Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Quote of the Day

Above (from left): Bad Bunny, who will perform this weekend’s Super Bowl halftime show; Kid Rock, who will headline Turning Point USA’s alternative “All American” Super Bowl halftime show; and Erika Kirk, widow of Turning Point founder Charlie Kirk and current CEO of the conservative youth group.


The Turning Point USA “All-American” Super Bowl Halftime Show, like every venture in the MAGA/Trump ecosystem, is a grim, sinister, mean-spirited fight against progress, evolution, and diversity disguised as sincere virtue.

The fact that the Right feels compelled to create an “alternative” to Bad Bunny’s Super Bowl appearance speaks eloquently about their desire to secede from a culturally and racially diverse nation, how committed they are to perpetuating the myth of oppressed white Christians, and how determined they are to manipulate every event into a racist holy war in order to keep their hateful rank-and-file foaming at the mouth.

Turning Point USA spokesman Andrew Kolvet said in a statement that the show “is an opportunity for all Americans to enjoy a halftime show with no agenda other than to celebrate faith, family, and freedom.”

But whose faith are they celebrating?

Not the spiritual beliefs of Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, Sikhs, Unitarians, or non-MAGA Evangelical Christians.

Whose families are they talking about?

Not Latino families, or black families, or immigrant families, or LGBTQ families, that’s for damn sure.

And exactly whose freedom will take center stage on Sunday?

Not the people with brown skin being relentlessly terrorized by ICE, not the thousands of sexual assault survivors brutalized by Jeffrey Epstein and his collaborators, not the tens of millions of women who deserve autonomy over their own bodies, and not the migrants and refugees being persecuted by these cosplaying Christians.

Trump and his supporters don’t want an alternative halftime show; they want an alternative white, gated community nation where only they benefit.

In these days, we are in a brutal battle for an America where everyone will find opportunity, safety, and welcome.

It’s time we all got in the game.

John Pavlovitz
Excerpted from “Bad Bunny, Kid Rock,
and MAGA's Super Bowl of Racism

The Beautiful Mess
February 3, 2026


Related Off-site Links:
Bad Bunny’s Historic Grammy Win Delivers a Powerful Message to Trump’s Divided America – Kevin E G Perry (The Independent, February 2, 2026).
Bad Bunny and Billie Eilish Among Celebrities Criticizing ICE at Grammys – Rebecca Cohen and Nicole Acevedo (NBC News, February 1, 2026).
Why Bad Bunny Won’t Get Paid for the Super Bowl Halftime Show – Matt Craig (Forbes, January 30, 2026).


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


Monday, February 02, 2026

Michael Jochum on Bad Bunny and “the Great American Meltdown”


I didn’t know much about Bad Bunny until recently. I’m old, I’m tired, and the Grammys tend to feel like a corporate hostage situation. But credit where it’s due: the man is a gentleman, an artist with spine, and, most importantly, someone who understands that silence in the face of cruelty is complicity. His unapologetic stance against ICE’s lawless deportations and the casual erasure of due process matters. A lot.

So the fact that Bad Bunny has been chosen to perform the Super Bowl halftime show feels less like a booking decision and more like a cultural stress test. And judging by the early howling from the usual corners, the test is already breaking them.

If there’s any justice left in this country, poetic, karmic, divine, take your pick, I sincerely hope Bad Bunny struts onto that halftime stage in a full-length gown that sends conservative group chats into cardiac arrest. I hope he waves the Puerto Rican flag like it’s the Second Coming, refuses to utter a single damn word of English, not even a polite “hi,” and delivers fifteen minutes of pure, unbothered Spanish.

No apologies. No subtitles. Just rhythm, defiance, and cultural truth.

And I hope Fox News spontaneously combusts in real time.

Because nothing terrifies self-styled “patriots” more than a brown man who is wildly successful, beautifully androgynous, politically awake, and utterly uninterested in kissing the ring. The MAGA cult doesn’t hate him because of his music. They hate him because he exists on his own terms. Autonomy is the real threat. They worship “freedom” until someone else exercises it, whether that’s freedom of expression, freedom of religion, or the radical freedom to speak in a language they don’t control.

They’re already sharpening the knives. Spanish lyrics are suddenly “divisive.” Gender-fluid fashion is somehow a national emergency. And, as always, someone inevitably questions his legal status, as if Puerto Ricans haven’t been U.S. citizens for more than a century. Facts, of course, are optional accessories in the MAGA wardrobe.

Bad Bunny’s activism is what really rattles them. He’s been outspoken about ICE brutality, deportations without due process, and the casual cruelty inflicted on immigrant communities. He doesn’t wrap it in euphemisms or patriotic cosplay. He says what he means, and he means it. That kind of clarity is dangerous in a culture built on denial.

And yes, right on cue, Kristi Noem, the patron saint of cruelty and dead dogs, has reportedly floated the idea of an ICE “presence” at the Super Bowl. Because nothing says “land of the free” like threatening brown fans at a football game. Her translation of “law-abiding Americans” remains unchanged: white, obedient, and grateful for the boot.

Trump, meanwhile, is said to be “not weighing in,” which is MAGA-speak for sulking somewhere, hoarding ketchup packets, and counting how many times his name comes up. The man who spent years calling the NFL unpatriotic now gets to watch a Puerto Rican global icon command the world’s attention without asking his permission.

Karma is nothing if not efficient.

This was never about music. It’s about control, over culture, bodies, language, and who gets to claim Americanness. They don’t love this country; they want to own it, the way a bored child clutches a toy they no longer enjoy but refuse to share.

I hope Bad Bunny walks onto that field like a living act of resistance. I hope he sings every note in Spanish, waves that flag high, and gives not one inch to the people who mistake cruelty for strength and ignorance for virtue.

Let Fox News hosts rupture blood vessels trying to translate his lyrics. Let ICE threats ring hollow. Let Trump stew in silence, wondering how a kid from Vega Baja managed to capture the world without ever bowing.

Bad Bunny doesn’t need their approval. He already has something they’ll never understand: authenticity. Truth without permission. Power without cruelty.

And in a country that worships domination and punishes conscience, someone who refuses to bow is the most dangerous thing of all.

And the most necessary.

Michael Jochum
Bad Bunny and the Great American Meltdown
via social media
February 1, 2026







Related Off-site Links:
Bad Bunny Wins Grammy for Album of the Year – Isabella Gomez Sarmiento (NPR News, February 1, 2026).
Bad Bunny and Billie Eilish Among Celebrities Criticizing ICE at Grammys – Rebecca Cohen and Nicole Acevedo (NBC News, February 1, 2026).
Bad Bunny’s Historic Grammy Win Delivers a Powerful Message to Trump’s Divided America – Kevin E G Perry (The Independent, February 2, 2026).

See also the previous Wild Reed post:
John Pavlovitz: Quote of the Day – September 30, 2025


Sunday, February 01, 2026

Honoring Renée Good and the “Astonishing Surge of Courage” of Minneapolis


Earlier today on this snowy first day of February I visited the people’s memorial for Renée Good, the legal observer and mother of three who was shot to death by ICE agent Jonathan Ross just over three weeks ago in Minneapolis. Renee was the first of two U.S. citizens to have been killed by federal agents. The second was Alex Pretti. Their deaths took place during the Trump regime’s ongoing “immigration crackdown” in Minnesota, an operation that started in early December last year.

The pictures I share this evening of my visit to this sacred ground are accompanied by excerpts from Jacobin’s Eric Blanc’s recent interview with Aru Shiney-Ajay, executive director of the Twin Cities Sunrise Movement. Blanc’s interview is titled “Minneapolis Is Going on the Offensive Against ICE.”

Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and the Border Patrol’s terror campaign in Minnesota has taken the lives of Renée Good and Alex Pretti and led to the abduction of five-year-old Liam Conejo Ramos, among countless others. Minneapolis has answered with an astonishing surge of courage. Neighborhood Signal chats and daily community-watch patrols have turned sidewalks into lines of mutual aid and defense, while the January 23 statewide general strike proved a willingness on the part of residents to stop business as usual in defiance of ICE’s violent repression.

The Twin Cities Sunrise Movement has pushed the resistance onto offense, targeting the Hilton hotels that quietly house ICE agents. This campaign has led to an impressive string of local victories, including getting a local Hilton to refuse service to ICE, sparking outrage from the Department of Homeland Security and the subsequent capitulation of Hilton nationally to the administration.

Jacobin’s Eric Blanc spoke with Aru Shiney-Ajay, Sunrise Movement’s executive director and a lifelong Minneapolis resident, about Minneapolis’s organizing pushback and how ICE’s opponents can go on the offensive nationwide by pressuring companies like Hilton, Enterprise, and Home Depot to stop collaborating with the agency.


Eric Blanc: What has it felt like to be a Minneapolis resident and organizer these past two months?

Aru Shiney-Ajay: It feels like living in a war zone. I was really reluctant to say that at first, but every few hours I get a Signal message about ICE – usually within walking distance of me. Two weeks ago, I had a friend who had a gun pointed at their head by ICE agents, and I have friends who’ve been dragged out of their cars and detained. It feels like you’re walking around and at any moment you could be grabbed and kidnapped. It’s come to a point where something as simple as recording an interaction with ICE can be met by being shot, which is a really different level of fear to carry around.

At the same time, it’s also the most organized community I’ve ever experienced anywhere. We’ve hit a density in Minneapolis where over 4 percent of every single neighborhood is in a Signal chat at the neighborhood level – and it might be higher, because those are just the Signal chats we’re centrally tracking. In St Paul, there’s a neighborhood called Frogtown. It’s heavily Hmong. Every day, we create a rapid response Signal chat for people actively patrolling in Frogtown, and every day by 11 a.m., that chat hits its limit of a thousand people – which is to say that, at any given moment in one neighborhood, there are a thousand people out patrolling.



Eric Blanc: Can you speak more about the sense of community that has emerged?

Aru Shiney-Ajay: I feel more from Minnesota than I’ve ever felt. And I’ve grown up here. But now I know as I’m walking down the street that I have hundreds of people who will swarm to help me if needed, and that I will swarm to help them.

There are these intense protest moments – like the number of times you pick someone up after they’ve been tear-gassed and use snow to wipe the tear gas from their face. But there’s also this everyday feeling of solidarity, because everyone is walking around with whistles. If you hear a whistle, suddenly people start swarming toward you. I’ve never felt so backed up. It feels like we’re all on a giant team together as a city. It’s incredible.

It’s like building a muscle of solidarity across race, across class. It’s something the Left talks about a lot, but I’ve never experienced it like this. And it’s truly ordinary people – it’s not majority organizers or activists. It’s people who’ve never organized a day in their lives but know something wrong is happening and want to do something.


Eric Blanc: Can you speak more about the fear and how people have overcome it?

Aru Shiney-Ajay: Part of it is that it starts really small, and then the small things become more risky, and you don’t want to give them up. Standing and recording with a phone was what we were first training everyone to do. Monarca Unidos, an immigrants group here, trained something like 24,000 people on legal observer roles: standing and recording with a phone.

Everyone was prepared to do that, and then that became risky. But it was an identity people had taken up – “I can stand here and record with a phone” – and people didn’t want to back away from that.

Another example is that delivering groceries to undocumented people who can’t risk going outside was floated as a low-risk thing you could do. But in the last week, ICE agents have started following around white people carrying grocery bags, because they think that will lead them to undocumented people.

So now the people delivering groceries – which, again, is a very low-risk thing – have been trained to know that in case ICE grabs them, they should never write the list of addresses down digitally. You write it on a physical piece of paper, and if ICE grabs you, you eat the piece of paper.

That type of thing is motivating courage right now. What we’re doing is very basic: it’s giving people food and walking around recording on our cell phone. And when you’re not allowed to do that – when that becomes high-risk – there’s a sense of, my basic rights are being violated.

Obviously it’s harder to go and directly confront an ICE agent. That’s high-risk. But delivering groceries shouldn’t be high-risk. It violates people’s sense of dignity and basic rights, and that’s what creates courage.


Eric Blanc: Can you speak more about your strategy of going on the offensive? Because a lot of people right now are trying to figure out how we can stop ICE. And what we’ve seen, beyond the important local defense and know-your-rights work, is mostly a lot of one-off protests or vague calls online to boycott companies. What you’re doing seems different.

Aru Shiney-Ajay: I think about it as leverage and power: looking everywhere ordinary people have leverage and seeing where we can pull those levers.

Under a functioning democracy, you play the game of public opinion. If you convince the majority, then you can get legislation or win an election. But what we’re living under right now is not a democracy. In many ways, the feedback loop from public opinion to outcomes has been broken for a long time. It’s broken because of money in politics, because of the setup of our Senate, because of gerrymandering. And now they might just try to steal the election outright.

Public opinion still matters. It’s important that we have majorities on our side. But we’re fooling ourselves if we think public opinion alone will translate into victories, or that the midterms and 2028 will be normal elections.

A lot of establishment advocacy groups seem to be hoping we’ll show America that Trump is really bad, then in the midterms, we’ll take back power – a rerun of 2018 to 2020. I don’t think that’s accurate: just look at what Trump is doing now and how similar it is to how authoritarians in other countries have grabbed power.

So you have to switch from purely persuasion campaigns to the logic of noncooperation. You have to look at the ways ordinary people are directly upholding a regime’s ability to logistically function: where the money flows but also how they eat, how they sleep, who is doing the literal work enabling everything to operate.

Corporations aren’t the only method of looking at that. There are many. Local governments are a piece. But I do think corporations are a really key one, particularly corporations that the public has a lot of access to and influence over.

A lot of the companies collaborating with ICE are shadowy and operating in the background. But there are also companies like hotels – places we all book, sleep at, and spend money at – that we can actually shift, because we have leverage over them. That’s the logic behind corporate campaigning: identifying the places where ordinary people are directly enabling Trump’s regime to function.

When you look at it that way, there are dozens and dozens of little buttons you can start to push. We’ve been brainstorming a lot of other ones, too. For example: ICE agents drive around on the roads – could we get the city government to do construction on the highway entrances in or out of the Whipple Building? Things like that. The question is: What are the concrete ways they’re moving around, and how do you put yourself in the way using every nonviolent lever you have access to?

We zeroed in on hotels because we wanted to pick something that anyone, anywhere can immediately recognize: “There’s a Hilton near me. I could book a reservation and cancel it. I could leave a bad review on Booking.com.” You want to pick campaigns that everyone has power over, because our strength comes from involving large numbers of ordinary people. If it’s just the same activists who have been doing this for years, we can’t win.

. . . Winnability is key. When you’re organizing a population against dictatorship, it’s important to understand what the main emotional barriers are that stand in people’s way. In a lot of countries, that ends up being fear. I look a lot to Otpor in Serbia as an example: they identified fear as the main barrier and said, “What’s the antidote to fear? The antidote to fear is humor. We’re going to be funny in all of our actions so that people aren’t scared.” It was great.

I don’t think the main barrier in the US is fear. It’s skepticism. Most people don’t believe in our ability to change things. So one of the most important things for organizers right now is to pick campaigns that are ambitious, tangible, and winnable – wins that aren’t so small they feel meaningless but are still actually achievable. Because one of the biggest things we need to prove to ordinary people right now is that we really do have power over how the government operates, and over what happens in our society.


To read Eric Blanc’s interview with Aru Shiney-Ajay in its entirety, click here.


Related Off-site Links:
Minneapolis City Councilor Robin Wonsley on Fighting ICE – Trey Cook (Jacobin, February 3, 2026).
“We Have to Keep Showing Up for Each Other”: In Minnesota, Caregiving Is a Form of Resistance – Barbara Rodriguez (The 19th, February 3, 2026).
Minneapolis Is Showing a New Kind of Anti-Trump Resistance – Christian Paz (Vox, February 2, 2026).
“Streets of Minneapolis”: Bruce Springsteen Releases Anthem to Honor Uprising Against ICE – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, January 28, 2026).
Faith Activists Are Praying with Their Feet in Minneapolis – Ariel Gold (Waging Nonviolence, January 28, 2026).
The Nation Nominates Minneapolis for the Nobel Peace PrizeThe Nation (January 28, 2026).
The “Theology of Showing Up” Is Making Minneapolis a Holy Place – Sunita Viswanath (Religion News Service via National Catholic Reporter, January 26, 2026).
Minnesota Proved MAGA Wrong – Adam Serwer (The Atlantic, January 26, 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”
“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)

Images: Michael J. Bayly.


Saturday, January 31, 2026

January Vignettes


See also the previous Wild Reed January 2026 posts:
Into a New Year
Progressive Perspectives on the Trump Regime’s Illegal Attack on Venezuela
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like”
Butch Ware: “We Have the Power to Stop the Flow of Money and the False Legitimacy Upon Which Empire Depends”
“It Was Murder”: 12 Powerful Responses to the Death of Renée Nicole Good
Omar Fateh: “Folks Are Waking Up”
Chris Hedges: “Most Revolutions Succeed Not Through Violence But Through National Strikes”
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”
Maha D. Blackfeather’s Message to the American People: “We’re Finally Seeing the Truth”
A “Red Alert Moment for American Democracy”
Dispatches from Occupied Minnesota
Remembering the Visionary Leadership of Patrice Lumumba
Butch Ware: “People Really Want New Options in Politics”
What Moral Clarity Looks Like in Minnesota This MLK Day
Andre Henry: “So Many of the Freedom Movements in Our History Were Actually Anti-Fascist Movements”
Nemik’s Eulogy for Renée Nicole Good
“It Was Never About Keeping America Safe”
“ICE Out!”: The Minnesota General Strike – 1/23/26
“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”
“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

See also:
January Vignettes (2025)
January Vignettes (2024)
Winter Vignettes
The Light of This New Year’s Day (2023)
Out and About – Winter 2022-2023
Shining On . . . Into the New Year (2022)
Carrying It On . . . Into the New Year (2021)
Out and About – Winter 2020-2021
A Blessing for the New Year (2020)
A Blessing for the New Year (2019)

Images: Michael J. Bayly.


Craig Mokhiber on the “Imperial Boomerang”: How U.S. War Tactics Abroad Are Now Used at Home


In the following interview with the hosts of BreakThrough News, former UN human right’s official Craig Mokhiber explains how repression abroad becomes repression at home – and what it signals about the U.S. state’s posture toward its own population and the tactics used against it.

From labeling protesters “terrorists” to deploying militarized police and ICE as paramilitary forces, these tactics aren’t new. They mirror the same methods the U.S. has used for decades across the Global South — now turned inward.

In making his case, Mokhiber draws on international law, colonial history, and the concept of the “imperial boomerang.”





Related Off-site Links:
ICE Violence: What is Aimé Césaire’s “Imperial Boomerang” Theory and How Does It Apply to Minnesota?The New Arab (January 26, 2026).
“We Cannot Separate Imperialism From Domestic Militarization”: Understanding the Links Between ICE, Gaza, and U.S. Foreign Policy – Michael Arria (Scheer Post, January 29, 2026).
Hyper-Imperialism: The Imperial Boomerang That Crushes SovereigntyThe Briefing Room (January 28, 2026).
The Imperial Boomerang: How War Abroad Comes HomeThe Briefing Room (January 26, 2026).
The Imperial Boomerang and Police – Untitled Finn Project (December 30, 2025)>
Modern Gangsters of Capitalism and the Imperial Boomerang: An Interview with Jonathan KatzLiberal Currents (December 1, 2025).
American Imperialism and Bukele’s BoomerangAdu (May 14, 2026).


Friday, January 30, 2026

The Path Ahead . . .


. . . is clear despite the chaos.
It is always clear.

That path is to do what we can,
to control our focus,
responses, and actions
so that we honor our values
and serve as a positive light for others.

In uncertainty you find grounding
by living an intentional and kind life.



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
A Sacred Journey, a Pilgrim Path
Held in the Presence of God
The Act of Surrender
The Journey Home
Clarity, Hope, and Courage
Joyce Rupp: Seeking and Trusting the “Why” of Your Life
Resting in the Presence of the Beloved
Finding Balance in the Presence of the Beloved
Quote of the Day – November 16, 2011
Be Just in My Heart
The Most Sacred Mystery of All
The Path Ahead (2016)

Image: Artist unknown.


Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Bruce Springsteen and the Streets of Minneapolis in the Winter of ’26


I wrote this song on Saturday, recorded it yesterday and released it to you today in response to the state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis. It’s dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renée Good

Stay free.

Bruce Springsteen
January 28, 2026





Through the winter’s ice and cold
Down Nicollet Avenue
A city aflame fought fire and ice
‘Neath an occupier’s boots
King Trump’s private army from the DHS
Guns belted to their coats
Came to Minneapolis to enforce the law
Or so their story goes
Against smoke and rubber bullets
By the dawn’s early light
Citizens stood for justice
Their voices ringing through the night
And there were bloody footprints
Where mercy should have stood
And two dead left to die on snow-filled streets
Alex Pretti and Renée Good

Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice
Singing through the bloody mist
We’ll take our stand for this land
And the stranger in our midst
Here in our home they killed and roamed
In the winter of ’26
We’ll remember the names of those who died
On the streets of Minneapolis

Trump’s federal thugs beat up on
His face and his chest
Then we heard the gunshots
And Alex Pretti lay in the snow, dead
Their claim was self defense, sir
Just don’t believe your eyes
It’s our blood and bones
And these whistles and phones
Against Miller and Noem’s dirty lies

Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice
Crying through the bloody mist
We’ll remember the names of those who died
On the streets of Minneapolis

Now they say they’re here to uphold the law
But they trample on our rights
If your skin is black or brown my friend
You can be questioned or deported on sight

In chants of ICE out now
Our city’s heart and soul persists
Through broken glass and bloody tears
On the streets of Minneapolis

Oh our Minneapolis, I hear your voice
Singing through the bloody mist
Here in our home they killed and roamed
In the winter of ’26
We’ll take our stand for this land
And the stranger in our midst
We’ll remember the names of those who died
On the streets of Minneapolis
We’ll remember the names of those who died
On the streets of Minneapolis




Related Off site Links:
“Streets of Minneapolis”: Bruce Springsteen Releases Anthem to Honor Uprising Against ICE – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, January 28, 2026).
New Track from Springsteen Responds to Recent Minneapolis Deaths During Immigration Raids – Max Sparber (MPR News, January 28, 2026).
Faith Activists Are Praying with Their Feet in Minneapolis – Ariel Gold (Waging Nonviolence, January 28, 2026).
The Nation Nominates Minneapolis for the Nobel Peace PrizeThe Nation (January 28, 2026).
The “Theology of Showing Up” Is Making Minneapolis a Holy Place – Sunita Viswanath (Religion News Service via National Catholic Reporter, January 26, 2026).
Minnesota Proved MAGA Wrong – Adam Serwer (The Atlantic, January 26, 2026).
Minneapolis Is Going on Offense Against ICE – Aru Shiney-Ajay (Jacobin, January 26, 2026).
10 Rules of Resistance for #ICEOut – Rivera Sun (Waging Nonviolence, January 21, 2026).

UPDATES: “This Is Not America” Is the Most Dangerous Lie We Keep Telling Ourselves – Rashida James-Saadiya (Truthout, January 28, 2026).
Hope Itself Is Under Attack in ICE Crackdown – Jack Nelson-Pallmeyer (MinnPost, January 29, 2026).
“They Picked the Wrong State”: How Minneapolis Is Fighting BackThe Take (January 29, 2026).
Rural Minnesotans Stand Up to ICE – Betsy Froiland (In These Times, January 29, 2026).
“We’re Here to Demoralize”: The Minneapolis Residents Tracking Trump ICE Agents’ Every Move – Bel Trew (Independent, January 30, 2026).
ICE Ordered Not to Engage with Minnesota Protestors and Focus Only on Arresting Migrants with Criminal Records, According to Report – Rhian Lubin (Independent, January 30, 2026).
Majestic Scorn: A City Aflame Fights Fire and ICE – Abby Zimet (Common Dreams, January 30, 2026).
Trump’s Biggest Weakness? Ordinary People: An Interview with Adam SerwerIt’s Been A Minute (January 30, 2026).
From Maine to Minnesota and Beyond, Tens of Thousands March to Demand “ICE Out!” – Brett Wilkins (Common Dreams, January 30, 2026).
Labor Unions Play Key Role in Combating ICE in Minnesota – Kieran Knutson and Chris Mills Rodrigo (Common Dreams, January 31, 2026).
A “Terrifying Line Is Being Crossed,” Warns Minneapolis Mayor as More ICE Horror Stories Emerge – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, January 31, 2026).
Replacing Bovino With Homan Won’t Change ICE’s Tactics in Minneapolis – Logan McMillen (Common Dreams, January 31, 2026).
The Other Heroes on the Streets of Minneapolis? Citizen Journalists – Mark Hertsgaard (Covering Climate Now via Common Dreams, January 31, 2026).
Minnesota Medical Examiner Rules Alex Pretti’s Death a Homicide – Brett Wilkins (Common Dreams, February 2, 2026).
Nearly 30,000 Minnesotans Trained as Constitutional Observers – Kelly Gordon and Ellen Finn (MPR News, February 2, 2026).
Minneapolis is Showing a New Kind of Anti-Trump Resistance – Christian Paz (Vox, February 2, 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”

Images 1 and 3: Michael J. Bayly.
Image 2: Arthur Maiorella/Anadolu via Getty Images


Tuesday, January 27, 2026

“They Were Alive. Then They Were Not”


Early this morning my friend Kathleen and I visited the people’s memorial for Alex Pretti at the site of his murder by Border Patrol agents three days ago.

The pictures I share this evening of our visit to this sacred ground are accompanied by some recent writings on both the killing of Pretti and of Renée Good, also murdered by federal agents earlier this month on the streets of Minneapolis.


They were not symbols when they woke up that morning. Renée Good and Alex Jeffrey Pretti were Americans moving through ordinary days, trusting that rules still mattered and that authority still carried restraint. They had names, routines, people who expected them home. Whatever arguments came later, whatever justifications were rushed into place, that truth does not change. They were alive. Then they were not.

Their deaths were not accidents. They were not confusion. They were the result of a system that has begun to treat force as efficiency and accountability as optional. Once a government crosses that line, citizenship becomes paperwork and innocence becomes irrelevant. Power stops pausing to think.

What makes this unbearable is not only the loss of two lives, but the speed with which language is bent to explain it away. The careful phrasing. The quiet shifting of blame onto the dead. This is how a republic teaches itself not to feel. This is how violence becomes procedural instead of shocking.

We mourn Good and Pretti because they deserved more time, more care, more restraint from those sworn to protect. But we also mourn something larger. A country that once demanded power answer to law is now asking its people to accept killings as background noise. To scroll past. To move on.

A republic does not collapse in a single moment. It frays. It excuses. It explains. And one day it wakes up realizing that mourning has replaced expectation.

Remember their names. Not as slogans. Not as ammunition. As people. Because a nation that forgets who was lost will eventually forget who it was supposed to be.

Bruce Fanger
via social media
January 26, 2026




What makes that video so unbearable to watch isn’t only that an ICE agent killed Alex Pretti. It’s that in the middle of being shoved, struck, and repeatedly blasted in the face with chemical spray, his body kept doing one thing: reaching.

Reaching for a woman who had just been knocked down. Reaching for clarity through the burning in his eyes. Reaching to put himself between her and whatever was coming next. You can see that he is disoriented, choking, and staggering but still his instinct is PROTECTION.

He isn’t posturing or trying to be a hero for a camera. He’s trying to focus so he can shield somebody else. His nervous system is under assault, his vision is blurred, his lungs are on fire, and yet his moral center doesn’t collapse inward. It expands outward toward another human being in danger.

Maybe he knew her. Maybe he didn’t. I don’t know. But that’s almost beside the point. What the footage shows is a man whose first reflex under state violence was not self-preservation at all costs, but solidarity. Care. The ancient, almost forgotten impulse to say, “you are not going to face this alone.”

That is what makes his killing so devastating. The state didn’t just shoot a protester. It shot someone in the act of trying to protect a woman. It shot a man whose last visible choice was compassion. Whose final posture was not aggression, but guardianship.

And that is the deepest obscenity of the footage. It’s watching a system built on force extinguish a body that was, even in terror, still reaching for love. Damn.

Stacey Patton
via social media
January 25, 2026



Indigenous people in Minneapolis are very concerned.
And at the center of that concern is a human being.

Alex Pretti was not a symbol.
He was a son.
A family member.
A trusted presence in his community.

He was an ICU nurse – someone whose daily work was keeping people alive in their most fragile moments.
Someone trained to stay calm when bodies are breaking,
to act with care when others are afraid,
to move toward suffering, not away from it.

That matters.

Because when someone who lives a life of care is killed,
the questions do not stop at what happened.
They move toward how power responds when harm is done.

For many people, this may look like a single event –
a moment to analyze, to debate, to file away.

For Indigenous people, it lands differently.

Encounters with armed authority do not live in isolation for us.
They arrive carrying memory –
of patrols and removals,
of borders enforced through force,
of systems that have long decided whose lives are protected
and whose deaths require explanation.

So when force is used,
when official accounts shift,
when video and statements do not align,
our bodies recognize something before our minds do.
This is not fear.
This is memory.

And let me be clear – carefully, and without accusation:

This is not about demonizing law enforcement.
This is not about disorder.
This is not about political sides.

It is about responsibility.

Alex was known as someone who showed up for others.
Someone who believed presence mattered.
Someone whose instinct was to help, to witness, to care.

So when a life like that is lost,
the community has the right – and the responsibility –
to ask for truth that does not bend under pressure.

Indigenous peoples have not always lived under overlapping jurisdictions –
federal, state, municipal –
and when harm happens, accountability too often dissolves in those seams.

We are watching carefully.
Not with rage, but with attention.
Not to inflame, but to understand how power is moving in this moment.

Because safety cannot exist without trust.
And trust cannot exist without truth –
truth that does not change depending on who is speaking.
We are asking for clarity.
For transparency that does not circle back on itself.
For investigations that do not feel pre-written.

This is not radical.
This is relational.

In our teachings, responsibility is carried forward – not deflected.
We call this wâhkôhtowin – the understanding that everything exists in relationship, and that relationship requires care, honesty, and accountability.

We hold space for Alex’s family.
We hold space for those who worked beside him.
We hold space for a community trying to make sense of loss without being rushed past it.

This is shared in good faith.
With firmness, yes – but also with care.

We will continue to watch.
We will continue to speak.
And we will do so in a way that protects life –
especially the lives of those still coming.

Ekosi.
And so it continues.

Standing Bear Network
via social media
January 26, 2026



We are not okay. But we are still helpers. We still see human. And that is why they will never win.

Emily Solberg
via social media
January 26, 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”

Images: Michael J. Bayly.