Thursday, October 09, 2025

Kanipawit Maskwa: “The Land Still Remembers”



In response to President Trump ditching Indigenous Peoples’ Day and opting instead to proclaim Italian explorer Christopher Columbus as “the original American hero,” Kanipawit Maskwa shared the following earlier today via social media. (NOTE: Kanipawit Maskwa is the ceremonial name of John Gonzalez, a Taíno/Pimicikamak journalist,activist and filmmaker, which translates to “Standing Bear.”)

______________________

When I hear words like “Columbus, the original American hero,” I feel a heaviness in my chest – not because I am angry, but because I know how stories can wound when they are told without truth. Our people have lived on this land since long before that man ever dreamed of crossing the ocean. The rivers already had names. The stars already had songs. The people already knew the Creator. To call him a hero, and to erase the names of the ones who were here, is to speak only half a story – and half-stories have always been dangerous things.

When the leaders of a nation use their power to lift up conquest and silence the survivors, it tells me they have not yet learned the meaning of kinship. A true leader does not fear truth. A true leader does not need to erase others to stand tall. Our ancestors taught that greatness is not measured by how far you travel or how many lands you claim, but by how well you remember your relatives – all your relatives – the four-legged, the winged, the swimmers, the crawlers, and the human beings.

When I was young, the old ones told us that stories are medicine, but they can also be poison if told without humility. This proclamation feels like that – words dressed in honor but carrying harm. It forgets the women and children who suffered, the languages silenced, the songs that were not allowed to be sung. It forgets that this so-called discovery began a long night for our peoples, one we are still waking from.

I do not speak these things to divide us. I speak them because truth must be spoken if there is ever to be peace. We do not need to hate Columbus to honor our own story. But we must not let his name stand above the countless ancestors who greeted him with open hands and were repaid with chains.

Today, when the government once again chooses to remember the colonizer and forget the Indigenous, it is not surprising – it is just a reminder that our work is not done. We must keep teaching the children who they are. We must keep speaking our languages, planting our medicines, walking softly on the land that still remembers us.

So I say this: we will not disappear because a proclamation forgets us. We were here before Columbus, and we will be here long after the politicians are gone. The land remembers. The water remembers. The wind carries our names. And as long as we breathe, we will keep telling the whole story – the one that begins not with discovery, but with belonging.

– Kanipawit Maskwa




Today is a gift.
The Great Spirit’s breath still touches the land.
The sky glows with colors of fire,
The wind sings softly.
And for this, I say – thank you.

I am grateful
For another chance to live a good life –
To walk with kindness,
To use my hands to bring healing,
To speak with honesty and truth.

Sacred breath,
Fill me with patience,
Help me to listen deeply before I speak,
And to walk gently where my ancestors once danced.

Let my heart remember:
I am never alone.
My ancestors walk with me –
In every breath, every step, every beat of the drum.

Today, may I live with love,
With courage,
And with a spirit that helps others.

This is the truth:
The sun rises for all of us, not just me.
We are in this life together.

So keep going, my relatives.
Together, we rise.

– Kanipawit Maskwa



Related Off-site Links:
Trump Declares Columbus Day, Omits Indigenous Peoples’ Day RecognitionNative News Online (October 9, 2025).
Noam Chomsky: World Indigenous People Only Hope for Human SurvivalteleSUR (July 26, 2016).
The Real Christopher Columbus – Howard Zinn (Jacobin, October 12, 2015).
Five Young Native Americans on What Indigenous Peoples’ Day Means to Them – Sarah Ruiz-Grossman (The Huffington Post, October 9, 2017).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Words of Wisdom on Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Something to Think About – October 9, 2017
Something to Think About – February 23, 2017
Something to Think About – October 13, 2015
Quote of the Day – September 27, 2015
Something Special for Indigenous Peoples’ Day
Recognising and Honoring Australia’s First Naturalists
“A Mysteriously Charged and Magnificently Alive Archetypal Presence”
An Australian Spirituality: “A Festival of Light and Rock”
Australian Indigenous Culture and the Reality of LGBTI Lives
Celebrating Mabo
Matariki
“It Is All Connected”
Forever Oneness
Standing Together
Standing in Prayer and Solidarity with the Water Protectors of Standing Rock
At Standing Rock and Beyond, Celebrating and Giving Thanks for a “Historic Decision”
Come, Spirit . . .
Exploring the Meaning and History of “Two-Spirit”
Tony Enos on Understanding the Two-Spirit Community
North America: Perhaps Once the “Queerest Continent on the Planet”
The Landscape Is a Mirror
“Something Sacred Dwells There”

Opening image:The heart of everything that is” – Pahá Sápa, which is the Lakota name for the Black Hills of South Dakota and Wyoming. (Photo: Michael J. Bayly, June 2013.)


Wednesday, October 08, 2025

James Greenberg on Trump’s “Larger Design” – the Construction of a Military Dictatorship

James B. Greenberg is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology at the University of Arizona, the Founding Editor of the Journal of Political Ecology, and the past president of the Political Ecology Society.

Yesterday Greenberg published the following commentary on his substack. I find it to be a very insightful though disturbing piece. Perhaps you will too.

_______________

As we are distracted by Trump’s latest headline, it is easy to miss the larger design. As an anthropologist, I have learned to look for patterns beneath the surface: the deeper structures and the ways systems of relationships interact. In this case, not much imagination was required. The design was already in print. Project 2025 spelled it out in extraordinary detail. Since Trump returned to office, it is clear he is not improvising. He is following a plan to dismantle the Bill of Rights, turn liberties into conditional privileges, and build a dictatorship in plain sight.

The first target was freedom of speech and of the press, for the First Amendment is the foundation of American democracy. In February 2025, the White House barred the Associated Press from coverage unless it renamed the Gulf of Mexico the “Gulf of America.” The AP refused and sued. Soon after, the Correspondents’ Association gave up managing the press pool, handing the White House control over access. The Pentagon then imposed a pledge requiring reporters to avoid publishing “unauthorized” material or risk losing credentials. When Mario Guevara, an immigrant journalist, was deported, the message to the foreign press was unmistakable: freedom of the press is conditional, revocable at any moment.

Trump’s assault on the public’s right to know has been steady, often carried out quietly through regulation and funding. His FCC launched investigations into CBS, NPR, and PBS. He issued an executive order slashing their support, and Congress soon followed with the Rescissions Act of 2025, stripping $1.1 billion from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. NPR sued, but intimidation moves faster than the courts. In this climate, budgets become weapons – starving independent outlets while allies thrive. Project 2025 explicitly called for breaking the independence of public broadcasting and tightening executive grip over information.

Bringing institutions to heel is only one side of the campaign. Bending language to serve power is the other. Protesters are labeled “domestic terrorists.” Immigrants are cast as “invaders.” Political opponents are branded “traitors.” The press is vilified as “the enemy of the people.” Stephen Miller, who shaped immigration bans, and Tom Fitton, whose legal campaigns helped suppress voter access, have pushed to designate Antifa and Black Lives Matter as terrorist organizations despite their decentralized character. These labels do more than stigmatize. They create an ambient climate of fear in which people censor themselves. A teacher skips a lesson on civil rights. A student deletes a protest photo from social media. A journalist rewrites a headline. None have been punished, but all expect they might be.

Protest is treated not as dissent but as insurrection, and the right to assemble has become a pretext for force. Trump has deployed National Guard units to Democratic cities over the objections of mayors and governors. At the border, he stages “shows of force” with troops against a supposed invasion. These operations are not about security; they are political theater, rehearsals for repression. And when ICE carried out a nighttime raid in Chicago – agents rappelling from helicopters, breaking down doors, and zip-tying children, including U.S. citizens, before separating them from their parents – it became clear that this was more than an enforcement action. It was a warning to the entire country, a preview of things to come.

Such rehearsals prepare the ground for the next step: the open talk of martial law and the Insurrection Act. His allies now float the idea of invoking both as solutions to unrest or even disputed elections. The precedent is not new. After his 2020 defeat, Michael Flynn openly advocated for military intervention to rerun the vote. We hear these threats so often they begin to sound routine. The National Guard appears so frequently in civic life that their presence begins to feel ordinary. Once the extraordinary feels normal, any crisis – immigration, protest, or fiscal standoff – can be used to suspend liberties. And history reminds us that emergencies, once declared, rarely end quickly.

The rule of law and the right to due process are also under assault. Visas and green cards have been revoked with little explanation. The Department of Justice has been weaponized against officials who resist Trump’s directives. Surveillance of journalists and activists has expanded, while loyal judges are promoted and critics discredited. The law, once a shield, now serves as a tool of discipline – punishing dissent, threatening critics, undermining its legitimacy.

Economic power has likewise been turned into a weapon. Institutions that resist the administration’s directives face financial retaliation. Public broadcasting has been stripped of federal funds. Nonprofits labeled “left-wing” are harassed by the IRS. Universities – the engines of knowledge and speech – are smeared as “anti-American” propaganda mills, threatened with the loss of federal grants and tax exemptions unless they conform. Allies are rewarded with contracts, subsidies, and favorable rulings. Funding, which once sustained civic institutions, has been twisted into a tool of political control. As Project 2025 recommended, opponents are to be defunded while allies are rewarded, and the state’s economic leverage is used to enforce loyalty.

And just as institutions are punished or rewarded, so too are the terms of political participation. The right to vote is being rewritten in real time. Trump loyalists now hold seats on the Election Assistance Commission and inside the DOJ’s voting rights division. His aim is nothing less than to rig the 2026 election. Districts are gerrymandered. Voter rolls are purged. Restrictions mount. With federal oversight rolled back, manipulation proceeds unchecked. Minority communities are targeted with disinformation campaigns that threaten penalties for voting. Elections may remain as ritual, but their substance is stripped away, staged to provide the illusion of legitimacy.

Even freedom of thought and belief has come under siege. In March 2025, Trump reestablished the 1776 Commission as a permanent office, tying education grants to “patriotic” curricula. His administration scrubbed federal websites of terms such as “climate change,” “LGBTQ,” and “environmental justice.” Museums that mount critical exhibits face threats to their funding. ABC, under political pressure, has announced it will cancel Stephen Colbert’s show at the end of the season. Jimmy Kimmel Live! was suspended after a joke offended the administration. None of this is accidental. Project 2025 outlined the capture of education, culture, and public discourse. This is more than censorship – it is a narrowing of what may be studied, remembered, or even laughed at in public.

When NPR is defunded, when a foreign journalist is deported, when troops patrol city streets, the fingerprints of Project 2025 are unmistakable. Rights of speech and assembly are hollowed out. Due process bends to political ends. Elections are managed for appearance. Knowledge that contradicts the official narrative is silenced. Citizens are taught to behave as if their liberties have already vanished.

These are not isolated acts. They form a machinery of command, recognizable to anyone who has studied past regimes. What is at stake could not be clearer: the right to speak, the right to publish, the right to assemble, the right to due process, the right to vote, and the right to think and believe without coercion. As each is stripped away, democracy does not collapse in a single moment; it hollows out piece by piece, until only its forms remain.

Authoritarians fear resistance because they know it grows with every outrage, every injury, every life trampled under their power. Trump’s priority is to construct the machinery of repression. Ours must be to expose it, resist it, and refuse to normalize it. The plan is not speculative – it is operational, unfolding in full view. The only uncertainty is whether we will confront it with the clarity and resolve this moment demands.

James Greenberg
Constructing a Military Dictatorship:
A Strategic Outline of Authoritarian Drift

James’s Substack
October 7, 2025


Related Off-site Links:
As Troops Invade Chicago, Trump Threatens to Jail the Mayor and Governor – Julianne McShane (Mother Jones, October 8, 2025).
Trump Destroys Another Guardrail of Democracy: Inspectors General – Steven Harper (Common Dreams, October 8, 2025).
Stephen Miller Says “Quiet Part Out Loud,” Claims Trump Has Unlimited “Plenary Authority” Before Going Silent in Interview – Stephen Prager (Common Dreams, October 8, 2025).
“Trump’s Invasion”: Illinois Officials Denounce Troop Deployment to Chicago as ICE Escalates RaidsDemocracy Now! (October 7, 2025).
“Legal Orders” and Trump’s Military – Jonathan V. Last (The Bulwark, October 7, 2025)
“Illegal ... Unconstitutional ... Dangerous ... Wrong”: Texas National Guard Troops Invade Illinois – Brett Wilkins (Common Dreams, October 7, 2025).
Are We on the Road to a Totalitarian U.S.? – Ted Morgan (Common Dreams, October 7, 2025).
Trump’s Plan – Robert Reich (RobertReich.Substack, October 6, 2025)
The Shutdown as Strategy: Authoritarianism by Other Means – James Greenberg (James’s Substack, October 6, 2025)
Governors Warn of “Martial Law” and Trump “Invasion” as U.S. Judge Halts Troop Order – for Now – Jon Queally (Common Dreams, October 6, 2025).
White House Responds with “Authoritarian Propaganda” as Judge Blocks National Guard in Portland – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, October 5, 2025).
Now That Fascism Is Here – John Pavlovitz (The Beautiful Mess, October 4, 2025)
Chicago Mayor on Trump’s Threat to Use “Dangerous” Cities as “Training Grounds for Our Military”Democracy Now! (October 1, 2025).
Is This the Beginning of the End for U.S. Democracy? – Amy La Porte (Common Dreams, September 30, 2025).

UPDATES: Why Has the Media Become So Vulnerable to Trump, and What Can We Do About It? – Robert Reich (RobertReich.Substack, October 9, 2025).
“Trump’s Gestapo”: Chicago Marches to Resist ICE and National Guard Deployment – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, October 9, 2025).


See also the following chronologically-ordered Wild Reed posts:
Marisa Kabas: “We’re Witnessing a Coup By an Unelected Billionaire Propped Up By a Felonious President”
Timothy Snyder on Resisting the Oligarchs’ “Logic of Destruction”
“This Is Essentially Viktor Orbán’s Playbook”
“An Extremely Clever Ruse” by and for the Rich: Owen Jones on Elon Musk’s Coup
“To Be a Rib in This Body of Our Country”
Quote of the Day – February 21, 2025
Ralph Nader: “We’re Heading Into the Most Serious Crisis in American History. There’s No Comparison”
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
“This Is How Democracy Unravels”
Jason Stanley on How Fascism Works
James Greenberg on Trumpism: “The Tactics Are Unmistakable”
Tony Pentimalli on Trump’s “Death Warrant for Democracy”
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like”
Peter Bloom: Quote of the Day – June 10, 2025
“Protesting Is What Patriotism Looks Like in Public”: The “No Kings” Protests of June 14, 2025
“No Kings”? Absolutely. But Also “No Oligarchy”
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – June 20, 2025
Rep. Ro Khanna: Quote of the Day – June 24, 2025
“This Is Fascism”
The Declaration of Resistance
The Choice Before Us
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
How Democrats Can Start Winning Again
Brent Molnar on the MAGA Cult and Its Intentions
James Greenberg: “The Choices We Make Matter”
Brent Molnar on the “Cold War in Our Own House”
Khalil Gibran Muhammad on Donald Trump’s Militarization of Law Enforcement
Jason Duchin: “It’s Here, and We Are Sleepwalking Through It”
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Moving Into Totalitarianism”
Garrett Graff: “America Tips Into Fascism”
Bowing to an Idol
Marianne Williamson on the Need for “Radical Love” in Responding to Trump’s Dismantling of Democracy
Brent Molnar on the the Silencing of Jimmy Kimmel: “This Is What Fascism Looks Like in Practice”
James Greenberg on the Identity Politics of MAGA
Staying Strong in Trump’s Fascist America
Memes of the Times – September 2025
Jason Duchin: Quote of the Day – September 24, 2025
Derek Johnson on the “Courage to Call Fascism by Its Name”
Will Potter on Trump’s War on Dissent: “This Is What Fascists Do”
Marianne Williamson: We Need an “Expanded Version of What it Means to Be Political”
An Incident That Feels “Ripped from a Dystopian Novel”
James Greenberg: “I Am in Mourning for America”
Butch Ware: Quote of the Day – October 6, 2025

See also:
Phil Wilson Remembers “American Fascism’s First Casualty” and Warns That Donald Trump’s “MAGA Death Cult Is Coming for Us All”
Marianne Williamson on America’s “Cults of Madness”
“The Republican Party Has Now Made It Official: They Are a Cult”
Chauncey Devega on the Ongoing Danger of the Trump Cult
Jeff Sharlet on the Fascist Ideology of Donald Trump and Marjorie Taylor Greene
The Republican Party in a Nutshell
Robert Reich: Quote of the Day – April 11, 2023
Republicans Don’t Care About American Democracy


We Are One



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Forever Oneness
The Most Sacred and Simple Mystery of All
The Source is Within You
Jesus: The Revelation of Oneness
The Mystic Jesus: “A Name for the Unalterable Love That All of Us Share”
In the Garden of Spirituality – Wendy Benning Swanson
Held in the Presence of God
As the Last Walls Dissolve . . . Everything Is Possible


Tuesday, October 07, 2025

Two Years of “Indescribable Horror”


The following is excerpted from an article by Branko Marcetic published earlier today by Jacobin.

_________________


Two years ago, Hamas carried out a spree of stomach-churning atrocities against mostly Israeli civilians that left the entire world rightly sickened and enraged at the terrorist group, and with enormous reserves of sympathy for Israel. Out of the infinite options available to it, Israel chose to respond by doing exactly what Hamas had just done to earn the world’s disgust, only on a far larger scale, and in many cases – torturing doctors to death, sniping kids in the head and testicles, and burning hospital patients alive, to name a few – committing atrocities even Hamas itself had not carried out.

This is the grisly paradox of the war in Gaza. The crimes of October 7 – killing families and children, kidnapping, sexual violence – were so heinous and beyond the pale, they somehow justified being repeated and inflicted endlessly on a different group of innocent people, week after week for the next two years.

. . . Western governments have given extraordinary, unflinching backing to Israel, even as it has serially disobeyed them, carried out atrocity after atrocity that has shocked the world, and turned their own voting publics vehemently against both the war and, increasingly, against Israel itself. They have parroted with a straight face the increasingly lazy talking points from Benjamin Netanyahu’s government. They have resorted to stunningly authoritarian behavior to stifle criticism of its actions, and been supported in this by a media establishment that has at times wildly violated its own professional standards in defense of the war, including handing the Israeli military censors the final cut of their reporting. They have gone to incredible lengths to avoid ending their military support for the war, right down to taking the unprecedented but ultimately meaningless step of recognizing the Palestinian statehood that they were effectively letting Israel snuff out.

It hasn’t just been Western governments. The Arab states that have historically been Palestine’s champions have the past two years served as Israel’s willing enablers.

As the Israeli military has gradually exterminated a fellow Arab population, these states have not just failed to do much of anything in response – sanctioning Israel, for instance, or even just expelling its diplomats – they have actually rewarded it: upping their trade with Israel, deepening military and economic ties, defending it from the consequences of its widening aggression, and serving as key logistical nodes to keep its war on Gaza going, including for the transfer of Western weapons. As with their Western counterparts, they’ve kept a lid on their increasingly irate populations through heavy-handed repression.

Tomorrow’s history books will have damning verdicts on this generation of political leaders, whose publics have watched them cover for and justify a genocide of largely children with the same practiced, straight-faced certainty they use to play down a budget deficit. It will not be surprising if the unseemly sight of the world’s political elite running out the clock on the crime of crimes pushes public trust in political institutions further into the gutter, and it will not be remotely surprising if years from now, the same media that convinced elderly TV viewers that Jewish-led protests against the war were neo-Nazi rallies treats it as a mystery why.

The flip side of this is the astonishing nonviolent mobilization by ordinary citizens that has bubbled and expanded across the globe against the war, bringing sometimes historic numbers of people into the streets. That mobilization has not only been sustained and actually grown, but has seen a remarkable array of tactics employed to force leaders’ hands, spanning the electorally centered “Uncommitted” movement and traditional civil disobedience like campus occupations, to the Global Sumud Flotilla’s nonviolent breaking of the Israeli blockade and a union-led general strike in Italy, with a Europe-wide dockworker rebellion brewing all the while.

When enough time has passed for us to take stock of the last two years, we shouldn’t forget that the stubborn cruelty of our supposed political betters on this war has never been mirrored in the attitudes of their populations, who, generally speaking, have been way ahead on a host of key questions like supporting a ceasefire, defining the war as a genocide, or putting an arms embargo on Israel. So often these days we’re told the anti-democratic story that it’s the untamed passions of the uncredentialed, uninformed masses that are the problem. In the post–October 7 world, the real danger has been our untamed elites.

– Branko Marcetic
Excerpted from “Two Years After October 7,
the Horrors Are Indescribable

Jacobin
October 7, 2025


Related Off-site Links:
October 7, Two Years On: An Interview with Mouin Rabbani, Analyst of Middle Eastern Politics – John-Baptiste Oduor (Jacobin, October 7, 2025).
Maoz Inon Lost His Parents in the October 7 Attack. Here’s Why He’s Still Calling for PeaceDemocracy Now! (October 7, 2025).
Israel’s Destruction of Gaza Over Last 2 Years “Would Not Have Been Possible” Without $21.7 Billion From U.S. – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, October 7, 2025).
Report from Gaza: Israeli Bombardment Enters Third Year Despite Ceasefire Talks in EgyptDemocracy Now! (October 7, 2025).
Mocking Gaza’s Murdered Babies on National TV – Owen Jones (Battlelines, October 7, 2025).
We Must Call It What It Is: A Genocide in Gaza – Basim Elkarra (Common Dreams, October 7, 2025).
In 2 Years of Gaza Genocide, Sunday Shows on NBC, ABC and CNN Have Not Featured a Single Palestinian Guest – Adam Johnson (In These Times, October 7, 2025).


See also the following chronologically-ordered Wild Reed posts:
October 7, 2023: “Nothing About Today Is ‘Unprovoked’”
Phyllis Bennis: “If We Are Serious About Ending This Spiraling Violence, We Need to Look at Root Causes”
In the Midst of the “Great Unraveling,” a Visit to the Prayer Tree
Eric Levitz: Quote of the Day – October 11, 2023
Something to Think About – October 12, 2023
Prayer of the Week – October 16, 2023
Voices of Reason and Compassion on the Crisis in Israel and Gaza
More Voices of Reason and Compassion on the Crisis in Israel and Gaza
Ta-Nehisi Coates: Quote of the Day – November 2, 2023
Jehad Abusalim: Quote of the Day – December 8, 2023
Christmas 2023 – Reflections, Activism, Art, and Celebrations
Sabrina Salvati: Quote of the Day – January 2, 2024
Michael Fakhri: Quote of the Day – February 27, 2024
Phyllis Bennis: Quote of the Day – March 28, 2024
Josh Paul: Quote of the Day – March 28, 2024
“A Genocide Has Been Normalized”
“This Is a Genocidal Project”
Outrage and Despair
Naomi Klein’s Powerful Words on Israel’s and the West’s Ongoing Gaza Genocide
Judith Butler on the Ongoing Student Protests Against the Gaza Genocide
Kyle Kulinski: Quote of the Day – May 23, 2024
Something to Think About – June 28, 2024
Nina Turner: Quote of the Day – July 24, 2024
Phyllis Bennis: “We Can Never Give Up Hope”
John Cusack: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2024
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Breaking Down Kamala Harris’s DNC Speech on Gaza
Yousef Munayyer: Quote of the Day – August 30, 2024
“It’s a Systematic Slaughter That We’re Funding”
Protesting Weapons Manufacturer and Genocide Enabler General Dynamics
Something to Think About – September 26, 2024
“A Year of War Against Children”
Anti-Genocide Presidential Candidate Jill Stein Reflects on the First Anniversary of Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
Liam Cosgrove Confronts U.S. State Department Spin Doctor Matthew Miller: “People Are Sick of the Bullshit”
“This Is a Tragic, Heartbreaking Moment in the History of Humanity”
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’ Faltering Presidential Campaign
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Presidential Election
Hope and Courage – Christmas 2024
Chris Hedges: “Israel Has No Intention of Halting Its Merry-Go-Round of Death”
The Lamentable Legacy of the Biden Administration
Caitlin Johnstone: Quote of the Day – January 22, 2025
Butch Ware: Quote of the Day – January 30, 2025
The Only Difference
Progressive Perspectives on Cory Booker’s Marathon Speech
Silence on Gaza Genocide Is “More Than a Mere Moral Abdication; It Is Lethal”
The Theft of One’s Soul: Omar El Akkad on the “Lesser of Two Evils” Argument
How Genocide Becomes Ordinary
Thomas Friedman: Quote of the Day – May 27, 2025
“A Holocaust, Live-streamed”
Why What’s Happening in Palestine – and Our Response to It – Is So Important
“Life Comes First”: An Interview with Thiago Ávila
Truth-telling in the Face of Systemic Power That Is Silent on Genocide
Caitlin Johnstone: Quote of the Day – July 23, 2025
U.S. Labor Leader Chris Smalls Joins the Crew of the Handala
Israel’s Actions in Gaza: “A Clear and Present Moral Collapse”
Protesting Israel’s “Starvation Campaign” in Gaza
Chris Smalls: Quote of the Day – August 5, 2025
Anas al-Sharif, 1996-2025
A Call to Divest from Israel
Idrees Ahmad: Quote of the Day – August 25, 2025
Michael Sala: Quote of the Day – August 29, 2025
A Poem That Remains Painfully Relevant
Memes of the Times
An “Illusion of Action”


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
“The Mistreatment and Discrimination Against Palestinians Is Not Unprecedented. It’s Baked Into the Foundation of the Political System in Israel”
“Essential Viewing for All Who Care to Understand the Plight of the People of Palestine”
Progressive Perspectives on the Ongoing Israeli-Palestinian “Nightmare” (2021)
Something to Think About – July 29, 2018
Noura Erakat: Quote of the Day – May 15, 2018
For Some Jews, Israel’s Treatment of Palestinians is Yet Another Jewish Tragedy
Remembering the Six-Day War and Its Ongoing Aftermath
David Norris: Quote of the Day – August 12, 2014


“If a Praying Minister Isn’t Safe, None of Us Are”


Writes Mark Sandlin in response to the above image* by Chicago Sun-Times photographer Ashlee Rezin . . .

Don’t think you’re safe just because you’re a white, Christian citizen.

This week in Chicago, ICE agents sprayed mace in the face of a minister while he was praying.

A pastor.
Kneeling.
Eyes closed.

Asking for justice.

He wasn’t undocumented.
He wasn’t resisting.
He wasn’t a threat.
He was praying.

That’s what happens when a system built on fear runs out of “others” to punish: it starts turning on its own. It starts seeing compassion as defiance.

And before long, the walls it built to keep others out start closing in on everyone inside.

If a praying minister isn’t safe, none of us are.

But maybe that’s the wake-up call we need. Because silence won’t save us.

Solidarity still might.



* The minister pictured is Rev. David Black, a pastor at First Presbyterian Church in Chicago. He is quoted as saying the following in an ACLU press release:

I extended my arms, palms outstretched toward the ICE officers, in a traditional Christian posture of prayer and blessing. Without any warning, and without any order or request that I and others disperse, I was suddenly fired upon by ICE officers. In rapid fire, I was hit seven times on my arms, face and torso with exploding pellets that contained some kind of chemical agent. It was clear to me that the officers were aiming for my head, which they struck twice.



Related Off-site Links:
Body Slamming, Teargas and Pepper Balls: Viral Videos Show ICE Using Extreme Force in Chicago – Siri Chilukuri (The Guardian, October 4, 2025)
Journalists and Clergy Sue Federal Government Over “Extreme” Force Used at Broadview ICE ProtestsFOX 32 Chicago (October 6, 2025)
The Americans the World Will Remember – John Pavlovitz (The Beautiful Mess, October 7, 2025)
Trump’s Plan – Richard Reich (RichardReich.Substack, October 6, 2025)
Governors Warn of “Martial Law” and Trump “Invasion” as U.S. Judge Halts Troop Order – for Now – Jon Queally (Common Dreams, October 6, 2025).
The Rule of Law vs. the Rule of Trump – William Kristol, Andrew Egger, and Jim Swift (The Bulwark, October 6, 2025).
White House Responds with “Authoritarian Propaganda” as Judge Blocks National Guard in Portland – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, October 5, 2025).
Now That Fascism Is Here – John Pavlovitz (The Beautiful Mess, October 4, 2025)
Is This the Beginning of the End for U.S. Democracy? – Amy La Porte (Common Dreams, September 30, 2025).


See also the following chronologically-ordered Wild Reed posts:
Marisa Kabas: “We’re Witnessing a Coup By an Unelected Billionaire Propped Up By a Felonious President”
Timothy Snyder on Resisting the Oligarchs’ “Logic of Destruction”
“This Is Essentially Viktor Orbán’s Playbook”
“An Extremely Clever Ruse” by and for the Rich: Owen Jones on Elon Musk’s Coup
“To Be a Rib in This Body of Our Country”
Quote of the Day – February 21, 2025
Ralph Nader: “We’re Heading Into the Most Serious Crisis in American History. There’s No Comparison”
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
“This Is How Democracy Unravels”
Jason Stanley on How Fascism Works
James Greenberg on Trumpism: “The Tactics Are Unmistakable”
Tony Pentimalli on Trump’s “Death Warrant for Democracy”
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like”
Peter Bloom: Quote of the Day – June 10, 2025
“Protesting Is What Patriotism Looks Like in Public”: The “No Kings” Protests of June 14, 2025
“No Kings”? Absolutely. But Also “No Oligarchy”
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – June 20, 2025
Rep. Ro Khanna: Quote of the Day – June 24, 2025
“This Is Fascism”
The Declaration of Resistance
The Choice Before Us
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
How Democrats Can Start Winning Again
Brent Molnar on the MAGA Cult and Its Intentions
James Greenberg: “The Choices We Make Matter”
Brent Molnar on the “Cold War in Our Own House”
Khalil Gibran Muhammad on Donald Trump’s Militarization of Law Enforcement
Jason Duchin: “It’s Here, and We Are Sleepwalking Through It”
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Moving Into Totalitarianism”
Garrett Graff: “America Tips Into Fascism”
Bowing to an Idol
Marianne Williamson on the Need for “Radical Love” in Responding to Trump’s Dismantling of Democracy
Brent Molnar on the the Silencing of Jimmy Kimmel: “This Is What Fascism Looks Like in Practice”
James Greenberg on the Identity Politics of MAGA
Staying Strong in Trump’s Fascist America
Memes of the Times – September 2025
Jason Duchin: Quote of the Day – September 24, 2025
Derek Johnson on the “Courage to Call Fascism by Its Name”
Will Potter on Trump’s War on Dissent: “This Is What Fascists Do”
Marianne Williamson: We Need an “Expanded Version of What it Means to Be Political”
An Incident That Feels “Ripped from a Dystopian Novel”
James Greenberg: “I Am in Mourning for America”
Butch Ware: Quote of the Day – October 6, 2025

See also:
Phil Wilson Remembers “American Fascism’s First Casualty” and Warns That Donald Trump’s “MAGA Death Cult Is Coming for Us All”
Marianne Williamson on America’s “Cults of Madness”
“The Republican Party Has Now Made It Official: They Are a Cult”
Chauncey Devega on the Ongoing Danger of the Trump Cult
Jeff Sharlet on the Fascist Ideology of Donald Trump and Marjorie Taylor Greene
The Republican Party in a Nutshell
Robert Reich: Quote of the Day – April 11, 2023
Republicans Don’t Care About American Democracy


Monday, October 06, 2025

Quote of the Day


Says Butch Ware, Green Party candidate for Governor of California . . .

Only massive civil disobedience is going to save us now.

Electoral politics alone CANNOT save us.

Team Red is staging a full authoritarian takeover, and Team Blue cannot and will not fight it because to do so would alienate their donors and end their party.

Meanwhile, the media is normalizing every successive step in the collapse of even the pretense of democracy.

Butch Ware
via social media
October 6, 2025


Related Off-site Links:
Trump Troops “Deliberately Attacking Peaceful Protesters” in U.S. Cities, Senator Says – Stephen Prager (Common Dreams, October 6, 2025).
Governors Warn of “Martial Law” and Trump “Invasion” as U.S. Judge Halts Troop Order – for Now – Jon Queally (Common Dreams, October 6, 2025).
The Rule of Law vs. the Rule of Trump – William Kristol, Andrew Egger, and Jim Swift (The Bulwark, October 6, 2025).
White House Responds with “Authoritarian Propaganda” as Judge Blocks National Guard in Portland – Julia Conley (Common Dreams, October 5, 2025).
Now That Fascism Is Here – John Pavlovitz (The Beautiful Mess, October 4, 2025).
The “Department of War” Is Designed to Fight American Citizens – Jonathan V. Last (The Bulwark, October 1, 2025).
“Hitleresque”: Retired Major General William Enyart Links Trump Speech to Nazi Propaganda – MSNBC (September 30, 2025).
Is This the Beginning of the End for U.S. Democracy? – Amy La Porte (Common Dreams, September 30, 2025).
Meet Dr. Butch Ware: The Green Party’s Rebrand Campaign for California Governor – Ryan Hutson (Redheaded Blackbelt, September 28, 2025).
Feeling Powerless Doesn’t Mean You Are Powerless – Daniel Hunter (Waging Nonviolence, September 19, 2025).
What Would a General Strike in the U.S. Actually Look Like? – Jeremy Brecher (Waging Nonviolence, April 8, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:

BUTCH WARE
Butch Ware: Quote of the Day – June 5, 2025
Butch Ware on His Run for California Governor and the Wider Goal of Disrupting the Duopoly
“The Moment Is Ripe”: Butch Ware on Building a “True Oppositional Alternative” to the Duopoly
Butch Ware: Quote of the Day – January 30, 2025
The Green Party’s Jill Stein and Butch Ware Give Their First Post-Election Interview
“This Is a Tragic, Heartbreaking Moment in the History of Humanity”: Butch Ware on the Gaza Genocide
Green Party Vice Presidential Candidate Butch Ware in Minneapolis
Butch Ware: “You Can Actually Vote Your Conscience”
Butch Ware: “I’m Not Here as a Spoiler”


THE RISE OF FASCISM IN THE U.S.
James Greenberg: “I Am in Mourning for America”
An Incident That Feels “Ripped from a Dystopian Novel”
The “Creeping Fascism of Trump’s America”: A View from Australia
Will Potter on Trump’s War on Dissent: “This Is What Fascists Do”
Derek Johnson on the “Courage to Call Fascism by Its Name”
Jason Duchin: Quote of the Day – September 24, 2025
Staying Strong in Trump’s Fascist America
James Greenberg on the Identity Politics of MAGA
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like in Practice”
Garrett Graff: “America Tips Into Fascism”
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Moving Into Totalitarianism”
“It’s Here, and We Are Sleepwalking Through It”
Khalil Gibran Muhammad on Donald Trump’s Militarization of Law Enforcement
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – June 20, 2025


THE FAILURES OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Mike Figueredo on the “Political Malpractice” of the Democratic Party
Ted Rall: Democrats Are Not “the Left”
Exposing the Dark Money Network Secretly Funding Establishment Democratic Influencers
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’s Book, 107 Days
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
Progressive Perspectives on Bernie Sanders’ “Fighting Oligarchy” Tour
Eric Fernández: Quote of the Day – May 14, 2025
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
How Democrats Can Start Winning Again


SIGNS OF HOPE
“No Kings”? Absolutely. But Also “No Oligarchy”
Chris Smalls: We Need to Escape the “Two-Party Plantation”
Kshama Sawant: Independent Working-class Campaigns Can Succeed
The Rational National’s Take on Zohran Mamdani
Omar Fateh: “We Need to Meet the Needs of Working People”
Something to Think About – July 25, 2025
In His Efforts to “Build a City That Works for All,” Omar Fateh Secures a Key Endorsement
Butch Ware on His Run for California Governor and the Wider Goal of Disrupting the Duopoly
Marianne Williamson on the Need for “Radical Love” in Responding to Trump’s Dismantling of Democracy
“Protesting Is What Patriotism Looks Like in Public”


Sunday, October 05, 2025

“I Like and Respect This Guy”: An Atheist’s Take on Jesus

The following was written and first shared in 2021 by actor Wil Wheaton in response to the AI generated image of Jesus at right.

My sharing today of Wheaton’s words is part of my ongoing effort to counter the rise in the U.S. of the idolotrous political movement known as Christian nationalism.

_______________

This is, apparently, what the actual Jesus of Nazareth looked like, according to an artist and an algorithm and actual, historical, data (as opposed to a story that white people tell each other).

I am an atheist. I do not believe in god, or the devil, or heaven, or hell. But I like and respect this guy. He was a rebel, he was an anti-authoritarian, he dedicated his life to helping the poor, the sick, the indigent, the people who were discarded and rejected by society. He hung out with sex workers and lepers, and gave comfort to the sick and suffering, and he loudly and relentlessly called out the hypocrisy of the church and its leaders. As I understand it, he was like, “Hey, you’re a sinner. That’s a bummer. Let me help you be a better person. No, I don’t expect anything from you for that. I just want to be as loving as I can be.” He was a really cool guy.

This guy, in this picture, is not the Jesus I was introduced to in parochial school. The Jesus I was introduced to was soooooo white, like super super super white, and he was keeping an eye on you so he could snitch on you to his dad, who was SUPER PISSED AT EVERYTHING YOU DID all the time for some reason. The Jesus I knew was, like, maybe going to be okay with you, as long as you knew what a giant fuck-up you were. And he was absolutely not accepting of anyone who didn’t do exactly what the authority figures at school told us we had to do. And Reagan was essentially his avatar sent to Earth. If we didn’t worship Reagan the same way we were supposed to worship white Jesus, we were going to have a REALLY bad time. Did I mention that I was, like, 8 when all of this was drilled into me?

I deeply resent the way that American “Evangelical” Christianity turned this guy in this picture, who was reportedly a cool, loving, gentle, dude, who was a legit rebel, into someone who hates all the same things they hate, and who LOVES authoritarians the same way they do. I despise the people who do all sorts of cruel, hurtful, hateful things in this guy’s name. And they are EVERYWHERE in America.

I don’t know what it’s like in the rest of the world. What I do know is that, in America, this person has been perverted into a weapon, a cudgel, to be used against the same people the actual Jesus loved and stood up for. It’s disgusting.

And, look, if someone professes to follow the teachings of this dude, whose WHOLE FUCKING THING was “love everyone. Period. No exceptions,” and they don’t, like, do that? They are as bad as the money changers in the temple. I know that this dude loves them, because that’s his whole thing, but I suspect that, if this dude exists, he is disappointed and maybe a little embarrassed by them.

As an afterthought: I can’t stop thinking about how this dude was an immigrant, and poor. I keep thinking that, if he showed up in . . . let’s say Texas, today, how badly he would be treated by the very same people who use his name and pervert his teachings to exert control over the very same people Jesus spent his entire life looking after.

And, honestly, none of this would even matter if the American Christian extremists would keep their white Jesus out of our laws and government.

Wil Wheaton


Related Off-site Links:
The Gospel and the Specter of Christian Nationalism – Stewart Clem (Covenant, September 16, 2025).
The Shameful Christian Idolatry and Fraudulent Martyrdom of Charlie Kirk – John Pavlovitz (The Beautiful Mess, September 12, 2025).
Critics Warn Trump’s “Religious Liberty” Panel Wants to Impose “Christian Nationalist Agenda” Nationwide – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, September 29, 2025).
Christian Nationalism Vs. Progressive Christianity: An Interview with Theologian Brandan Robertson – Marianne Williamson (Transform, September 30, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:

CHRISTIAN NATIONALISM
Bowing to an Idol
James Greenberg on the Identity Politics of MAGA
Memes of the Times – September 2025

JESUS
Why Jesus Is My Man
Jesus: Mystic and Prophet
The Mystic Jesus: “A Name for the Unalterable Love That All of Us Share”
The King of Love My Shepherd Is
Jesus: Path-Blazer of Radical Transformation
Jesus and Social Revolution – Part 1 | 2 | 3
Mysticism and Revolution
Jesus: Our Guide to Mystical Love in Action – Part 1 | 2 | 3
Jesus and the Art of Letting Go
Palm Sunday: A Sacred Paradox
Jesus: The Upside-down Messiah
Time to Grow Up
The Model of Leadership Offered by Jesus: “More Like the Gardener Than the Owner of the Garden”
Something to Think About – November 27, 2018
Prayer of the Week – October 19, 2015
The Lesson of Jesus
Good News on the Road to Emmaus
Jesus: The Revelation of Oneness
What Part of Jesus’ Invitation to “Be Not Afraid” Don’t the Bishops Get?
Something to Think About – December 14, 2011
Something to Think About – October 29, 2011
To Believe in Jesus
Jesus Was a Sissy
The “Moral Gaiety” of Jesus’ Teaching
Jesus Lives!


Saturday, October 04, 2025

Remembering the Wisdom and Compassion of Jane Goodall


It’s the feast of Francis of Assisi, patron saint of animals and the ecology. A perfect time to remember and celebrate the wisdom and compassion of English primatologist and anthropologist Jane Goodall, who died this past Monday at the age of 91.



About Jane Goodall’s religious and spiritual beliefs, Wikipedia notes the following.

Goodall was raised in a Christian congregationalist family. As a young woman, she took night classes in Theosophy. Her family were occasional churchgoers, but Goodall began attending more regularly as a teenager when the church appointed a new minister, Trevor Davies. “He was highly intelligent and his sermons were powerful and thought-provoking. . . . I could have listened to his voice for hours. . . . I fell madly in love with him. . . . Suddenly, no one had to encourage me to go to church. Indeed, there were never enough services for my liking.”

Of her later discovery of the atheism and agnosticism of many of her scientific colleagues, Goodall wrote that “fortunately, by the time I got to Cambridge I was twenty-seven years old and my beliefs had already moulded so that I was not influenced by these opinions.”

In her 1999 book Reason for Hope: A Spiritual Journey, Goodall described the implications of a mystical experience she had at Notre Dame Cathedral in 1977: “Since I cannot believe that this was the result of chance, I have to admit anti-chance. And so I must believe in a guiding power in the universe – in other words, I must believe in God.”

When asked if she believes in God, Goodall said in September 2010: “I don’t have any idea of who or what God is. But I do believe in some great spiritual power. I feel it particularly when I’m out in nature. It’s just something that’s bigger and stronger than what I am or what anybody is. I feel it. And it’s enough for me.” When asked in the same year if she still considers herself a Christian, Goodall told The Guardian: “I suppose so; I was raised as a Christian.” She stated further that she saw no contradiction between evolution and belief in God.

In her foreword to the 2017 book The Intelligence of the Cosmos by Ervin Laszlo, a philosopher of science who advocates quantum consciousness theory, Goodall wrote: “We must accept that there is an Intelligence driving the process [of evolution], that the Universe and life on Earth are inspired and in-formed by an unknown and unknowable Creator, a Supreme Being, a Great Spiritual Power.”



Related Off-site Links:
Jane Goodall, Ambassador for Wildlife, Dies at 91 – Cathy Newman (National Geographic, October 1, 2025).
Jane Goodall Helped Humans Understand Their Place in the World – Scott Simon (NPR News, October 4, 2025).
In an Exclusive Interview, Dr. Jane Goodall Leaves Behind Her Last WordsTudum (October 3, 2025).

See also the following Wild Reed posts:
Let Us Be “Energized by the Beauty That Is All Around Us”: Jane Goodall’s New Year Message (2018)
Francis and the Wolf
St. Francis of Assisi: Dancer, Rebel, Archetype