There are people who continue to relive their glory days, and then Dean Cain.
The film and television actor is better known for his work in the 1990s series “Lois & Clark: The New Adventures of Superman”.
It wasn't Christopher Reeve or Henry Cavill.
But enough people remember Cain with blue socks and a red layer to be a regular in the fan conventions circuit.
It is your presentation card, so when the Trump administration gave the call to recruit more ice agents, do you guess who answered the call?
Great track: up, up and A güey!
On August 6, until then not exactly Buzzworthy Cain revealed on Instagram that he joined the migra, and everyone else should also!
The 59 -year -old actor made his announcement as an orchestral version of the moving theme of “Superman” by John Williams played slightly below his speech.
Superman used to go after Nazis, Klansmen and intergalactic monsters; Now, Superman – Er, Cain, wants to go after Tamale Lady. His archEPEENEMIGO used to be Lex Luthor; Now, Bizarro Superman of real life wants to go to work for the equally bald version of Lex Luthor of the Trump administration: Stephen Miller.
“You can defend your homeland and get great benefits,” Cain said, showing his bright white smile and his brown biceps. Behind him was an American flag in a triangle case and a small statue that represents Cain in his days as a football player of the Princeton Tigers. “If you want to save the United States, ICE is arresting the worst of the worst and eliminating them from the streets of the United States.”
Later that day, Cain appeared in Fox News to affirm that he was going to “oath as an ice agent as soon as possible.” The National Security Assistant Secretary, Tricia McLaughlin, later clarified to the New York Times, would be only honorary. His exaggeration did not prevent the agency's social networks account from taking a break from his usual flow of whistles of white supremacist dogs to talk about Cain's announcement.
“Superman is encouraging Americans to become real life superheroes,” he published “responding to their country's call to join the brave ice men and women to help protect our communities to arrest the worst.”
The American heroes used to assault the beach of Omaha. Now the Trump administration wants their version of them to assault the section of the Home Depot Garden.
Dean Cain speaks during a ceremony in honor of Mehmet Oz, the former presenter of “The Dr. Oz Show”, with a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame on February 11, 2022.
(Chris Pizzello / Invision / Associated Press)
His attractiveness to Superman is part of his campaign to choose The migra As good guys while throwing all undocumented people as shady villains who deserve deportation, the faster and more unpleasant, the better. But as almost anything involved in American history, the Trump team has already perverted Superman's myth. At the beginning of June, they put Trump, who could not jump on a bingo card on a single limit and much less a high building, in the White House social media accounts in a Superman disguise. This was accompanied with the slogan: “Truth. Justice. The American way.” That was the day before Warner Bros. released his latest Man of Steel movie.
Even fans of non-comic books know that the hero born in Kal-El in Krypton was always a good condition that faced thugs and protected the oppressed. It came from a foreign land, a condemned planet, nothing less, like a baby. His alter ego, Clark Kent, is humble and kind, features that move when he becomes Superman.
The character's caregivers always leaned on that fictional background to comment on real world events. In a 1950 poster, when McCarthyism was increasing, DC Comics issued a poster in which Superman tells a group of children that anyone who mockens people for their “religion, race or national origin … is not American.”
A decade later, Superman starred in a public service announcement in the comic in which he rebuked a teenager who said that “those refugee children cannot speak English or play ball” by taking him to a camp in poor condition to show the child that the refugees of the difficulties had to endure.
Superman's Trumpworld version would fly to that child to “Alcatraz” to show him how great it is to imprison immigrants in a swamp infested with crocodiles.
It may surprise you to know that in even more recent times, in a 2017 comic, Superman saves a group of undocumented immigrants from a man on an American flag that opened fire. When the murderer's attempt said that his planned objectives stole his work, Superman growled “the only person responsible for blackness stifling your soul … it is you.”
Superman used to tell Americans that immigrants deserved our empathy; Super Dean wants to round them and send them.
Rapists? Murderers? Terrorists? That is what Superman Né Cain says that ICE is chasing, the often repeated “the worst of the worst”, but the accessory of access to transactional records of the University of Syracuse discovered that 71% of people currently in ice detention do not have a criminal record as of July 27.
I do not believe that the true Superman, with whom I mean the fictional that Cain seems to think that he is the official spokesman just because he interpreted him in an average drama 30 years ago, he would waste his strength and vision of X -rays to catch people like that.
Dean “Disadce Superman” Cain should take some corn popcorn and launch into a Superman movies marathon to cool off what the man of steel really represented. You can start with the last.
His plot depends on Lex Luthor trying to convince the United States government that Superman is an “alien” that came to the United States to destroy it.
“It's not a man, it's one thing. One thing,” he makes fun of the bad at one time, then affirm that the personality of the Superman choir is “wrapping us in the complacency so he can master [the U.S.] No resistance. “

Nicholas Hault as Lex Luthor and David Korenswet as Superman in “Superman” by Warner Bros. Pictures.
(Jessica Miglio / Warner Bros. Photographs)
Luthor's scheme, which implies manipulating social networks and television networks to convert public opinion against its rival, finally works. Superman gives himself and is taken to a cell away from the United States along with other political prisoners. Luthor boasts that “[constitutional] Rights do not apply to extraterrestrial organisms. “
Adjust that line a bit and could have come from Stephen Miller's mouth.
Director James Gunn told a British newspaper that the message of his film is “about human kindness and obviously there will be idiots out there that they are simply not friendly and will take it as an offensive just because it is kindness. But screw them.”
He also called Superman an “immigrant”, which left Cain. He called Gunn “Woke” TMZ and urged Gunn to create original characters and keep Superman away from politics.
Well, Super Dean can do his own for Ice and Trump. You can show your white teeth for the promotional videos of the Trump administration as it does who knows what for the deportation machine.
Just leave Superman out of him.