Article 7120P Trump’s DHS is recruiting ICE officers with a Halo meme

Trump’s DHS is recruiting ICE officers with a Halo meme

by
Jay Peters
from The Verge on (#7120P)
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After using the original Pokemon theme song in a montage of ICE raids, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is using another popular video game franchise to promote itself on social media: Halo. This morning, the DHS posted an image featuring Halo characters, a Warthog vehicle from the games, and the text DESTROY THE FLOOD" and a link to ICE's recruitment website. The DHS captioned the post, finishing this fight."

Finishing this fight. pic.twitter.com/6Ezq9NUqMq

- Homeland Security (@DHSgov) October 27, 2025

Like with its Pokemon-themed post, which was captioned, Gotta Catch Em All," the DHS's Halo post implicitly compares immigrants to creatures from video games - this time, the parasitic alien species called the Flood.

The DHS's post was the culmination of a social media exchange between the Trump administration and video game retailer GameStop, based on a joke that Trump had overseen the end of the console wars" thanks to the announcement of the Halo: Combat Evolved remake for PlayStation next year. GameStop, whose CEO and chairman Ryan Cohen has been a vocal supporter of Trump, quoted the joke with a picture of Trump shaking hands with Halo protagonist Master Chief. The White House followed up with an image of Trump in a suit of armor similar to Master Chief's, and GameStop responded with its own photoshopped Master Chief Trump, adding a meme-ified version of Vice President JD Vance's head swapped onto what looks to be the feminine anthropomorphic AI Cortana.

https://t.co/8DRFpgbFv5 pic.twitter.com/wWvOYrwSUR

- GameStop (@gamestop) October 27, 2025

https://t.co/jI0ZrstLgz pic.twitter.com/VS32cV0RG7

- GameStop (@gamestop) October 27, 2025

Microsoft declined to comment about the DHS's post, and didn't immediately respond to a request for comment about the White House's and GameStop's posts. The Pokemon Company International, in response to Pokemon being associated with Trump's mass deportation campaign, previously said in a statement to The Daily Beast that our company was not involved in the creation or distribution of this content, and permission was not granted for the use of our intellectual property."

Correction, October 27th: The Pokemon Company International provided the statement to The Daily Beast, not Nintendo, as we originally stated.

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