2010 Obama comforts his team: “We’re gonna get there” Why didn’t the DREAM Act pass? Doug can’t stop ranting against the filibuster… …and nativists Dreamers keep getting deported under Obama What can we get done without Congress? The White House gets serious What makes DACA legal? Obama announces DACA in the Rose Garden The 60-day sprint to get DACA running Implementation Day The amazing stories of individual Dreamers Congress still has to act Conclusion – “for anyone out there who’s just paralyzed by cynicism…”
Everyone knows that our immigration system is broken, so why hasn’t Congress fixed it for over 35 years? What you may not know is how close we came to comprehensive immigration reform – not once, not twice, but *four times.* Esther Olavarria was one of the foremost people working behind the scenes to make it happen, first as a staffer to Senator Ted Kennedy and later as a senior official under President Obama. This is her eyewitness account – of hope and despair, war rooms and whip counts, and honest answers on why it’s so hard for Congress to get the job done. Learn More Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * White House Offers Stealth Campaign to Support Immigration Bill - New York Times (June 20, 2013) * Summary of the “four-legged stool” - National Immigration Forum (2013) * How Democracy Works Now (2013) - free to watch with a library card * Senator Kennedy Floor Speech on the Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2007 * Senator Ted Kennedy's Remarks at Immigration Rally in Washington (2006) * Unions Split on Immigrant Workers - Washington Post (Jan. 26, 2007) Give More Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you Chapters Intro Esther Olavarria, American hero The “four-legged stool” of comprehensive immigration reform High hopes in 2001 Tuesday, Sept. 11 Senator Ted Kennedy’s commitment Reviving the work with Senator John McCain House Republicans strike back High hopes in 2006 Tough votes and the Laken Riley Act Popular support and victory in the Senate Failure in the House High hopes in 2007 The bait and switch of “points-based” immigration The death of the Grand Bargain Obama and deportations High hopes in 2013 What is a War Room? Senator Corker and the Yahoos Victory in the Senate (again) Floundering in the House (again) The primary race that crushed all hope How bleak is the future? How the right got what it wanted all along A note of hope? The filibuster is why we can’t have nice things Esther on screen! Conclusion
You don’t serve four years as a senior official in Biden’s Department of Homeland Security without seeing some things. This episode is Part 2 of Charanya Krishnaswami’s never-before-told story, walking us through the unprecedented border crossings in 2023 and the misunderstood reasons those numbers dropped in 2024 – far too late for political redemption. Along the way, we call out some ugly racism on the Democratic side of the aisle, lament the futility of Congress, and conclude with Charanya’s clear-eyed border plan for the next President. Learn More Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * Circumventing Lawful Pathways final rule - Federal Register (May 16, 2023) - extra credit for the first listener who turns this into a TikTok dance… * Refugee Roulette: Disparities in Asylum Adjudication - Stanford Law Review (2007) * Homeland Security Shares Unhinged AI Photo in Post on Immigration - The New Republic (10.02.2026) Give More Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you Chapters Intro Who are you, Charanya? Matt Yglesias platforms an anonymous racist Everyone loves a Hollywood narrative Who are “The Groups”? 2023: Preparing for a big shift in border policy Is it legal to make people wait in Mexico? Carrots and sticks What is a “Pull Factor”? What *isn’t*? Premature declaration of victory “The numbers were staggering” Going to Congress – who thought this was a good idea? 2024: Who “fixed” the border? The human cost How do we learn the right lessons? “There wasn’t a switch that could be flipped” A lack of decisiveness A five-point plan for the next President “We can’t get scared away from our vision” Conclusion
Nobody’s happy with how the Biden administration handled the U.S./Mexico border, but it’s hard to find an honest reckoning. That’s why you need to hear the story of Charanya Krishnaswami, a senior advisor at the Department of Homeland Security during all four of those tumultuous years. She’s brilliant, insightful, and even hilarious – all while pulling back the curtain on how so many smart people struggled to make good decisions. This episode is Part 1 of Charanya’s story, starting on day one of the Biden administration and taking us through the mounting panic of the second year… Learn More Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * How the Other Side Leaves - This American Life visits a refugee camp in Tijuana, Mexico filled with Ukrainians fleeing the war (05.06.2022) * Coins depicting Border Patrol agent grabbing Haitian migrant trigger investigation - Los Angeles Times (06.16.2022) * The Voyage of the St. Louis - Museum of Jewish Heritage (May 5, 2022) Give More Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you Chapters Intro Biden and the border – many failures, no simple heroes or villains Why you need to hear Charanya Krishnaswami Honest post-mortems are good; acronyms are bad 2021: Starting up a new presidential administration … via Zoom Biden did not reverse all of Trump’s immigration policies on day one What is Title 42? Why no president can “just shut down the border” We have asylum laws for a reason; remember the St. Louis How the Title 42 border rules made everything worse COVID, lawsuits, and chaos What happened when Haitian refugees arrived in Del Rio Why did Border Patrol feel betrayed? 2022: Attempted solution #1: The Asylum Officer Rule Why did this solution die on the vine? The vibe shift: Make Number Go Down Freakout as the pandemic is ending A strange and obscure silver lining Attempted solution #2: The Transit Ban “Skim milk protection” What happened when Ukrainian refugees arrived in Tijuana Conclusion (until Part 2…)
The Melting Pod brings you stories of our dysfunctional immigration system, and where we go from here. In this inaugural episode, Claire reveals how everything going on with ICE is even worse than it looks; Amanda explains how Trump is *de*-legalizing millions of people who thought they were protected; and Doug shatters any remaining illusions that MAGA is okay with legal immigrants. Plus we introduce ourselves, drag the New York Times a bit, and give you a few things to be hopeful about in 2026. Join us! Learn More Amanda, Claire, and Doug express their own personal opinions on The Melting Pod. This episode was produced by Michael Palmer (palm er.media). Read more about the topics in this episode: * Sweeping Raids, Giant Camps and Mass Deportations: Inside Trump’s 2025 Immigration Plans - New York Times (Nov. 11, 2023) * ICE Has Diverted Over 25,000 Officers from Their Jobs - Cato Institute (Sept. 3, 2025) * Medical examiner likely to classify death of ICE detainee as homicide, recorded call says - Washington Post (Jan. 15, 2026) * Trump administration sued over visa freeze on immigrants from 75 countries - NPR (Feb. 2, 2026) Give More Want to help build a more sane and humane immigration system? Support hardworking organizations like these: National: * #AfghanEvac – working to ensure the U.S. keeps its promise to our Afghan allies * Asylum Seeker Advocacy Project – the country’s largest membership organization of asylum seekers, working together for change * Black Alliance for Just Immigration (BAJI) – organizing and advocating for racial, social and economic justice * Haitian Bridge Alliance – providing humanitarian, legal, and social services * International Refugee Assistance Project (IRAP) - strategic litigation and advocacy to uphold the rights of people seeking safety * Justice Action Center - immigrant justice through litigation and storytelling Local: * Al Otro Lado - legal and humanitarian support to refugees, deportees, and other migrants in the U.S. and Tijuana * Catholic Charities Rio Grande Valley - providing assistance to the poor and most vulnerable populations in the Rio Grande Valley community * Las Americas Immigrant Advocacy Center - free and low-cost legal services to immigrants and refugees in West Texas, New Mexico, and Ciudad Juarez, Mexico * Support an immigration service provider near you Chapters Intro Was anyone prepared for this? Minneapolis is different from anything that came before The DHS funding fight – high stakes, weak leverage If Claire were in charge, what would Democrats prioritize? How the ICE surge is taking real cops off the beat Deaths in detention How Trump is de-legalizing immigrants with permission to be here How Trump is choking off legal immigration Litigation heroes fighting the immigration ban Birthright citizenship – what happens next? Claire’s story: “How can we shut her up” Amanda’s story: “I hated law school with a passion” Doug’s story: “I took some detours” Memo to NYTimes: Trump is just lying to you Things to actually hope for in 2026? Closing
The Melting Pod brings you stories of our dysfunctional immigration system, and where we go from here. Hosted by three friends who’ve served inside the federal government for two decades and four presidents of both parties, The Melting Pod will give you a deeper understanding of the immigration headlines, without jargon or shallow punditry. Amanda Baran, Doug Rand, and Claire Trickler-McNulty will also bring you extraordinary people with extraordinary stories to tell – about how we got here and where we're going.
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