Tuesday, November 04, 2025

All Things Speak My Language


Following is my adaptation of one of Julia Cameron’s “heart steps.”

I open my mind and heart to guidance from the Beloved One. I am open to guidance in all its many forms. I accept help from the Beloved One through people, events, and places which inspire and instruct me. I listen to the song of the Beloved through many instruments – the ebb and flow of the tides, animal companions, the wind, a bird, a flash of sunlight sparkling off colored glass. All things speak my language. I listen to all languages with my heart. My heart hears higher and higher frequencies of guidance as I raise my own thoughts to the possibility of higher realms guiding and embracing my own.

– Julia Cameron
in Heart Steps: Prayers and
Declarations for a Creative Life

Jeremy P. Tarcher / Putnam, 1997
pp. 52-53


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Solstice Dawn
Trusting the Flow
Higher Perceptions
The Guidance of Higher Forces
Anew
A Season of Listening
Be in My Mind, Beloved One
Resting in the Presence of the Beloved
Secret Language of the Heart
You Are My Goal, Beloved One
Finding Balance in the Presence of the Beloved
Your Peace Is With Me, Beloved One
The Soul’s Beloved

Image: Photographer unknown.


Matthew Cooke on the Fallacy That Socialism “Doesn't Work”

With two Democratic socialists (Zohran Mamdani and Omar Fateh) potentially set to win their mayoral races in New York and Minneapolis respectively, Matthew Cooke’s recent video commentary on socialism is timely indeed!





Related Off-site Links:
The Data Show That Socialism Works – Nick Warino (Current Affairs, December 7, 2019).
How Could Socialism Work?Socialist Alternative.
Understanding Dark TriadsPsychology Today.
Poll Shows 25-Point Mamdani Lead Over Cuomo as Frantic GOP Fearmongers Over “Socialist Uprising” – Brad Reed (Common Dreams, October 30, 2025).
“Our Time Is Now”: Zohran Mamdani’s Mayoral Campaign Inspires New York City’s Working-Class South AsiansDemocracy Now! (November 3, 2025).
Meet Omar Fateh. Could He Be the Next Mayor of Minneapolis?Democracy Now! (October 31, 2025).
Bernie Sanders Says a Mamdani Win Can Transform American Politics – John Nichols (The Nation, November 4, 2025).
Omar Fateh Has All the Right Enemies – Alex Skopic (Current Affairs, September 5, 2025).
“New York City Is Not for Sale” – Zohran Mamdani (Jacobin, September 8, 2025).
Minneapolis Gets Its Own Mamdani – Kayla Bartsch (National Review, July 15, 2025).
From Mamdani to Prop 50, John Nichols on Election Day Races and the Future of Democratic PartyDemocracy Now! (November 4, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:

DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISM
Martin Luther King, Jr. and Democratic Socialism
Bernie Sanders: Quote of the Day – June 12, 2019
Heather Cox Richardson on the Origin of the American Obsession with “Socialism”
The Biblical Roots of “From Each According to Ability; To Each According to Need”
Something to Think About – December 14, 2011
Jonty Langley: Quote of the Day – August 17, 2011
A Socialist Perspective on the “Democratic Debacle” in Massachusetts
Obama a Socialist? Hardly
Obama, Ayers, the “S” Word, and the “Most Politically Backward Layers in America”
A Socialist Response to the 2008 Financial Crisis
Capitalism on Trial
No, Hitler and the Nazis Weren’t Socialists
What It Means to Be a Leftist in 2025
Ted Rall: “Democrats Are Not the Left”


ZOHRAN MAMDANI
Dorothy Lennon: Quote of the Day – June 26, 2025
A Timely and Important Conversation
The Rational National’s Take on Zohran Mamdani
How Democrats Can Start Winning Again
Mike Figueredo on the “Political Malpractice” of the Democratic Party
Memes of the Times – September 2025
Zohran Mamdani and the Future of the Democratic Party


OMAR FATEH
A “Racist and Factless Meltdown” Over Omar Fateh
Omar | Jazz | DeWayne
In His Efforts to “Build a City That Works for All,” Omar Fateh Secures a Key Endorsement
Something to Think About – July 25, 2025
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Omar Fateh: “We Need to Meet the Needs of Working People”
“Hopeful and Grounded”: Omar Fateh’s Vision of Democratic Socialism
Omar Fateh: A “Person-Centered Leader”
Why Omar Fateh Is the Right Choice for Mayor of Minneapolis
Omar Fateh’s Grassroots Campaign for Mayor of Minneapolis
The Rise of Omar Fateh
Omar Fateh: A Mayor Who Will “Meet the Moment”


THE FAILURES OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY

Mike Figueredo on the “Political Malpractice” of the Democratic Party
Ted Rall: Democrats Are Not “the Left”
Exposing the Dark Money Network Secretly Funding Establishment Democratic Influencers
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
Howie Hawkins: “The Democrats Are Not the Answer to the Trump/Fascism Problem”
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
Progressive Perspectives on Bernie Sanders’ “Fighting Oligarchy” Tour
Eric Fernández: Quote of the Day – May 14, 2025
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
When Democrats Undermine Democracy


Progressive Perspectives on the Legacy of Dick Cheney

Dick Cheney has died. The former vice president and war criminal will be hailed in the corporate controlled press as the last “reasonable” voice in the Republican Party along with his daughter, Liz. Here’s some things the media won’t mention about this warmonger . . .

1. Cheney was a member of the Project for a New American Century (PNAC). This group of neoconservatives and imperialists called for America to rapidly expand the Pentagon budget, fight multiple wars and specifically overthrow Iraq. They do mention none of this would happen, “absent a catalyzing event, like a new Pearl Harbor.” Lucky for Cheney, he happened to be inside the Bush administration after 9/11.

2. The vice president helped lie America into Iraq. According to then-Treasury Secretary Paul O’Neil, shortly after the Bush administration was sworn in, they met for their first national security council meeting. There, before 9/11, they openly brainstormed how to start a war with Iraq. O’Neil even provided documents on how they could steal the oil of the Middle Eastern nation. Cheney invited oil and gas executives to the White House during and after the invasion of Iraq. He declined to make the content of those meetings available to the public.

3. Following the disastrous war in Iraq, Cheney tried to start a war with Iran. According to Seymour Hersh’s reporting for the New Yorker in 2006, Cheney tried to create a Gulf of Tonkin incident. He believed it could be a pretext to launch bombing campaigns on Iran. Thankfully, that never happened. After he left the Bush administration, Cheney bragged he was one of the most vocal voices for bombing Iran.

4. No one was a louder proponent of torture than Dick Cheney. The vice president repeatedly defended its practice and claimed that it saved lives. For the record, it never did. We now know that definitively from the Committee Study of the Central Intelligence Agency’s Detention and Interrogation Program. To highlight Cheney’s hypocrisy on this issue, he was once asked by NBC’s Matt Lauer if Iran would be justified in water boarding an American spy if he had information on possible activities inside their nation. Cheney, unsurprisingly, said he would be opposed to such tactics on Americans. Cheney’s philosophy was it’s okay when we do it. It’s not okay when they do it.

Cheney’s legacy of blood, carnage and war crimes is still felt at American tables who have one less child returning home from the Middle East, and the one million Iraqis who died. As I stated at the beginning of this post, many will mourn him as a man who represented a time when the GOP was reasonable. I dare those same people to interview a family member who lost a child in Iraq or an Iraqi who lost a family member following that HORRIFIC war. They will give you a different answer.

Dorothy Lennon
via social media
November 4, 2025


Dick Cheney rose from many government roles including U.S. Representative from Wyoming to Defense Secretary under George H. W. Bush, then became CEO of oil corporation Halliburton before serving as Vice President under George W. Bush.

As vice president, Cheney was one of the main forces behind the 2003 Iraq invasion. He pushed claims that Saddam Hussein had weapons of mass destruction, which later proved false, and pressured intelligence officials to lie in order to support the case for war.

After the invasion, Cheney’s former company Halliburton and its subsidiary KBR received about $39.5 billion dollars in Iraq contracts, many awarded without competition. Audits later found overbilling and waste, fueling accusations of war profiteering.

Cheney also defended the CIA’s use of torture, backed secret prisons, and supported private contractors like Blackwater that were later tied to civilian killings.

In 2012, the Kuala Lumpur War Crimes Commission found Cheney guilty in absentia of war crimes for authorizing torture, and Amnesty International urged that he be investigated if he traveled abroad.

Today, both liberals and conservatives will try to paint him as a good man, even though his decisions led to the deaths of millions of innocent Iraqi civilians.

Rogue DNC
via social media
November 4, 2025


Former Vice President Dick Cheney’s death on Monday could be the perfect opportunity for media institutions in the U.S. to take a sober look at the George W. Bush era – but it’s more likely they’ll fire up the nostalgia machine than confront reality.

Liberal network MSNBC’s flagship a.m. program Morning Joe somberly announced the news on Tuesday and quickly worked to portray Cheney as a strong leader who fought for the country at all costs. Host Joe Scarborough said the former vice president was defined by his determination not to see another 9/11. Later in the show, author and historian Jon Meacham called Cheney “a remarkable American figure.”

“We don’t make them like this anymore,” Meacham said, implying this is a bad thing.

Scarborough celebrated Cheney as a “defender of democracy” for his opposition to Donald Trump, a common theme in his final act. The former vice president and Republican hard-liner was greeted warmly in recent years by powerful Democrats like Nancy Pelosi, Steny Hoyer, and Adam Schiff for the pivot.

It’s a pattern we’re likely to see continued in the wake of his death – and a sign that Democrats have still not learned hard lessons about their role in sending the country into the abyss.

In fact, Cheney had more of a role in giving us Trump than his later opposition might suggest, pioneering a cruel brand of post-truth politics that Trump would perfect.

Cheney said whatever he needed to in order to push his agenda. He cast aside clear legal constraints, wantonly starting illegal wars and ignoring nettlesome obstacles like the legal prohibition on torture. He ruthlessly attacked his perceived political enemies, decrying anyone who disagreed with him as “terrorist” sympathizers. Sound familiar?

– Eoin Higgins
Excerpted from "Dick Cheney
Doesn’t Deserve Your Heartfelt Eulogies

The Intercept
November 4, 2025


Dick Cheney is dead at 84. He did not die in disgrace, though he should have. He died wealthy, respected in certain circles, and utterly unrepentant. The man who once declared that the United States would have to go to “the dark side” after 9/11 lived long enough to see that darkness normalized, monetized, and weaponized against his own countrymen.

Cheney’s fingerprints are all over the machinery of our current decline. The torture memos that redefined cruelty as legality. The surveillance architecture that turned privacy into a privilege. The doctrine of preemptive war that made deceit a tool of statecraft. His genius was not in leadership but in the quiet conversion of fear into policy and secrecy into power. Halliburton profited as Baghdad burned, and a generation of Americans learned that truth could be suspended if the lie was wrapped in a flag.

He taught a generation to confuse vengeance with justice. He convinced them that brutality was strength, that secrecy was safety, and that democracy could survive anything so long as the right people were in charge. The corrosion of conscience that began in those years never left us. It calcified into cynicism, and that cynicism became the oxygen of the authoritarian movement that followed. In his time, Cheney was often caricatured as Darth Vader, a moniker he wore with amusement. In hindsight, it stands as one of the most fitting apologies in modern political history. The cruelty that once required justification now parades as virtue, a moral inversion born in the shadow of Cheney’s America.

Two decades later, that same machinery hums under a new operator. The Trump administration took Cheney’s hidden authoritarian blueprint and removed its disguises. Where Cheney cultivated plausible deniability, Trump cultivates spectacle. Where Cheney institutionalized secrecy, Trump broadcasts vengeance. Both rely on the same architecture: the executive branch as weapon, the law as accessory, the lie as gospel.

. . . History should not remember Cheney as a statesman. It should remember him as a technician of empire, a man who perfected the mechanics of control and handed them, like loaded weapons, to those who came after him. His legacy lives not in monuments or memoirs, but in the machinery of the American police state he helped design.

Dick Cheney is gone. But his shadow still governs. Until we dismantle what he built, America will remain what he made it, a democracy in name, an empire in practice, and a lie we keep telling ourselves.

– Tony Pentimalli
via social media
November 4, 2025


Related Off-site Links:
War Criminal Dick Cheney Dead at 84Common Dreams (November 4, 2025).
“The Dark Side”: Dick Cheney’s Legacy from Iraq Invasion to U.S. Torture ProgramDemocracy Now! (November 4, 2025).
The Worst Crime of the 21st Century – Nathan J. Robinson and Noam Chomsky (Current Affairs, May 12, 2023).
It Wasn’t About Oil, and It Wasn’t About the Free Market: Why We Invaded Iraq – Danny Postel (In These Times, February 11, 2015).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Joseph Wilson on the Bush Administration: "Corrupt from Top to Bottom" (2007)
The Tenth Anniversary of the Iraq Invasion (2013)
Something to Think About – June 18, 2014
Progressive Perspectives on Liz Cheney (2022)


Monday, November 03, 2025

Zohran Mamdani and the Future of the Democratic Party

Recently Marc Lamont Hill and Briahna Joy Gray engaged in an insightful and timely conversation on the future of the Democratic Party.

Here’s how this conversation is introduced:

As inequality deepens and dissent is punished, many are looking to new voices like Zohran Mamdani, the democratic socialist running for New York City mayor on a platform of rent freezes, free public transit, and taxing the rich.

Can candidates like him revive the Democratic Party in the United States, or is real reform from within impossible?






There is a left populist economic path to electoral success and Zohran Mamdani is writing that path. You don’t need to become Liz Cheney to win. And in fact, Liz Cheney is not exactly winning in politics, and bear-hugging her did not turn-out so well for Kamala Harris in terms of ginning up votes. . . . So when you hear about compromise, and how we have to be a center party, and how we have to be pragmatic in order to win, that’s all propaganda to justify why the [Democratic establishment] won’t just ran on legitimate popular policies like universal health care, like taxing the rich, like a $15 minimum wage. Really basic stuff. . . . In this moment there’s an enormous amount of frustration with the Democratic Party among rank-and-file Democrats which presents opportunities for those of us who would like to see a break from the party. And, short of that, the threat of a break that is sufficiently real that it actually forces the Democratic establishment to have to choose the people over their corporate commitments. I don’t know if we’re close to that, if the party can fundamentally ever be reformed because I believe the purpose of it is to advance those corporate commitments. . . . I question if it is possible to be within the Democratic Party and carry on legitimate left, progressive values; economic populist values.

Briahna Joy Gray


Related Off-site Links:
Trump’s Greatest Ally is the Democratic Party – Chris Hedges (The Chris Hedges Report, November 3, 2025).
Bernie Sanders Says a Mamdani Win Can Transform American Politics – John Nichols (The Nation, November 4, 2025).
Poll Shows 25-Point Mamdani Lead Over Cuomo as Frantic GOP Fearmongers Over “Socialist Uprising” – Brad Reed (Common Dreams,October 30, 2025).
“New York City Is Not for Sale” – Zohran Mamdani (Jacobin, September 8, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:

THE FAILURES OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Mike Figueredo on the “Political Malpractice” of the Democratic Party
Ted Rall: Democrats Are Not “the Left”
Exposing the Dark Money Network Secretly Funding Establishment Democratic Influencers
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
Howie Hawkins: “The Democrats Are Not the Answer to the Trump/Fascism Problem”
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
Progressive Perspectives on Bernie Sanders’ “Fighting Oligarchy” Tour
Eric Fernández: Quote of the Day – May 14, 2025
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2025
When Democrats Undermine Democracy


ZOHRAN MAMDANI
Dorothy Lennon: Quote of the Day – June 26, 2025
A Timely and Important Conversation
The Rational National’s Take on Zohran Mamdani
How Democrats Can Start Winning Again
Mike Figueredo on the “Political Malpractice” of the Democratic Party
Memes of the Times – September 2025


OMAR FATEH
A “Racist and Factless Meltdown” Over Omar Fateh
Omar | Jazz | DeWayne
In His Efforts to “Build a City That Works for All,” Omar Fateh Secures a Key Endorsement
Something to Think About – July 25, 2025
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Omar Fateh: “We Need to Meet the Needs of Working People”
“Hopeful and Grounded”: Omar Fateh’s Vision of Democratic Socialism
Omar Fateh: A “Person-Centered Leader”
Why Omar Fateh Is the Right Choice for Mayor of Minneapolis
Omar Fateh’s Grassroots Campaign for Mayor of Minneapolis
The Rise of Omar Fateh
Omar Fateh: A Mayor Who Will “Meet the Moment”


THE GREEN PARTY
“The Moment Is Ripe”: Butch Ware on Building a “True Oppositional Alternative” to the Duopoly
“It Is Our Responsibility to Make a Third Party Viable”
We’re Witnessing a Liberal Meltdown Over Jill Stein
“We Give Reasons for People to Come Out and Vote”
Butch Ware: “You Can Actually Vote Your Conscience”
The “Green Smoothie” Option
When Democrats Undermine Democracy
Howie Hawkins: “The Democrats Are Not the Answer to the Trump/Fascism Problem”
“The Next Step Is a Green Step”: Cornel West Endorses Jill Stein (2016)
Bernie Sanders and Jill Stein: Is An “Historic Collaboration” in the Making? (2016)
Demolishing the False Narrative About Jill Stein and the 2016 Election
Hope Over Fear: Voting Green


Omar Fateh: A Mayor Who Will “Meet the Moment”


Minneapolis mayoral candidate Omar Fateh had an op-ed in last Thursday’s Minnesota Star Tribune.

As a supporter of and volenteer with his campaign, I share today, with added images and links, Omar’s October 30 op-ed in its entirety.

_______________


I love Minneapolis. This is the city where I want to raise my family. From morning coffee at Code Blu to pick up games at Peavey Park, this city is home. I’m eager to send my son to a Minneapolis public school, because I believe in what this city can be. We aren’t reaching our potential, but I see it – and I know you do, too.

I’m deeply concerned with the world my son has been born into. I want to raise him in a city that gives him the tools he needs to spread his wings and enough support to lift him up if he stumbles. I’m not just running to fix a broken system, I’m running to help build the city to grow up in. It’s time we had a mayor who will work as hard as we do to ensure Minneapolis is a city working people can afford to call home.

I delivered in the state Senate, and I worked across the aisle with Republicans to pass transformative policy. I passed free college for working-class families making less than $80,000 annually, led the fight to pass a living wage for Uber and Lyft drivers, and invested $19 million in Minneapolis public safety. Despite corporate interests throwing their weight around at every turn, I still got the job done – and I did it with a broad coalition of support.

For the last seven years, we’ve had a mayor who has failed to deliver meaningful change. He failed to work collaboratively with 13 fellow Democrats on the City Council, by prioritizing his ideology and political ambitions above the needs of Minneapolis residents. You deserve better than broken promises and endless vetoes. You deserve a mayor who puts you first.

If the historic 2023 session taught me anything, it’s that when you have the opportunity to make change, you seize it. You stay up all night with workers because people are making poverty wages, struggling to feed their families and they have waited long enough. What I have never done, and what I will never do, is look the people of this city in the eye and ask them to wait their turn.

I won’t run from President Trump; I’ll build the line of defense from the masked federal agents breaking into your home in broad daylight, separating families from their loved ones and disappearing our neighbors. I will fight for a stronger sanctuary policy that guarantees that the Minneapolis Police Department never supports Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), and I’ll stand up against the federal government’s attacks on health care and bodily autonomy.

Families have been put in an impossible position; they should never have to decide between paying rent and putting food on the table. I’m ready to raise the minimum wage to $20 an hour by 2028 and pass a rent stabilizatiom policy that still incentivizes new construction and tenant protections. I won’t bow to corporate interests or political pressure, because you deserve a mayor who fights for you.

It’s past time for true public safety. The political strategists have manufactured a myth to pit us against each other about our own safety. To that I say, we can walk and chew gum at the same time. That’s why I secured $19 million in public safety funding for Minneapolis and called for real accountability in policing. Safety means no longer asking officers to take on every problem leading to residents waiting on the phone with 911. Real public safety means investing in officer wellness while freeing up their capacity to focus on violent crime and clear the case backlog.

The MAGA talking heads, the dog whistles and the millions of dollars being spent to put my face in your mailbox, insisting that I’m too young, too radical, too idealistic – are afraid I’m too close to you. The worker, the immigrant, the renter, people in this city who are just trying to make it. If fighting to house people, protect immigrants and keep you safe is radical, then count me in, because Minneapolis is worth fighting for. For my son, for you – because we have the people, the power and the potential. Now, we need a mayor ready to meet the moment.

Omar Fateh
We Need a Mayor Who Meets the Moment
Minnesota Star Tribune
October 30, 2025


This past Friday, October 31, Omar Fateh was interviewed by Amy Goodman on the independent global news hour Democracy Now!. Following is the full 8-minute interview.





Related Off-site Links:
You Can’t Say No to a Pretty Face: The Grassroots Fundraising Campaign “Baddies for Omar” Has Been a Great Asset to Fateh’s Campaign – Andrew Godes (The Minnesota Daily, November 3, 2025).
Escalating Threats Towards Omar Fateh Reveal Challenges for Muslim Politicians in Minnesota – Mohamed Ibrahim (Sahan Journal, October 27, 2025).
Omar Fateh Wants Minneapolis Police to Arrest Federal Agents Who Wear Masks – Anthony Gockowski (Alpha News, October 27, 2025).
Rep. Ilhan Omar Endorses Omar Fateh for Mayor of Minneapolis – Esme Murphy (CBS News Minnesota, October 12, 2025).
Minnesota Sen. Omar Fateh on Housing, Trump, Corruption in Politics, and CrimeKatGetsMoney (October 12, 2025).
Minnesota Sen. Omar Fateh Says He Won’t Back Down Despite Islamophobic Threats – Brianna Kelly (Bring Me the News, September 25, 2025).
Four Candidates for Minneapolis Mayor Weigh In on Major Issues Facing the City – Jon Collins (MPR News, September 19, 2025).
People “Are Tired of Backroom Decisions”: A Conversation with Minneapolis’s Omar Fateh – Peter Lucas (The Nation, September 5, 2025).
Omar Fateh Has All the Right Enemies – Alex Skopic (Current Affairs, September 5, 2025).
State DFL tries to disenfranchise the City DFL – David Tilsen (Southside Pride, September 3, 2025).
Minnesota Democrats Stab Omar Fateh in the BackConcernicus (August 27, 2025).
DFL Reverses Omar Fateh EndorsementLeft Reckoning (August 26, 2025).
Democrats in Minnesota Revoke the Mayoral Endorsement of Omar FatehI Am Blakeley (August 23, 2025).
The State DFL Spits on the Minneapolis DFL – Steve Timmer (LeftMN, August 23, 2025).
Minnesota DFL Revokes Endorsement for Omar Fateh in Minneapolis Mayoral Race – Naasir Akailvi (KARE 11 News, August 21, 2025).
Rep. Ilhan Omar Condemns Party’s Decision to Throw Out Fateh Endorsement – Torey Van Oot (Axios, August 21, 2025).
How Did This Happen? – Ed Felien (Southside Pride, August 5, 2025).
Minnesota Democrats Endorse Socialist Omar Fateh for Mayor Over Incumbent Democrat Jacob FreyAllSides (July 21, 2025).
Who Is Omar Fateh? Mamdani of Minneapolis Faces MAGA Abuse – Kate Plummer (Newsweek, July 15, 2025).
CAIR-Minnesota Condemns Anti-Muslim, Racist Hate Targeting Sen. Omar Fateh Amid Rising Political Violence – CAIR-Minnesota (July 15, 2025).
Minneapolis Gets Its Own Mamdani – Kayla Bartsch (National Review, July 15, 2025).
Minneapolis Mayoral Candidate Omar Fateh Faces Racist Trolling: “Go to Mogadishu”Times of India (July 14, 2025).
Omar Fateh Will Work Across the Aisle If Elected Mayor – Melody Hoffmann (Southwest Voices, April 2, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
A “Racist and Factless Meltdown” Over Omar Fateh
Omar | Jazz | DeWayne
In His Efforts to “Build a City That Works for All,” Omar Fateh Secures a Key Endorsement
Something to Think About – July 25, 2025
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Omar Fateh: “We Need to Meet the Needs of Working People”
“Hopeful and Grounded”: Omar Fateh’s Vision of Democratic Socialism
Omar Fateh: A “Person-Centered Leader”
Why Omar Fateh Is the Right Choice for Mayor of Minneapolis


What the Wind Says



By Steven Charleston

Listen to the wind. It has something to tell you.
Whether it is as quiet as the current
That lifts the hawk to circle the sky
Or as loud as the storm chasing high waves to shore:
The wind has something to say.

There is a word for each of us, a message sent directly
That flows through the wind each day
Offering us insight and vision, clarity and creative ideas
If only we will stop long enough to receive it.

Be still. Be awake. Trust your spiritual senses.
Listen to the wind. The Spirit is speaking to you.



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Two Exceptional Singers Take a Chance on the “Spirit of the Wind”
Resilience and Hope
Trusting the Flow
A Season of Listening
To Be Still
Today I Will Be Still
Cultivating Stillness
Eckhart Tolle on Silence and Stillness
Sufism: A Call to Awaken
Don’t Go Back to Sleep
Secret Language of the Heart
Come, Spirit

Image: Michael J. Bayly.


Sunday, November 02, 2025

The Rise of Omar Fateh

Omar Fateh, a Democratic socialist, hopes to
defeat incumbent mayor Jacob Frey by focusing
on affordability, wages and public safety.

– Rachel Leingang


I share today the second half of Rachel Leingang’s recent Guardian article on Omar Fateh, the Democratic socialist who is running for mayor of Minneapolis and whom I’m supporting. In fact, I’ll be door-knocking for him later today. (NOTE: For the first part of Leingang’s piece, click here.)

_______________


Omar Fateh, like [New York mayoral candidate] Zohran Mamdani, is running a campaign full of progressive promises, including raising the minimum wage to $20 an hour, a plan for rent stabilization, a public safety system that funds alternatives to police for calls like mental health crises and standing up to Trump. Six of the 13 council members have backed him, as have unions and state lawmakers.

He casts [incumbent mayor] Jacob Frey’s two terms as “broken promises and vetoes,” noting a 2017 campaign promise to end homelessness within five years and goals for public safety reform after George Floyd’s murder [in 2020].

“We have a progressive city council that’s ready to do the work, that has been doing the work,” Fateh told The Guardian. “We just don’t have a mayor as a partner.”

Fateh, born in Washington DC, moved to Minneapolis about a decade ago. In 2020, the Democratic socialist launched a challenge to an incumbent Democrat for the state senate, earning the party’s endorsement and eventually becoming the first Somali American and first Muslim in the chamber. As a senator, he pushed through a bill creating labor standards for ride-share drivers and championed a tuition-free college plan.

His time in the legislature and reputation as a progressive fighter gave him a base of support in the mayoral contest, elevating him to top contender against Frey, Jacobs said.

An increased national profile has brought along an increase in threats, racism and Islamophobia, Fateh told Sahan Journal, a local publication, this week. Earlier this month, he got a message that said: “Two bullets to the head, done.” He has had to take additional safety precautions and pay for security, he told the outlet. “Most campaigns don’t have to think about this,” his campaign manager told Sahan Journal.

Fateh believes [his] revoked endorsement [by the state Democratic party] is in part because of the donor class and how it would look to support a progressive candidate with a populist message, especially in suburban and rural areas where the party has lost ground.

“The Democratic party as a whole likes to always say we’re a big tent, we are a wide spectrum, we welcome everybody,” he said. “But a lot of times it seems like when it’s the more progressive wing . . . they shut [them] out.”

After knocking on doors, Fateh returned to the park, where families set up bubble machines and boxes of fruit snacks and goldfish for a “play date with Omar Fateh”, himself the tired first-time father of a newborn. He is quick to show off pictures of his baby. Frey also has a newborn, his second child – the two politicians’ babies were born within 10 days of each other.

An organizer at the play date asked the crowd of a few dozen adults and kids if anyone knows who Fateh is. “I’ve seen him on the phone!” one kid yelled.

Sarah Quinn, a Minneapolis voter who spoke to the crowd at the event, said she had heard from people who were ready to vote against Frey, but weren’t sure how they would rank the other candidates. People seemed excited to hear about Fateh’s vision, she said, and she was sick of hearing about vetoes of council bills and “low-grade insults back and forth” among the mayor and council.

“I feel like Minneapolis has this reputation of being a really progressive city, and I’m not actually feeling that as a resident,” Quinn said. “And so just hearing his agenda has really resonated with me, and I think that he’s somebody that can actually get the shit done with the city council.”

The rise of the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) has served as a boogeyman of sorts for the Democratic establishment: before the Minneapolis convention, one proposal, which was later pulled back, sought to make it so a candidate couldn’t be endorsed by both the DSA and the [state Democratic party, known in Minnesota as the DFL].

Fateh’s campaign has been boosted by the Twin Cities DSA. Brooke Bartholomew, the group’s co-chair, said they had seen new members sign up after Mamdani’s win in the primary.

“We have the people power,” Bartholomew said. “That’s part of what DSA brings to the table for Omar Fateh’s campaign is people power – going on those doors, talking to neighbors and helping to build this really diverse coalition.”

Frey, endorsed by Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, has the money advantage over Fateh and the other two top contenders, Jazz Hampton and DeWayne Davis. That “organizational muscle” that comes from allied groups and the business community could help get out the vote for Frey, said Jacobs, of the University of Minnesota. The Guardian repeatedly sought an interview with Frey and asked to attend a campaign event. The campaign initially agreed, but then did not make the mayor available, instead sending a statement from a campaign spokesperson.

“Over the last five years, Minneapolis was tested like never before,” the statement said. “Under Mayor Frey’s leadership, the city has been making a comeback. Violent crime is trending down, the city is creating eight times more deeply affordable housing than before Mayor Frey took office, and Minneapolis is taking the Trump administration to court to defend our neighbors. The mayor is running for one final term to improve public safety by hiring more police officers and implementing police reform, expanding affordable housing, and focusing on delivering excellent core city services. We’re optimistic that Minneapolis voters will support that vision next week.”

Since Trump returned to the White House, Frey has vocally defended Minneapolis, which could become a target of Trump’s increased deportation raids or military occupations. The homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, came to town in late October, stoking speculation that the city could be next on Trump’s list. Frey, flanked by city leaders, put out a video on the day of her visit saying he had been preparing for months for a potential federal influx.

“In Minneapolis, we have your back,” Frey said to the city’s immigrant communities. “You will be protected and respected by our city employees regardless of your immigration status.”

Opposing Trump is an increasing part of the mayor’s purview, and one that all the contenders say is critical. Fateh wants the city to strengthen the separation ordinance that prevents city employees from aiding immigration activities.

While the race is often cast as a two-person contest, Hampton and Davis see lanes for themselves to win, given ranked-choice voting, and not just to help Fateh.

“I would not be running to prop up someone else’s campaign,” Hampton said. “I’m running to win, and I believe that we can and will. However, if that means door-knocking with other candidates to let everyone see us, that’s what we should be doing.”

Davis, a minister and former congressional staffer, said voters were ready to move beyond “leadership by press conference and ribbon-cutting”, and the success of the three insurgent campaigns shows that.

The Mamdani comparisons don’t track as much with the Minneapolis race, Davis said. Looking past the weak opposition from Cuomo in New York, Minneapolis has a “very active establishment” of business-oriented Democrats.

“I think we are far more divided here,” Davis said of Minneapolis voters. “And so given the ranked choice with us, that division, it’s any guess about how that iteration of choices through ranked choice will end up happening.”

Rachel Leingang
Excerpted from “The 'Mamdani of Minneapolis'
Is Banking on a Gassroots Campaign
to Unseat the Democratic Mayor

The Guardian
October 30, 2025



This past Thursday, October 30, Omar Fateh was interviewed by Minneapolis-based Water Wave TV. In this interview, Omar talks about his life before politics, Minneapolis police, ICE, and his campaign to be mayor of Minneapolis.




0:00 Introduction
0:30 – Current political climate
2:50 – Who is Omar Fateh?
4:20 – High school
6:00 – What got you into politics?
7:50 – Youth disconnect with politics
10:00 – Using your background to shape you as a mayor
13:00 – Legislation changes
16:00 – Mistakes you’ve made as a legislator
20:00 – Turning point to run for mayor
21:50 – What does the first 100 days in office look like for Fateh?
23:45 – How do you expect to get things done with people who don’t agree with you?
25:30 – Key indicators that what you are saying is working if you become mayor
27:00 – Public Safety and George Floyd
31:00 – Police staffing issues
33:10 – ICE

NOTE: For Part 2 of this interview, click here. For Part 3, click here. To watch all three parts as a complete one-hour & 40-minute interview, click here.



Related Off-site Links:
Escalating Threats Towards Omar Fateh Reveal Challenges for Muslim Politicians in Minnesota – Mohamed Ibrahim (Sahan Journal, October 27, 2025).
Omar Fateh Wants Minneapolis Police to Arrest Federal Agents Who Wear Masks – Anthony Gockowski (Alpha News, October 27, 2025).
Rep. Ilhan Omar Endorses Omar Fateh for Mayor of Minneapolis – Esme Murphy (CBS News Minnesota, October 12, 2025).
Minnesota Sen. Omar Fateh on Housing, Trump, Corruption in Politics, and CrimeKatGetsMoney (October 12, 2025).
Minnesota Sen. Omar Fateh Says He Won’t Back Down Despite Islamophobic Threats – Brianna Kelly (Bring Me the News, September 25, 2025).
Four Candidates for Minneapolis Mayor Weigh In on Major Issues Facing the City – Jon Collins (MPR News, September 19, 2025).
People “Are Tired of Backroom Decisions”: A Conversation with Minneapolis’s Omar Fateh – Peter Lucas (The Nation, September 5, 2025).
Omar Fateh Has All the Right Enemies – Alex Skopic (Current Affairs, September 5, 2025).
State DFL tries to disenfranchise the City DFL – David Tilsen (Southside Pride, September 3, 2025).
Minnesota Democrats Stab Omar Fateh in the BackConcernicus (August 27, 2025).
DFL Reverses Omar Fateh EndorsementLeft Reckoning (August 26, 2025).
Democrats in Minnesota Revoke the Mayoral Endorsement of Omar FatehI Am Blakeley (August 23, 2025).
The State DFL Spits on the Minneapolis DFL – Steve Timmer (LeftMN, August 23, 2025).
Minnesota DFL Revokes Endorsement for Omar Fateh in Minneapolis Mayoral Race – Naasir Akailvi (KARE 11 News, August 21, 2025).
Rep. Ilhan Omar Condemns Party’s Decision to Throw Out Fateh Endorsement – Torey Van Oot (Axios, August 21, 2025).
How Did This Happen? – Ed Felien (Southside Pride, August 5, 2025).
Minnesota Democrats Endorse Socialist Omar Fateh for Mayor Over Incumbent Democrat Jacob FreyAllSides (July 21, 2025).
Who Is Omar Fateh? Mamdani of Minneapolis Faces MAGA Abuse – Kate Plummer (Newsweek, July 15, 2025).
CAIR-Minnesota Condemns Anti-Muslim, Racist Hate Targeting Sen. Omar Fateh Amid Rising Political Violence – CAIR-Minnesota (July 15, 2025).
Minneapolis Gets Its Own Mamdani – Kayla Bartsch (National Review, July 15, 2025).
Minneapolis Mayoral Candidate Omar Fateh Faces Racist Trolling: “Go to Mogadishu”Times of India (July 14, 2025).
Omar Fateh Will Work Across the Aisle If Elected Mayor – Melody Hoffmann (Southwest Voices, April 2, 2025).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:

OMAR FATEH
A “Racist and Factless Meltdown” Over Omar Fateh
Omar | Jazz | DeWayne
In His Efforts to “Build a City That Works for All,” Omar Fateh Secures a Key Endorsement
Something to Think About – July 25, 2025
The Longstanding Fault Lines Within the Democratic Party Have Surfaced Again in Minnesota
Omar Fateh: “We Need to Meet the Needs of Working People”
“Hopeful and Grounded”: Omar Fateh’s Vision of Democratic Socialism
Omar Fateh: A “Person-Centered Leader”
Why Omar Fateh Is the Right Choice for Mayor of Minneapolis


DEMOCRATIC SOCIALISM
Martin Luther King, Jr. and Democratic Socialism
Bernie Sanders: Quote of the Day – June 12, 2019
Heather Cox Richardson on the Origin of the American Obsession with “Socialism”
The Biblical Roots of “From Each According to Ability; To Each According to Need”
Something to Think About – December 14, 2011
Jonty Langley: Quote of the Day – August 17, 2011
A Socialist Perspective on the “Democratic Debacle” in Massachusetts
Obama a Socialist? Hardly
Obama, Ayers, the “S” Word, and the “Most Politically Backward Layers in America”
A Socialist Response to the 2008 Financial Crisis
Capitalism on Trial
No, Hitler and the Nazis Weren’t Socialists
What It Means to Be a Leftist in 2025
Ted Rall: “Democrats Are Not the Left”


Saturday, November 01, 2025

November Song


The end is not the end;
it’s just a beginning.


What many consider to be the Celtic New Year takes place this evening. It’s a turning that has its roots in the Gaelic festival of Samhain (pronounced sow-in) which marks the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter, the “darker half” of the year. It is held on November 1 but its celebration begins on the evening of October 31 as the Celtic day began and ended at sunset.

Samhain is one of the four Gaelic seasonal festivals along with Imbolc, Beltaine and Lughnasa. Historically it was widely observed throughout Ireland, Scotland, and the Isle of Man. Similar festivals took place in Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany.

Wikipedia notes that:

Like Beltaine, Samhain was a liminal or threshold festival, when the boundary between this world and the Otherworld thinned, meaning the Aos Sí (the “spirits” or “faeries”) could more easily come into our world. Most scholars see the Aos Sí as remnants of pagan gods. At Samhain, they were appeased with offerings of food and drink, to ensure the people and their livestock survived the winter. The souls of dead kin were also thought to revisit their homes seeking hospitality, and a place was set at the table for them during a meal. Mumming and guising were part of the festival from at least the early modern era, whereby people went door-to-door in costume reciting verses in exchange for food. The costumes may have been a way of imitating, and disguising oneself from, the Aos Sí. Divination was also a big part of the festival and often involved nuts and apples.


As you’ve no doubt ascertained, many features of Samhain have been incorporated into the Catholic celebrations of November 1, “All Hollows Day” (or “All Saints Day”) and November 2, “All Souls Day.” Filtered through these celebrations, elements of Samhain also emerge in the modern holiday of Halloween.

Hallowtide, is the name I use for the time of transformative power that all these names, origins, meanings, and dates call to mind and heart.

A song which for me calls to mind and heart the transformative power of Hallowtide is “Pretty Tune" by Kiki Dee (left) and Carmelo Luggeri (with guest artists Pandit Dinesh and Micky Simmons). It’s from Kiki and Carmelo’s sublime 1998 album Where Rivers Meet, a beautiful title that evokes the meeting of worlds associated with Hallowtide.



Hallowtide Blessings!

May this time of transformation
bring you the endings you need and
the beginnings you desire.





Dark afternoons, driving into strange cities
And if we feel the doubt, it’s only change
Back when the days were long we could do anything
Bathed in the sunlight
It’s just a different place

This is my November song
The end is not the end
It’s just a beginning
A year in your life
What’s in a name?
It’s just my pretty tune

Radio views, I’ll look and I’ll listen
But I think it maybe time not to buy these wares
Each step moves us on
Right now I’m going home
I’m going home



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Samhain: Reaffirming the Oneness of All Spirits
Something to Think About – October 31, 2022
Samhain: A Time of Magick and Mystery
At Hallowtide, Pagan Thoughts on Restoring Our World and Our Souls
Resilience and Hope
Hallowtide Reflections
An All Hallows Eve Reflection
Halloween Thoughts
A Hallowtide Reflection
The Pagan Roots of All Saints Day
Remembering the Beloved Dead
“Call Upon Those You Love”
Our Sacred Journey Continues: An All Saints and Souls Day Reflection
An All Souls Day Reflection
Advent: A “ChristoPagan” Perspective
Magician Among the Spirits
Holy Encounters Where Two Worlds Meet
Balancing the Fire
November Musings
Time to Go Inwards
Anew

Nature images: Michael J. Bayly