“Wonder Woman” star Lynda Carter used her social media power on Friday to fight Donald Trump’s immigration crackdown.

Carter, who played the iconic superhero in the 1970s television series, shared a post from Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) highlighting a recent CNN segment showing the aggressive tactics of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement as protests against the agency continue in Minneapolis and across the country.

Warren reminded Americans that they are paying for ICE operations, noting that the president’s “Big Ugly” spending bill funneled billions of dollars into the agency when the money could have gone to reducing health care costs.

“Instead of helping your mother get cancer treatment, your tax dollars are used to terrorize communities,” Warren wrote.

Carter later confronted anyone who was “confused” about sharing.

“This should clear it up,” she wrote, along with a screenshot of her as Wonder Woman delivering a devastating blow to a Nazi officer, Colonel Kesselman (played by Bo Brundin), in a 1976 episode.

In recent weeks, Carter has shared posts indicating disgust over the shooting of Minneapolis resident Renee Good by ICE Agent Jonathan Ross in her vehicle.

Over the years, the actress has celebrated her Mexican heritage and paid tribute to her grandmother, Martina, who traveled with her family from Mexico to the United States when she was a baby. In 1981, Carter discussed how her grandmother raised 10 children “under pretty difficult circumstances” and kept her family together “through her spirit, her energy and her great dignity.”

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“Wonder Woman” star Lynda Carter has made no secret of her feelings toward ICE.

ROBYN BECK/News via Getty Images

In June, Carter took to social media to declare that she is “LATINA AND PROUD” amid anti-ICE protests in which Trump federalized the California National Guard and ordered thousands of troops to Los Angeles.

“I am a product of immigration,” wrote Carter, who noted that his mother “was a fierce and beautiful Latina woman of Mexican and Spanish descent.”

He continued: “Immigrants built this country. Other than America’s indigenous people, we are ALL immigrants. This madness must end.”

“Slaves also built this country, in large part, and I am grateful to those who remind me that this must be articulated with purpose. ❤️ I am with you,” Carter concluded.