Monday, February 16, 2026

Genny Harrison on Brian Tyler Cohen’s Interview with Obama: “A Careful Meditation That Comforts More Than It Challenges”


. . . and “in a moment defined by aggressive
use of power, comfort is not resistance.”


I appreciate Genny Harrison’s analysis and critique of Barack Obama’s recent remarks to Brian Tyler Cohen. It should be noted that Cohen is a Democratic establishment influencer, or “Demfluencer.” This clearly shows in his interview with Obama, prompting Harrison to note the following.

Throughout the interview, Brian Tyler Cohen [. . .] approaches Obama less as a journalist than as a devoted interlocutor, rarely pressing him on contradictions or omissions. When Obama describes enforcement abuses as unprecedented, Cohen does not raise deportation data from the Obama years. When Obama critiques Democratic tradition, Cohen does not ask why those traditions were protected when Obama had the authority to challenge them. When Obama discusses youth disengagement, Cohen does not ask whether institutional failure, rather than tone, is the central driver. The result is a conversation that feels curated rather than examined. It allows Obama to occupy the role of moral narrator without confronting the full consequences of his legacy.


Following is Genny Harrison’s full commentary on Cohen’s interview with Obama.

________________

In Brian Tyler Cohen’s recent interview with Barack Obama, the former president attempts to do many things at once. He condemns cruelty in political discourse, defends democratic norms, critiques institutional inertia, explains Democratic infighting, reflects on youth disengagement, and gestures toward the long arc of social movements. The interview is expansive and rhetorically polished. It is also evasive in precisely the places where honesty would have mattered most.

Obama frames the current political moment as a moral test, arguing that decency, civic engagement, and community organizing are the antidotes to authoritarian behavior. He reassures listeners that most Americans still believe in kindness and fairness, even if social media and television reward cruelty.

This is comforting, but it sidesteps the more pressing reality that belief without leverage does not constrain power. The erosion of democratic norms has not occurred because Americans forgot their values. It has occurred because institutions have been structured to allow those values to be overridden without consequence.

This becomes especially clear in Obama’s discussion of immigration enforcement. He describes recent ICE actions as unprecedented and dangerous, highlighting community resistance as a source of hope. The moral clarity is welcome.

The historical framing is not. Modern immigration enforcement did not suddenly become expansive under Trump. The machinery that enables aggressive raids, broad discretion, and minimal oversight was constructed over decades, including during Obama’s own presidency. Deportations reached historic highs while he was in office, and enforcement partnerships were normalized as governance rather than treated as emergency measures.

A more honest Obama would have said this out loud. He would have acknowledged that systems built in the name of pragmatism are easily weaponized, and that his administration, like others before it, chose stability over dismantling. Instead, the interview treats the present as a rupture rather than a culmination. That choice allows outrage without responsibility.

Obama does briefly address institutional barriers, criticizing the Senate filibuster and Democratic attachment to tradition. He is right that these traditions have often functioned as obstacles rather than safeguards. But he speaks about them as inherited problems rather than defended ones. The filibuster was not merely endured during his presidency. It was protected. Gerrymandering was condemned rhetorically but confronted unevenly. Executive power expanded even as Congress stagnated. These choices were not accidents. They were trade-offs. The interview never names them as such.

This pattern continues when Obama turns to Democratic infighting and the long shadow of 2016. He argues that divisions between liberals, moderates, and progressives are exaggerated, noting that figures as different as Bernie Sanders and Hillary Clinton share core values around equality, social protection, and regulation. This is broadly true. But it elides the deeper conflict that animated that primary and still shapes the party.

The Sanders-Clinton divide was not merely tactical. It was institutional. It was about whether incrementalism within existing systems was sufficient, or whether those systems themselves were fundamentally misaligned with democratic and economic reality. Obama positions himself above this divide, portraying it as a matter of tone and strategy rather than power and legitimacy. Yet his presidency, by necessity or choice, aligned far more closely with Clinton-era assumptions about globalization, technocracy, and institutional continuity than with Sanders’ critique of structural inequality.

A nobler, more rigorous Obama would have acknowledged this. He would have said plainly that his governing philosophy, while effective in stabilizing a post-crisis economy, also reinforced systems that left many voters feeling permanently excluded. He would have admitted that the party’s preference for managerial competence over structural reform created fertile ground for populist backlash. Instead, the interview treats 2016 as a lesson about unity rather than a warning about complacency.

Obama’s emphasis on persuasion further underscores this tension. He repeatedly frames Democratic governance as harder because it requires coalition-building, compromise, and legislative process, while the opposition thrives on destruction. This is accurate as far as it goes. What he does not say is that persuasion loses power when institutions are unresponsive. When voters see electoral wins fail to translate into material change, persuasion begins to sound like delay.

This is why his reflections on youth engagement are both the strongest and most incomplete part of the interview. Obama is correct that age itself is not the problem. Distance is. He candidly admits that he no longer understands the cultural world his daughters inhabit, and that leaders eventually lose direct access to the present tense. He explains that his campaigns succeeded with young voters because they were given real responsibility and ownership, not merely inspirational rhetoric.

This insight is crucial. Young people were not mobilized by Obama because he was young or charismatic. They were mobilized because he trusted them with power inside his movement. They were builders, not spectators.

But once again, Obama stops short of the harder conclusion. Youth disengagement today is not primarily a messaging failure. It is a rational response to a political economy that offers diminishing returns on participation. Younger voters are burdened by debt, locked out of housing, facing climate catastrophe, and watching institutions fail to respond even when elections are won. Joy without agency feels insulting in that context.

Obama gestures toward these realities but reframes them as cultural challenges rather than structural ones. He suggests Democrats lost young voters because they became scolds, because they failed to be welcoming, because they lost touch with joy. These critiques may be partially true, but they are insufficient. The deeper issue is that participation no longer feels consequential.

Throughout the interview, Brian Tyler Cohen reinforces this softened framing. He approaches Obama less as a journalist than as a devoted interlocutor, rarely pressing him on contradictions or omissions. When Obama describes enforcement abuses as unprecedented, Cohen does not raise deportation data from the Obama years. When Obama critiques Democratic tradition, Cohen does not ask why those traditions were protected when Obama had the authority to challenge them. When Obama discusses youth disengagement, Cohen does not ask whether institutional failure, rather than tone, is the central driver.

The result is a conversation that feels curated rather than examined. It allows Obama to occupy the role of moral narrator without confronting the full consequences of his legacy.

Obama’s decision to focus on leadership development rather than direct political confrontation is sincere and admirable. His foundation’s work matters. But his authority remains immense, and how he uses it shapes the political imagination. By framing the current crisis as a test of values rather than a failure of structures, he offers reassurance rather than reckoning.

This interview does not stand up to Trump. It does not meaningfully confront the conditions that produced Trump. It reflects on the moment without fully engaging its causes. It asks citizens to be better without demanding institutions be transformed.

Obama is right that age does not disqualify leadership. Distance does. Distance from material reality. Distance from institutional accountability. Distance from the consequences of past decisions.

A nobler version of this interview would have named that distance, including his own. It would have acknowledged that decency is not enough, that good intentions do not neutralize bad systems, and that the Democratic Party’s greatest failure has not been tone but timidity in the face of entrenched power. Instead, we are left with a careful meditation that comforts more than it challenges. In a moment defined by aggressive use of power, comfort is not resistance.

– Genny Harrison
The Speech Obama Gives,
and the Reckoning He Avoids

February 16, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
Brian Tyler Cohen Rages in Response to Demfluencer Dark Money Scandal – Krystal Ball (Breaking Points, September 5, 2025).
Taylor Lorenz Schools Brian Tyler Cohen and David Pakman on the Definition of JournalismRantoinette (September 9, 2025).
Barack Obama Is A War Criminal – Prince Williams (Harvard Political Review, September 29, 2021).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Progressives and Obama (Part 1)
Progressives and Obama (Part 2)
Progressives and Obama (Part 3)
Progressives and Obama (Part 4)
Progressives and Obama (Part 5)
Progressives and Obama (Part 6)
Progressives and Obama (Part 7)
Historic (and Wild)!
Reality Check
One of Those Moments
Obama, Ayers, the “S” Word, and the “Most Politically Backward Layers in America”
Obama a Socialist? Hardly
Thoughts on Tomorrow’s Presidential Election (2008)
“Change Has Come to America”
A Night of Celebration
The Challenge for Progressives with an Obama Presidency
Exposing the Dark Money Network Secretly Funding Establishment Democratic Influencers


Friday, February 13, 2026

What Does It Really Take to Build a Rebellion?


What does it really take to build a rebellion? . . . That’s the question posed by Kapil of Show Me the Meaning, a podcast dedicated to “exploring what great TV has to say about our lives,” in his beautifully-crafted video that focuses on the second (and final) season of the Star Wars show Andor.

I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: I can think of no other contemporary TV series than Andor that captures the political zeitgeist we’re living through, one dominated by the rise of fascism in the U.S. Streaming on the Disney+ platform, Andor is a prequel to the 2016 film Rogue One: A Star Wars Story, which in turn serves as a prequel to the events of Star Wars: A New Hope (1977).

Among other things, Andor contends that resistance to and rebellions against fascism, authoritarianism, and empire are built on hope. But is that enough? . . . Are there other factors that intentionallr or not, come into play? Realies such as loss and reckoning; formative leadership; moral complexity and contradictions; blind luck; community; sacrifice.

What does it really take to build a rebellion? And what are the long-term consequences of the various factors involved in what it takes?

These are the hard, unsettling questions explored by Kapil in his 12-minute video commentary below.





Related Off-site Links:
The Dark Side of Hope: How Andor Brings Star Wars Into the 2020sShow Me The Meaning (January 4, 2025).
The Side of Andor That Nobody Talks AboutEpic Sell (August 24, 2025).
Tony Gilroy on What Andor Says About Trump’s Fragile Authoritarian RegimeLovett or Leave It (August 24, 2025).
How Andor Mirrored Israel’s GenocideJessie Gender After Dark (June 17, 2025).
How Not to Be Fascist According to Andor (and Jesus) – Bryan Jarrell (Mockingbird, May 20, 2025).


For more of Andor at The Wild Reed, see:
Welcome to the Rebellion
Andor’s Depiction of the Rise of Fascism: Not Predictive But Reflective
Andor: “A Magnum Opus of Anti-Imperialist Art”
The Revolution Will Be Televised
Andor: The Star Wars Franchise’s “First Piece of Universally Excellent Television”
The Brilliance of Andor
Inauguration Day Thoughts
How Empires Are Built and Rebellions Are Born
Andor Season One Recap
The Reckoning Is Here


See also the related Wild Reed posts:
Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
More Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
Omar Fateh: “Folks Are Waking Up”
“It Was Murder”: 12 Powerful Responses to the Death of Renée Nicole Good
A “Red Alert Moment for American Democracy”
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like”
Chris Hedges: “Most Revolutions Succeed Not Through Violence But Through National Strikes”
Jason Duchin: “It’s Here, and We Are Sleepwalking Through It”
Marianne Williamson: “We’re Moving Into Totalitarianism”
“He Is Enacting an Authoritarian Agenda”: Khalil Gibran Muhammad on Donald Trump’s Militarization of Law Enforcement
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
Robert Reich: “This Is Fascism”
“Protesting Is What Patriotism Looks Like in Public”: The “No Kings” Protests of June 14, 2025
Peter Bloom: Quote of the Day – June 10, 2025
“This Is How Democracy Unravels”


“It’s All Lies and Propaganda”


Twin Cities resident Corey Magstadt shared the following on Facebook today in response to yesterday's press conference by Tom Holman (left), in which he declared that Operation Metro Surge will end in Minnesota. (For six other responses to this news, see this Wild Reed post from yesterday.)

________________

Like most of us in Minnesota, I listened to Tom Homan’s press conference yesterday with skepticism. Not just because ICE has been very active in our neighborhood today, but also because there is a funding bill on the table that is being held up due to the increasing unpopularity of ICE enforcement.

After listening to it, I was disgusted. I’m not sure I’ve ever heard someone lie and gaslight with such boldness (and I’ve listened to a lot of Trump’s speeches). My rage response is to argue, so here’s an unnecessarily long breakdown of the press conference and data countering his lies.


CLAIM #1: “Minnesota Is Safer Because of the Surge”

• “The Twin Cities of Minnesota in general are and will continue to be much safer . . . because of what we have accomplished under President Trump’s leadership.”

• “Minnesota is now less of a sanctuary state for criminals.”

• “We’re leaving Minnesota safer.”

• “This community is safer because we arrested over 4,000 illegal aliens. . . . Many of them public safety threat, not all of them.”


FACT CHECK

• No public data demonstrates a decrease in violent crime that can be attributed to ICE’s surge. In fact, two of the only three homicides in Minneapolis this year were committed by ICE agents.

• Minnesota is not less of a sanctuary state than it was before. The Trump administration often claims victory by winning something it already had (see the Greenland debacle for another example). In this case, Homan claims that now Minnesota is partnering with ICE and letting them take criminal immigrants from jail and prison after they complete their sentences. He was very proud of this because it’s much safer for everyone to deport someone who is already in custody. THEY WERE ALREADY DOING THIS! THIS IS NOT NEW! IT HAS ALWAYS BEEN THE POLICY! What Minnesota doesn’t do and still won’t do is hand over immigrants who are arrested and accused of crimes but not yet convicted (because Minnesota actually believes that people should have due process).

• They have shown no evidence that they have arrested over 4,000 illegal aliens. And even if that is the number, many are being released as their immigration status didn’t warrant it (ongoing asylum claims, refuge status, etc.). Over 800 habeas corpus lawsuits have been filed since the surge began (compared to 128 in all of 2025) and the vast majority have resulted in the successful release of the prisoner back into the community.

• I can’t fact check this claim, but I GUARANTEE that more crime has been committed by ICE agents than undocumented immigrants in Minnesota over the past two months. The number of car accidents caused by ICE alone is enough to prove this claim to be a lie.

• ICE arrest totals often include: Administrative immigration violations (not showing up for a hearing, missing paperwork, etc.), Pending criminal charges (we’re still innocent until proven guilty in this country), old or nonviolent convictions (small crimes from 30 years ago probably shouldn’t be cause for deportation today).



CLAIM #2: ICE Only Targets Serious Criminals (But Also Promises Mass Deportation)

• “Many criminal aliens have been arrested . . . including murders, sex offenders . . .”

• “Through targeted enforcement operations . . .”

• “We will enforce immigration law against all persons in the United States illegally.”

• “Prioritizing public safety threats . . . doesn’t mean we’ll forget about everybody else. We will take action on everybody else.”

• “President Trump made a promise of mass deportation and that’s what this country is going to get.”


FACT CHECK

• According to the Minnesota Department of Corrections, most of the violent “worst of the worst” criminals that ICE has claimed credit for were actually already in custody.

MPR News has reported on cases involving administrative immigration violations and individuals with minor or old convictions being taken into custody “mass deportation” proposals have been estimated to cost hundreds of billions of dollars and would require unprecedented detention expansion.

• Our on the ground reporting demonstrates that this is not a targeted approach. As I’ve repeatedly written, if you have brown skin, you are a target and can be arrested anywhere.



CLAIM #3: ICE Did Not Arrest Anyone Inside Hospitals, Schools, or Churches

• “ICE has not arrested anybody inside a hospital.”

• “We have not arrested anybody inside of a school.”

• “We have not arrested anybody inside a church.”

• “It simply has not happened.”

• “Those locations are not off the table.”


FACT CHECK

• This was a very intentionally misleading statement. Has anyone been arrested in hospitals, churches or schools? Not to my knowledge. But parking lots and streets surrounding these sensitive locations have been fair game. Most immigrant churches have stopped meeting in person since ICE is always circling around their parking lots before and after services. Schools around the state have reported daily occurrences of ICE agents knocking on families doors before school, following them to and from school, waiting at bus stops, following buses, and circling around the school parking lots.

• UPDATE: “They have been arresting people inside the hospitals in Rochester and they have arrested people inside a mosque there as well. I heard reports of arrests in HCMC and in mosques up north, but I don’t know anyone close enough to it to confirm. My parents have confirmation of the abductions in Rochester." – Brenna Zeimet (2/13/26)



CLAIM #4: 3,364 “Missing Unaccompanied Alien Children” Were Located

• “ICE here in this state have located 3,364 missing unaccompanied alien children.”

• “Children that the last administration lost and weren’t even looking for.”


FACT CHECK

• He’s straight up lying. First, ICE isn’t involved in placement and care of unaccompanied minors. That role is played by the Department of Health and Human Services.

• The number 3,364 is given with no evidence and there is simply no way that many children have been picked up by ICE without parents or guardians. Do you think the protesters outside of Whipple every day or the guy watching every plane take off and counting the people who get on wouldn’t have noticed thousands of kids being put onto airplanes and shipped to Texas? It’s completely fabricated.

• In fact, claims of “missing” children actually reflect simply the inability of ICE to contact the child’s sponsors or guardians, not that they are actually missing. So if they actually located that many "missing” children, it just means that they now have cleaned up their database to have contact information for these families that they didn’t previously have.



CLAIM #5: “Most Secure Border in American History” and “Record Arrests and Deportations”

• “Today, we have the most secure border in American history.”

• “Record number of arrest and deportations under President Trump’s first year.”


FACT CHECK
• Deportation totals during the previous Trump administration did not exceed the peak removal numbers recorded during the Obama administration. And Biden’s last year in office had more deportations than Trump did in 2025 (Not that this is a good thing, but it’s just remarkable how much they feel like they have to lie, especially to beat the libs).

• I can’t really speak to the border. It seems that border crossings are down and fentanyl smuggling is also down. But border crossings are mostly down because of the cruelty of this government. Is that really how we want to solve illegal immigration . . . make this country so violent and unsafe that no one wants to come here?



CLAIM #6: “Unprecedented Cooperation” and No Jail Refusals

• “We have obtained an unprecedented level of coordination . . .”

• “I have not met one county jail that says no to us.”


FACT CHECK

• As stated above in #1, this has always been the policy. Minnesota counties generally do not hold individuals beyond their scheduled release time solely on ICE detainers without judicial warrants (as courts have ruled that this violates the 4th amendment). The jail or prison contacts ICE to let them know someone is scheduled to be released. If ICE doesn’t show up to get them, they are released because they have completed their sentence. This has always been and still is the policy. So if “dangerous criminals" are released back into the community IT’S BECAUSE ICE DIDN’T DO ITS JOB TO SHOW UP AND PICK THEM UP!


Beyond the lies, Homan’s overall tone was unconscionable. He repeatedly praised and blessed ICE officers and never once said anything comforting about the people they terrorize. He defended the use of masks because of “doxing,” but they’re the ones taking pictures of all of the protesters and observers and putting them in their database for who knows what nefarious purpose. He consistently refers to constitutional observers as violent agitators rather than community members who are showing up to care for their neighbors. He casually threatens that his security forces won’t go away as long as people continue to protect their neighbors. He never mentions the devastating economic impact on families and businesses or the emotional impact on children who haven’t been able to go to school.

It’s all lies and propaganda. And until we see otherwise, we continue to keep ourselves safe since no one else is going to do it.

– Corey Magstadt
via Facebook
February 13, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
What Minnesota Really Thinks of the End of Trump’s ICE Surge – Jennifer Bendery (The Huffington Post, February 13, 2026).
What We Can Learn From Minneapolis’ Model of Resistance – Gabriel Furshong (Common Dreams, February 13, 2026).
The Rise of the Rebel Loon LogosThe Nerd of The Rings (February 13, 2026).
‘Time to Speak Up’: In Columbia Heights, School Leaders Stepped in to Protect Families as ICE Surged – Elizabeth Shockman (MPR News, February 13, 2026).
Mayor Jacob Frey Calls on Feds and State to Help Pay ICE Surge Costs in MinneapolisMPR News (February 13, 2026).
“Border Czar” Tom Homan Says Immigration Operation in Minnesota Will End Soon – Katelyn Vue (Sahan Journal, February 12, 2026).
“Not an Anomaly . . . A Blueprint”: Homan Says Minnesota ICE Surge Ending – But Mass Deportations Aren’t – Jessica Corbett (Common Dreams, February 12, 2026).
Yet Another Case of ICE Agents – and DHS Officials – Lying About Shooting Incident Emerges – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, February 12, 2026).
Charges Dropped Against Men Accused of Attacking ICE Officer – Matt Sepic (MPR News, February 12, 2026).
Twin Cities Health Care Workers Describe “Fear” and “Intimidation” Due to ICE in Hospitals – Erica Zurek (MPR News, February 11, 2026).
The People of Minneapolis Will Simply Not Let the ICE Thugs Prevail – Dan Simmons (The New Republic, February 5, 2026).
Anti-ICE Organizing Is Creating Counter-Institutions Based on Care – Rashida James-Saadiya (Truthout, February 4, 2026).
“Backing Down Isn’t an Option”: Minnesota ICE Shootings Mobilize Americans to Join ICE Observer Groups – Lex McMenamin (The Guardian, January 31, 2026).
Letter From Minnesota: Details From an Occupation – Angela Pelster (Literary Hub, January 29, 2026).
Meet the Minneapolis Parents Patrolling Their Schools Amid ICE Operations – Elizabeth Shockman (MPR News, January 16, 2026).
The Women Holding Minneapolis Together – Anna Moeslein Glamor, January 7, 2026).

UPDATE: White House Official Says Hundreds of Federal Agents Are Leaving Minnesota, “Small” Security Force Will Remain for a Time – The Associated Press and MPR News (February 15, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts on the resistance to the Trump regime’s fascist occupation of Minnesota:
Omar Fateh: Quote of the Day – December 4, 2025
Photo of the Day – December 5, 2025
Susie Hayward on What’s Happening in Minneapolis
Doing What We Can to Stop Unjust Arrests of Immigrants
Great Event, Great Sign, Great Nails
Christmas Eve Musings
May We Do Likewise
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like” – January 7, 2026
“It Was Murder”: 12 Powerful Responses to the Death of Renée Nicole Good
Omar Fateh: “Folks Are Waking Up”
A Good Faith Appeal and a Grim Response
Why Minnesota?
Chris Hedges on ICE: “I Have Seen These Masked Goons Before”
Steven Donziger: “Let’s Get Real . . . ICE Is a Domestic Terrorist Organization”
Historian Kyle Dekker: “It’s Not Nazi Ideology We Are Fighting. It’s American”
Knowing Our Rights
Mike Figueredo on Why Trump Might Be Pushing the U.S. to the Brink of Collapse
A “Red Alert Moment for American Democracy”
Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
Marianne Williamson on How to Psychologically Endure This Moment
What Moral Clarity Looks Like in Minnesota This MLK Day
Nemik’s Eulogy for Renée Nicole Good
“It Was Never About Keeping America Safe”
“ICE Out!”: The Minnesota General Strike – 1/23/26
“This Was a Flat Out Execution”
“Organized Sustained Systemic Resistance and Self-Defense Are Our Only Options”
Honoring Alex Pretti
George Conway: The Trump Administration Is a “Criminal Organization”
In the Face of Fascist Lies, MN Governor Tim Walz Sets the Record Straight
Adam Serwer on How “Every Social Theory Undergirding Trumpism Has Been Broken on the Steel of Minnesotan Resolve”
“Trump Is Scared Shitless”
“They Were Alive. Then They Were Not”
Bruce Springsteen and the Streets of Minneapolis in the Winter of ’26
Craig Mokhiber on the “Imperial Boomerang”: How U.S. War Tactics Abroad Are Now Used at Home
January Vignettes (2026)
Honoring Renée Good and the “Astonishing Surge of Courage” of Minneapolis
A Luminous Celebration of Light, Love and Community
More Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
Memes of the Times – February 2026
Only the Beginning

Image: White House “border czar” Tom Homan speaks at a press conference at the Whipple Federal Building on Thursday, February 12. Homan announced an end to the Trump regime’s immigration enforcement operation in the state. (Photo: Stephen Maturen / Getty Images)


Thursday, February 12, 2026

Only the Beginning


Seven responses to the news that the Trump regime’s chaotic, deadly and, in many cases, unlawful “immigration enforcement surge” in Minnesota is ending.

Today’s announcement that the ICE surge in Minnesota is coming to an end feels . . . complicated.

I’ve imagined this day for months, wondering what it would feel like. Relief? Happiness? Anger? Sadness?

The truth is – it’s all of it at once.

What has happened here in Minnesota – whether it was the “right” way or not – will be debated for a long time. But what I hope doesn't get lost in that debate are the people whose lives were upended along the way.

And that’s where my heart is today.

The members of our immigrant communities who have taken all the right steps to be here lawfully have carried themselves with extraordinary resilience and courage through so much fear and uncertainty. They’re our neighbors, our coworkers, our classmates, our friends, and our small‑business owners that poured everything into the American dream only to suffer through this moment. So many have built beautiful lives here – lives that matter deeply - and they stayed strong even when everything around them felt unsteady.

Please continue to support and honor their humanity, their courage and their strength.

As for me – if I’m honest . . . even with today’s news, I don’t know if I’m ready to stop carrying my passport yet. Do I feel safe? Not quite. That hyper‑vigilance doesn’t turn off overnight. It comes from months of watching people who look like me – my family, my community – being questioned, profiled, and targeted. These are habits born out of survival.

I hope that one day soon, I will feel safe again. I hope there comes a time when I don’t think twice about leaving my passport at home. I hope I can feel like a Minnesotan and an American again – fully, confidently, and without feeling like I’m “other.”

And I truly believe that day will come.

Pauleen Le
via social media
February 12, 2026


A quick response to the script being read by Tom Homan, Tim Walz, Jacob Frey, and all of the politicians on the so-called end of “Metro Surge.”

The blood on the street is scarcely dry when Walz and Homan made this grand announcement with the prescription that communities end their direct protection of our neighbors in the street. It is made days prior to the Democratic Party voting on DHS funding, most certainly so they can have a talking point to vote to fund ICE and DHS.

The meetings between the Minnesota Democratic Party (or DFL as its known here) were closed to all community members and essential workers. We have no idea what was agreed to, nor who was present in the meetings.

Every level of Minnesota government and policing has been cooperating with ICE actions and abductions. The Minneapolis Police Department arrested community members in our defense actions. The Hennepin County Sheriff has been protecting the federal detention center from protesters as has the Minnesota State Police. All of this while ICE has been collecting data on our community members for their, “Domestic Terrorist,” database.

Not a single Democratic politician is saying a word about the $70 billion budget of ICE and the purchasing of warehouses all over the country for mass detention.

As far as I can tell, some community members are hopeful of the announcement, which is a intention driven by the scale of violence and oppression we have all experienced. No one has forgotten or will ever forget the titanic levels of organizing, resistance and bravery shown by the people here in defending vulnerable communities.

Personally, I see no reason to believe anything is ending here except the last remaining and desperate threads of legitimacy of the politicians and their stooges. “It’s the pattern of an abuser,” a local RN said. “They beat you and then apologize before returning to the violence.”

Cliff Willmeng
via social media
February 12, 2026


ICE agents finally getting out of Minnesota is only the beginning of restoring the rights and livelihoods of people harmed by this invasion. Far too many Minnesotans were unlawfully detained, assaulted, harassed or imprisoned by these masked, unaccountable agents.

In my district, two of us, Renée Good and Alex Pretti, were killed. Minnesota is proud of them, and of other community members for standing up to Donald Trump’s police state by bearing witness to their crimes and protecting neighbors with time, donations and resources. The effect of ICE chaos in the streets, combined with missing and terrorized people, on schools, hospitals and small businesses has been devastating.

Next, we need real accountability for the perpetrators and the leaders that sent them here, and help for the Minnesotans they harmed. That means honest investigations into violent crimes committed by ICE agents, passing legislation to empower Minnesotans to sue the agents and agency that wronged them, and reinvesting in communities to stabilize small businesses, household budgets and neighborhoods traumatized by this lawless invasion.

Sen. Omar Fateh
via social media
February 12, 2026


ICE turned Minnesota’s suburbs into a militarized dragnet near schools and everyday errands, and now Trump’s “border czar” Tom Homan is claiming the surge is “ending” after weeks of masked agents, unmarked vehicles, and families being driven into hiding.

This is the part that should scare the hell out of everyone, not just “immigration people” in the city: the crackdown did not stay in Minneapolis. It metastasized into the places where kids catch the bus, where people buy gas, where you grab Burger King, where school administrators are supposed to be thinking about lesson plans instead of tracking federal agents like it’s a war zone.

A superintendent in Fridley (from a north Minneapolis suburb) says she’s literally spending school days driving between buildings to monitor agent activity, and described how “masked men with huge weapons in unmarked vehicles” has become a normalized sight.

Then she drops the line that should end this conversation forever: “Five-year-olds should not be able to recognize ICE agents.”

It gets worse. After she spoke publicly and the district filed a lawsuit over activity in or near schools, she says agents followed her and members of the school board. That is intimidation, full stop.

And because this is happening in suburbs with mixed politics, the response isn’t always a big public protest. People are being forced underground. An immigrant-led org in an outer suburb has locked its doors, removed its contact info, switched to third-party donations, and its co-founder has been in hiding while keeping their child away for safety.

Read that again. In America, in 2026, community groups are operating like they’re in an occupied state.

Meanwhile, the human fallout is exactly what you’d expect from a fear-based policing campaign: soaring absenteeism at schools, church attendance collapsing, families too terrified to leave home, and mutual aid networks delivering food and even rent help because people are afraid that one trip outside could end with a loved one disappearing into detention.

So when officials say “the surge is ending,” here’s the question: ending into what? Because the damage is already done. Trust has been shattered, communities terrorized. And a new baseline established where federal agents can hover around schools and neighborhoods and call it “enforcement.”

If you want something concrete to do: get trained with local rapid response groups, donate to immigrant mutual aid, and share basic “know your rights” materials (like ILRC’s Red Cards and NILC guidance) so families have tools, not just fear.

The Other 98%
via social media
February 12, 2026


He never said it exactly, but way back when it was dawning on Americans that pouring blood and treasure into Vietnam – to blunt “yellow peril” – wasn’t looking like a quick and easy win, Vermont Sen. George Aiken gave a speech. He suggested the way for the White House and country to save face over the burgeoning disaster was actually pretty simple: Just declare victory and leave.

So it is this morning with Tom “The Bag Man” Homan telling reporters that Operation Metro Terror has been an enormous success and that he’s going to move on. According to Homan, it’s been successful, we assume, because the worst of the worst have been taken off the streets and local police are finally being so cooperative. (There’s no proof of either.)

With that said, (but not done), Trump 2.0 can proudly pack up its thousands of ill-trained mall cops and all their testosterone-boosting GI Joe gear and move on to terrorize someplace else.

Obviously, since this is coming from a Trump administration tool, not to mention a guy so dim he took – on camera – $50,000 in a bag from undercover FBI agents to grease the skids for federal contracts with the soon-to-be-reelected Trump kleptocracy, there’s no reason to believe a word of it. At least not until every last masked, camo-clad goon has scuttled off under a new rock.

Homan, very likely reading from a script from Stephen Miller edited by Russ Vought, can say whatever he pleases with impunity. But out here in the reality-based world where servitude to a demented reality TV host isn’t Job #1, we can already assess the spectacular failure of Trump’s attack on Minneapolis (and elsewhere in Minnesota).

ICE has succeeded in terrorizing thousands of people guilty – at most – of misdemeanor-level civil infractions. It accomplished this while murdering two people lawfully protesting its campaign of morbidly telegenic lawlessness. But ... but ... they have failed to defeat, much less dispirit, a city/state smart enough and brave enough to spontaneously rise up, organize and fight back.

So much for victory.

The tipping point for ICE’s failure here was the murder of Renee Good and the instantaneous international reaction to it, followed by cratering polls for the Vought/Miller/Trump strategy of militarized thuggery. Prior to Good's murder Team Trump clearly believed they had achieved a level of imperial control allowing them to get away with anything. They felt they had the court system, enough media and a craven Congress deep enough in their pockets to get away with a brutish spectacle of authoritarian rampage.

Minnesota, Minneapolis in particular, has proven them wrong.

Thousands of utterly ordinary, uh “unpaid”, citizens turned out, day after day, in a mid-winter deep freeze to protest and vilify the thugs and support the victimized.

Those citizens showed their faces.

They turned out despite White House assertions of “absolute immunity” for ICE to kill whoever they pleased for whatever reason they pleased, including being "disrespectful". They were otherwise average citizens confronting and hurling righteous vulgarities on masked goons breaking more laws in a day than a short order fry cook could in lifetime. In the process, they risked their own assault by Donald Trump’s out-of-control, demonstrably homicidal insta-cops.

Simultaneously, away from the Tik Tok front line confrontations, there’s been the truly stunning, overnight, pop-up creation of an enormous infrastructure for acquiring and distributing food and home supplies for ICE’s victims. A process that sometimes requires volunteer drivers to destroy the address in case ICE might pull them over and stick a nozzle of pepper spray up their nose for, you know, aiding and abetting serial killing rapists.

Add to that collections for rent money for housekeepers, construction workers, nursing home staff and on and on, too terrified to leave their homes for work. All of this springing up and coordinating on a scale no one could have imagined two months ago.

So yeah, out here in the reality bubble, everything about the Minnesota response to this historic siege is a profound failure . . . for Homan, ICE, “weird Stephen,” and The Mad Orange Crypto King.

This episode will not be forgotten. Certainly not by whatever community suffers next.

Not that any Trump lickspittle will ever concede the failure they’ve inflicted on themselves.

With that in mind, we should be prepared for a couple things, knowing what we know about how Trump 2.0 operates.

One, Homan is lying in quantity. ICE goons killing American citizens in front of 50 cellphone cameras, vandalizing private property and flying five year-olds to Texas is too high profile to completely disguise. But let’s not be naive. The White House’s Stasi-like intimidation will not/can not diminish entirely.

In Trump’s mind, he only wins. Roy Cohn taught him well. Even when losing spectacularly, like bankrupting casinos, he’ll declare every imbecilic disaster a stunning success, a view immediately echoed by his media supplicants. Fewer strutting ICE thugs doesn’t mean fewer screws turning on local blue state bureaucrats and their agencies. In fact with a meme that Trump has “lost” in Minnesota those screws will get twisted even harder.

Two, armed with $75 billion, the “siege of Minneapolis” will be re-directed and inflicted on someone else. That kind of money has to go somewhere, and it sure as hell won’t be into Obamacare subsidies. Public disapproval of what ICE has done here be damned. And never mind fear-struck Republican incumbents pleading with Miller to tone things down at least until after the November elections.

Like the U.S. in Vietnam, Team Trump is in this until the last chopper off the roof.

Brian Lambert
via social media
February 12, 2026


Tom Homan confirmed that Operation Metro Surge has ended and most activities by U.S. Gestapo in Minnesota are being withdrawn.

To everyone who stood tall, protested, organized, and refused to be intimidated – your courage mattered.

We also honor the lives of Renée Good and Alex Pretti. Their names must not be forgotten.

Justice requires memory. And Minnesota did not stay silent.

Tony Pentimalli
via social media
February 12, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
“Border Czar” Tom Homan Says Immigration Operation in Minnesota Will End Soon – Katelyn Vue (Sahan Journal, February 12, 2026).
“Not an Anomaly . . . A Blueprint”: Homan Says Minnesota ICE Surge Ending – But Mass Deportations Aren’t – Jessica Corbett (Common Dreams, February 12, 2026).
Yet Another Case of ICE Agents – and DHS Officials – Lying About Shooting Incident Emerges – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, February 12, 2026).
Charges Dropped Against Men Accused of Attacking ICE Officer – Matt Sepic (MPR News, February 12, 2026).
Twin Cities Health Care Workers Describe “Fear” and “Intimidation” Due to ICE in Hospitals – Erica Zurek (MPR News, February 11, 2026).
The People of Minneapolis Will Simply Not Let the ICE Thugs Prevail – Dan Simmons (The New Republic, February 5, 2026).
Anti-ICE Organizing Is Creating Counter-Institutions Based on Care – Rashida James-Saadiya (Truthout, February 4, 2026).
“Backing Down Isn’t an Option”: Minnesota ICE Shootings Mobilize Americans to Join ICE Observer Groups – Lex McMenamin (The Guardian, January 31, 2026).
Letter From Minnesota: Details From an Occupation – Angela Pelster (Literary Hub, January 29, 2026).
Meet the Minneapolis Parents Patrolling Their Schools Amid ICE Operations – Elizabeth Shockman (MPR News, January 16, 2026).
The Women Holding Minneapolis Together – Anna Moeslein Glamor, January 7, 2026).

UPDATES: What Minnesota Really Thinks of the End of Trump’s ICE Surge – Jennifer Bendery (The Huffington Post, February 13, 2026).
What We Can Learn From Minneapolis’ Model of Resistance – Gabriel Furshong (Common Dreams, February 13, 2026).
The Rise of the Rebel Loon LogosThe Nerd of The Rings (February 13, 2026).
‘Time to Speak Up’: In Columbia Heights, School Leaders Stepped in to Protect Families as ICE Surged – Elizabeth Shockman (MPR News, February 13, 2026).
Mayor Jacob Frey Calls on Feds and State to Help Pay ICE Surge Costs in MinneapolisMPR News (February 13, 2026).
White House Official Says Hundreds of Federal Agents Are Leaving Minnesota, “Small” Security Force Will Remain for a Time – The Associated Press and MPR News (February 15, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts on the resistance to the Trump regime’s fascist occupation of Minnesota:
Omar Fateh: Quote of the Day – December 4, 2025
Photo of the Day – December 5, 2025
Susie Hayward on What’s Happening in Minneapolis
Doing What We Can to Stop Unjust Arrests of Immigrants
Great Event, Great Sign, Great Nails
Christmas Eve Musings
May We Do Likewise
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like” – January 7, 2026
“It Was Murder”: 12 Powerful Responses to the Death of Renée Nicole Good
Omar Fateh: “Folks Are Waking Up”
A Good Faith Appeal and a Grim Response
Why Minnesota?
Chris Hedges on ICE: “I Have Seen These Masked Goons Before”
Steven Donziger: “Let’s Get Real . . . ICE Is a Domestic Terrorist Organization”
Historian Kyle Dekker: “It’s Not Nazi Ideology We Are Fighting. It’s American”
Knowing Our Rights
Mike Figueredo on Why Trump Might Be Pushing the U.S. to the Brink of Collapse
A “Red Alert Moment for American Democracy”
Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
Marianne Williamson on How to Psychologically Endure This Moment
What Moral Clarity Looks Like in Minnesota This MLK Day
Nemik’s Eulogy for Renée Nicole Good
“It Was Never About Keeping America Safe”
“ICE Out!”: The Minnesota General Strike – 1/23/26
“This Was a Flat Out Execution”
“Organized Sustained Systemic Resistance and Self-Defense Are Our Only Options”
Honoring Alex Pretti
George Conway: The Trump Administration Is a “Criminal Organization”
In the Face of Fascist Lies, MN Governor Tim Walz Sets the Record Straight
Adam Serwer on How “Every Social Theory Undergirding Trumpism Has Been Broken on the Steel of Minnesotan Resolve”
“Trump Is Scared Shitless”
“They Were Alive. Then They Were Not”
Bruce Springsteen and the Streets of Minneapolis in the Winter of ’26
Craig Mokhiber on the “Imperial Boomerang”: How U.S. War Tactics Abroad Are Now Used at Home
January Vignettes (2026)
Honoring Renée Good and the “Astonishing Surge of Courage” of Minneapolis
A Luminous Celebration of Light, Love and Community
More Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
Memes of the Times – February 2026


Image 1: Steve Sack.
Image 2: Federal immigration agents walk down the street after deploying tear gas on civilians around Nicollet Avenue and W. 26th Street in Minneapolis on January 24, 2026. (Photo: Aaron Nesheim / Sahan Journal)
Image 3: A citizen stands along a chain-link fence holding a sign reading “No ICE, Resist Fascism” outside the Whipple Federal Building on February 7 in Minneapolis. (Photo: Kerem Yücel / MPR News)
Image 4: Militarized federal agents in Minneapolis – January 2026. (Photographer unknown)
Image 5: Concerned citizens gather at the gate of the Whipple Federal building where ICE agents are stationed in Minneapolis on January 15, 2026. (Photo: Dymanh Chhoun / Sahan Journal)
Image 6: The Indigenous prayer camp set up near both Fort Snelling and the Whipple Federal building in Minneapolis – February 11, 2026. Writes Derek James of CBS News Minnesota:

Fort Snelling and the Whipple Federal Building were built on Bdóte, a sacred site for the Dakota and other tribes at the confluence of the Mississippi and Minnesota rivers. It is also the site where the United States government killed hundreds of Dakota people and imprisoned more than 1,600 in the mid-1800s.

Now, a camp with tipis and a prayer fire stands across from the Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention center in the Whipple building, with a focus on families and neighbors impacted by immigration enforcement.

“I’m praying for my people to wake up, I’m praying for my people to speak up, to cast aside the things that have held us back and clean up our families,” said Allen Michael Owen. “I’m praying for our people to be good relatives, to remember who we are, and I’m praying that our people can help people all across the world remember who they are.”

Owen, a Dakota descendent, says the fear and family separation happening now hits close to home.

“It’s horrible, not only on a conscious level for my neighbors, but on a personal level, and what it does to my family and their perception of my safety,” he said.

Owen says what’s happening today echoes generations of trauma for Indigenous people, but he believes prayer is action.

“We’re not going to tolerate our homes being invaded as Dakota people. We’re not going to tolerate this occupation any longer, or silently,” Owen said. “And so I think the humanity has come from not tolerating violence to our neighbors anymore, and that’s what we’re all here for.”

And this group says they’ll remain to raise awareness of the government brutality happening again on this land.

“As an akicita, I’m going to stay here as long as my people need me here,” Owen said.

Organizers say the prayer camp is open to the public and operates on traditional Indigenous customs, with decisions made by consensus.

They say supporters have been dropping off firewood and other supplies daily.


Image 7: Michael J. Bayly – Minneapolis, January 27, 2026.


Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Thoughts on Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl Halftime Show


Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl half-time show was one big love letter to his native Puerto Rico, culminating in a message of pride in his home and the Americas, and an appeal for unity with the U.S.

. . . The 31-year-old, who was the world’s most-played artist in 2025 according to Spotify, made history by becoming the first musician to perform entirely in Spanish at a Super Bowl, which is normally the most-watched event on U.S. TV. He did choose to say one line in English, “God bless America,” before listing nations of Central, South and North America as dancers carried their flags. Behind them, a billboard message read "The only thing more powerful than hate is love," and he held a football at the end of the segment bearing the slogan in English: “Together, We Are America.”

. . . Bad Bunny’s performance in Santa Clara, California, marked the first time the singer and rapper had performed in the United States - except for shows in Puerto Rico - since releasing last year’s Grammy Award-winning album Debí Tirar Más Fotos (I Should Have Taken More Photos).

Puerto Rico, which is a self-governing territory of the U.S.A., was at the heart of everything in this performance, from his early emergence from a sugarcane field to a set that was meant to represent the sounds and sights of the place he calls home.

Transporting himself through a Latin landscape, with set pieces that included everything from a nail salon to a bar, the Grammy award winner reeled off a medley of his biggest hits, including “Tití Me Preguntó,” “MONACO” and “BAILE INoLVIDABLE.”

Bad Bunny ended his performance by shouting “God Bless America” and naming multiple countries and territories, including Puerto Rico and the U.S., with those two flags carried behind him side-by-side.

Sunday’s show represented the best of Latin culture on the sporting world’s biggest stage.

Annabel Rackham
Excerpted from “Bad Bunny Makes History
as Trump Criticises 'Terrible' Super Bowl Show

BBC News
February 8, 2026



Bad Bunny didn’t just break the Internet and viewership records; he broke MAGA in a way that is deeply personal, and they hate him for it.

But they don’t hate him because he doesn’t sing in English, or because he’s been critical of the masked thugs they beat immigrants vicariously through, or because his pigmentation is problematic – at least those aren’t the primary reasons.

MAGAers hate Bad Bunny because he is a symbol of their greatest fears coming to life: a nation that is outgrowing them, a culture that is evolving past them, a war against progress that they know they’re losing.

They despise him because, over the course of a thirteen-minute halftime show that they swore they wouldn’t watch but couldn’t look away from, they were forced to see what’s happening outside of the insular, white nationalist echo chamber they spend their lives in, and it terrified them.

John Pavlovitz
Excerpted from “MAGA Americans Have a Bunny
Living Rent-Free in Their Heads

The Beautiful Mess
February 11, 2026



The MAGA efforts to degrade Bad Bunny have backfired horribly; instead, they've been fueling a global wave of support that has solidified his status as a cultural supernova.

Opponents attempted to weaponize his fluidity, using AI-generated imagery to frame his embrace of femininity as something sinister or "demonic." They tried to transform his expression into a source of fear, but the public saw through that distortion shit.

Instead of alienating his audience, these attacks highlighted the very qualities that make him resonate: his refusal to be shamed and his commitment to harmony and diversity. People feel the sincerity in his journey. He remains the former grocery bagger turned global visionary, curating a space of love and defiance that a manufactured smear campaign simply cannot touch.

Ebony Ava Harper
via social media
February 11, 2026







The most popular act in music – the 31-year-old Puerto Rican pop king Bad Bunny – took viewers on a journey through sugarcane breaks and coco frio stands, past tíos playing dominos and a few diablonas perfecting their acrylics. Guest appearances included Ricky Martin, Jessica Alba, Lady Gaga, Pedro Pascal, Ronald Acuna Jr., and Cardi B. There was also a digitized sapo concho, the Puerto Rican crested toad.

An actual wedding ensued. Bad Bunny handed a Grammy award to a young boy who may have been a stand-in for his childhood self. A few lyrics rued the fate of the world’s oldest colony: that it might be further exploited, further degraded. Most of the rest were chiefly concerned with – and wholly successful at – eliciting gyration. The parting message was “God bless America,” which followed “The only thing more powerful than hate is love” and “Together, we are America.” The country and continents did not divide. The world did not end. There was not even a squall of brimfire.

If you’d indulged in any of the fuss coming out of the Trump-industrial complex, pre- or post-performance, you’d have thought that Che Guevara was headlining the intermission.

. . . That the most consumed artist of the decade, fresh off 15 top-10 hits and a Grammy win for Album of the Year, has become the latest focal point of the culture war is both a farce and wholly unsurprising. Despite his relatively nondescript, lower-middle-class origins (he grew up in the Almirante Sur barrio of Vega Baja; his father was a truck driver, his mother an English teacher), Bad Bunny has specialized in challenging conventions, audiences, hierarchies across his public life. . . . The tone of Bad Bunny’s music vacillates between observational, romantic, and braggadocious, but it is almost never preacherly.

This is not to say that it is not expressly political: He’s repeatedly voiced opposition to U.S. statehood for Puerto Rico, trashed the territorial bureaucracy that has allowed rounds of energy blackouts on the island, spoken out in support of the Puerto Rican transgender community, and toyed with sexual and gender norms on- and offstage. During the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, he called out Trump directly, writing, “F–K DONALD TRUMP! PRESIDENTE DEL RACISMO” in a statement to Time. He [also] voiced his objection to Trump’s mishandling of recovery efforts after Hurricane Maria ravaged the island.

Lex Pryor
Excerpted from “The All-American Legacy
of Bad Bunny’s Halftime Show

The Ringer
February 9, 2026




Bad Bunny’s official half-time show . . . was joyous and complex, intimate and historical, and it managed to do all of that all at once. It felt like a celebration of life, and you didn’t need to follow the words, because you just needed to feel the beat. (Asked if people must know Spanish to appreciate this show, Bad Bunny said: “It’s better they learn to dance. There’s no better dance than the one that comes from the heart.”) The performance concluded with a big banner that read “The only thing more powerful than hate is love” and with Bad Bunny holding a football (the U.S.A. kind) with text that read: “Together, we are America.”

That American conservatives saw that last line as “subversive” shows you the depths of the problem we face in this country. While some of us realize that we have and even like our neighbors, others seem to think we live, or should live, in a hermetically sealed-off land.

Moustafa Bayoumi
Excerpted from “Why Has MAGA
Lost Its Mind Over Bad Bunny?

The Guardian
February 11, 2026



This is the choice in front of us. You can accept Trump’s America, the America that governs through sieges, blockades, sanctions, and humiliation, deciding from afar who may rule, who may eat, and who must be punished into submission. Or you can stand with Nuestra América, the America José Martí and Simón Bolívar imagined, and that Bad Bunny echoed when he held up a football, reading “Together we are America.” This is an America that refuses domination, that believes no nation is a backyard, and that insists the future of this hemisphere belongs to its peoples, not to an empire. There is no neutral ground between those two Americas.

This is why the moment demands more than applause. It demands that we look past the spectacle and confront the systems that decide who gets to thrive and who is forced to flee. A real Good Neighbor Policy would respect sovereignty, stop weaponizing hunger and instability, and recognize that dignity does not end at the U.S. border. Bad Bunny reminded millions of people of connection, of shared humanity, of a hemisphere bound together by history and responsibility. What comes next is on us. If those 13 minutes meant anything, they must move us toward demanding a foreign policy that treats our neighbors as equals. Because in the end, the message is simple and uncompromising: The only thing more powerful than hate is love.

Michelle Ellner
Excerpted from “Bad Bunny, Good Neighbor
Common Dreams
February 11, 2026




Related Off-site Links:
Bad Bunny Super Bowl Halftime Show Symbolism DecodedTeflon Tv (February 10, 2026).
Bad Bunny’s Nuestra América – Diego von Vacano (Buenos Aires Herald, February 9, 2026).
Bad Bunny’s Superbowl Halftime Show ExplainedMattyBallz (February 9, 2026).
In Times of Turmoil, Bad Bunny Chose Love with the Halftime Show – Olivia Flanz (Berkeley Beacon, February 11, 2026).
Bad Bunny Sets Super Bowl Record While MAGA’s Halftime Implodes – David Doel (The Rational National, February 9, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
John Pavlovitz: Quote of the Day – February 3, 2026
Michael Jochum on Bad Bunny and the “Great American Meltdown”
John Pavlovitz: Quote of the Day – September 30, 2025