Day 1835: "More relaxed."

Wednesday, January 28th, 2026 04:40 pm[syndicated profile] wtfjht_feed

Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1835

Today in one sentence: FBI agents executed a search warrant at Fulton County’s election facility near Atlanta, seeking records related to the 2020 election; Senate Democrats demanded new restrictions on ICE in any deal to avert a partial U.S. government shutdown; Trump’s domestic National Guard deployments are costing taxpayers about $93 million a month; the two federal officers who fired guns during the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis were placed on administrative leave; Rep. Ilhan Omar was attacked at a Minneapolis town hall when a man approached the lectern and used a syringe to spray her with an unknown liquid; the Federal Reserve kept interest rates steady at 3.5% to 3.75%, defying pressure from Trump and pausing after three consecutive quarter-point cuts; Trump warned that a “massive Armada” led was heading toward Iran and threatened another U.S. attack if Tehran did not “make a deal” on its nuclear program; and a record 45% of Americans identified as political independents in 2025.


1/ FBI agents executed a search warrant at Fulton County’s election facility near Atlanta, seeking records related to the 2020 election. While FBI only said it was carrying out a “court authorized law enforcement action,” Fulton County said the warrant “sought a number of records related to 2020 elections.” The search comes a week after Trump repeated his false claim at Davos that the 2020 vote was “rigged” and that “people will soon be prosecuted for what they did.” It also follows the Justice Department’s civil lawsuit against court clerk Ché Alexander seeking the 2020 “physical ballots, stubs and absentee ballot envelopes.” (Associated Press / Reuters / Politico / New York Times / Washington Post / ABC News / NBC News / Wall Street Journal)

2/ Senate Democrats demanded new restrictions on ICE in any deal to avert a partial U.S. government shutdown. Democrats tied funding the Department of Homeland Security to legislation requiring warrants before agents enter homes, end roving patrols, mandate body cameras and visible identification, ban agents from wearing masks, and establish a uniform code of conduct with independent investigations after use-of-force incidents. Government funding expires Friday, and Republicans and the White House oppose rewriting the Homeland Security funding bill, warning that changes would likely force a shutdown if the package must return to the House. (Washington Post / Associated Press / Bloomberg / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / Semafor)

  • Trump’s domestic National Guard deployments are costing taxpayers about $93 million a month. The Congressional Budget Office said that if current deployments continue, total costs could reach about $1.1 billion this year. (Bloomberg / NPR)

3/ The two federal officers who fired guns during the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis were placed on administrative leave. The preliminary internal review sent to Congress didn’t describe Pretti as brandishing a gun or trying to attack officers, directly undercutting Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s initial claim that Pretti was “brandishing” a gun and Stephen Miller’s portrayal of him as a “domestic terrorist” and “assassin.” After the review, Miller shifted blame to Customs and Border Protection, saying DHS’s initial public narrative came from CBP reports “from a very chaotic scene” and that the White House was evaluating why CBP personnel “may not have been following” guidance to use extra forces for “force protection” and to create a “physical barrier” between arrest teams and “disruptors.” He also pointed to the operation’s leadership, placing blame on then-border patrol commander Gregory Bovino. Trump then suggested agents could use “more relaxed” and “de-escalated” tactics in Minnesota while the operation continued under border czar Tom Homan. The Justice Department, meanwhile, charged 16 Minneapolis protesters with assault and interference tied to the enforcement surge, Attorney General Pam Bondi said. (New York Times / NBC News / ABC News / Bloomberg / New York Times / Washington Post / CNN / Wall Street Journal / Associated Press / Bloomberg)

4/ Rep. Ilhan Omar was attacked at a Minneapolis town hall when a man approached the lectern and used a syringe to spray her with an unknown liquid. She appeared unharmed and continued speaking after the man was tackled by security. Minneapolis police said 55-year-old Anthony Kazmierczak was arrested and booked into Hennepin County Jail on suspicion of third-degree assault, and the FBI later took over the investigation. Trump, meanwhile, attacked Omar – a sitting member of Congress – suggesting without evidence that she “probably had herself sprayed.” Lawmakers from both parties condemned the assault. (Washington Post / ABC News / CNN / Axios / The Guardian / NPR / New York Times / Associated Press / NBC News / Wall Street Journal)

5/ The Federal Reserve kept interest rates steady at 3.5% to 3.75%, defying pressure from Trump and pausing after three consecutive quarter-point cuts. Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said the economy is expanding at a “solid pace,” while “job gains have remained low,” the unemployment rate has shown “some signs of stabilization,” and inflation remains “somewhat elevated.” The decision comes as the Justice Department is conducting a criminal investigation into Powell over his testimony to Congress about cost overruns in a multibillion-dollar headquarters renovation. Powell has called the investigation politically motivated. (CNBC / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal / New York Times / NBC News / Washington Post)

6/ Trump warned that a “massive Armada” led was heading toward Iran and threatened another U.S. attack if Tehran did not “make a deal” on its nuclear program. He gave no specifics on the terms, beyond demanding “NO NUCLEAR WEAPONS” and citing “Operation Midnight Hammer,” which was operation that struck Iranian nuclear facilities. Trump warned that “the next attack will be far worse.” Iran’s permanent mission to the United Nations said Iran was “ready for dialogue” but would defend itself “IF PUSHED.” (CNBC / Politico / New York Times / ABC News / NBC News / Bloomberg / The Guardian)

poll/ 65% of Trump voters support the U.S. taking military action against at least one foreign country, with Iran drawing the highest support at about 50%. (Politico)

poll/ A record 45% of Americans identified as political independents in 2025, while Democrats and Republicans each accounted for 27%. Among independents, more leaned Democratic than Republican, giving Democrats a five-point edge in combined party identification and leanings, ending a three-year period in which Republicans held an advantage. (Gallup)

The 2026 midterms are in 279 days; the 2028 presidential election is in 1,014 days; and it’s been 41 days since the Trump administration was required by law to release the Epstein files.



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Usual miscellany and trivia

Wednesday, January 28th, 2026 09:07 pm[personal profile] mtbc
mtbc: maze K (white-green)
I don't manage to make time to update much lately but I can write a little about this and that occasionally.

Our dog L. is still doing reasonably better, which is reassuring. He's seemed quite well lately. I look forward to being able to take him for a good walk again. Right now I'm in the middle of my in-office days for the week so not much else gets done, of course others are home with him.

[personal profile] mst3kmoxie will graduate with M.A. (Hons) Art History so yay for them.

At work, I'm finally coming to the other side of a tricky project that's gone on for some weeks, I'm glad to be moving on to other, more usual, tasks, though today my current tasks got something of a specification change partway through. The tricky work is getting more testing now, I do hope that goes well. It's been nice to have limited timezone overlap with the person testing, then I can fix things before they start work and they get to test without me also fiddling with things.

Recently, I ran an errand which had me driving along a local road that had what seemed to me to be an absurd bicycle lane (on Google Maps), barely a couple of feet wide right in the door zone alongside the parked cars. If I were cycling, I'd not use it while hoping not to be annoying the cars behind. (When I passed, there were more cars parked further along the road than shown in the link.)

We saw Sinners (2025) and I didn't see what all the fuss is about. I tend to like the Deep South as a setting, and I like the blues, but I feel as if I've largely seen the elements before, it was easy to guess what would happen, the characters and plot seemed fairly thin; I just didn't end up much caring. I'm obviously missing something.

I've also been watching Pluribus (2025) which is an interesting concept but it does move fairly slowly, each episode doesn't come with quite the pace of developments that we get from, say, Fallout (2024). It's enough to keep me watching but, again, I'm not quite the fan that plenty others seem to be.
conuly: (Default)
and god, I love her so much. She truly is a sweet and gentle kitty.

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Read more... )

Both the news and the weather continue awful

Saturday, January 31st, 2026 03:51 am[personal profile] conuly
conuly: (Default)
Do you know how hard it even is to get people to protest in this sort of crappy weather? It's cold out!

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Read more... )

Terminology [curr ev]

Wednesday, January 28th, 2026 03:33 am[personal profile] siderea
siderea: (Default)
Overheard on Reddit, u/Itsyademonboi:
Sorry, Nazis are from Germany under Adolf Hitler, what we have here is Sparkling Fascists.

Day 1834: "A very good job."

Tuesday, January 27th, 2026 04:51 pm[syndicated profile] wtfjht_feed

Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1834

Today in one sentence: Trump said he’ll be “watching over” an “honest investigation” into the killing of Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis before blaming Pretti for carrying a gun he was legally permitted to have; House Democrats threatened to begin impeachment proceedings against Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem if Trump doesn’t fire her; Stephen Miller reportedly directed Noem to publicly claim that Alex Pretti wanted to “massacre” immigration agents after he was shot and killed in Minneapolis; Trump’s immigration policies coincided with a year-to-year drop in U.S. population growth; and U.S. consumer confidence fell in January to its lowest level since 2014 as Americans grew more pessimistic about the economy and the job market.


1/ Trump said he’ll be “watching over” an “honest investigation” into the killing of Alex Pretti by federal agents in Minneapolis before blaming Pretti for carrying a gun he was legally permitted to have. “You can’t walk in with guns,” Trump said. “You can’t do that.” Minnesota’s gun laws permit open carrying a handgun as long as the gun owner has a valid permit, which Minneapolis Police said Pretti had. Even the NRA, a longtime Trump ally, called the Trump administration’s rhetoric that officers could be “legally justified” in shooting an armed citizen “dangerous and wrong,” urging a full investigation instead of “demonizing law-abiding citizens.” Trump added that you’d have to be a “stupid person” not to think what happened to Pretti was “very unfortunate.” (New York Times / CNBC / Politico / Associated Press / The Guardian)

  • Since July, the Trump administration has publicly declared 16 Department of Homeland Security shooting incidents justified even before investigations were completed. In at least four cases, prosecutors dropped charges or judges dismissed them after video or witness evidence contradicted DHS claims that those shot had attacked officers. No ICE, Border Patrol, or Homeland Security Investigations officer has faced criminal charges or disciplinary action.(Washington Post)

2/ House Democrats threatened to begin impeachment proceedings against Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem if Trump doesn’t fire her. Democrats said Noem spread false or unsupported claims about the shooting, including that Pretti was “brandishing” a weapon and “violently” resisted officers, that they argued are contradicted by bystander video. Republicans Sens. Thom Tillis and Lisa Murkowski also called for Noem to resign. A DHS report sent to the House Oversight Committee, meanwhile, confirmed that two federal officers fired their guns at Pretti “approximately five seconds” after an officer yelled “He’s got a gun!” multiple times. The ultimatum came after Trump reportedly met for nearly two hours in the Oval Office with Noem and her top aide Corey Lewandowski to discuss the political and operational response in Minnesota. After the meeting, Trump said Noem was “doing a very good job” and rejected calls for her to step down. (CNBC / Politico / Washington Post / Axios / CBS News / New York Times / Associated Press / The Hill / ABC News / CNN / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal)

  • U.S. District Judge Patrick Schiltz ordered acting ICE director Todd Lyons to appear in court Friday and warned he could be held in contempt for repeatedly failing to comply with court orders. Schiltz said ICE had ignored or delayed bond hearings and release orders for detained immigrants, writing that “the court’s patience is at an end.” (New York Times / Reuters / Politico / Washington Post)

3/ Stephen Miller reportedly directed Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to publicly claim that Alex Pretti wanted to “massacre” immigration agents after he was shot and killed in Minneapolis. The DHS statement was rushed out under Miller’s guidance after reports that Pretti had a gun, despite limited information from the officers involved. Video later contradicted parts of that narrative, and Trump subsequently sent border czar Tom Homan to Minnesota. After the statement was released, Miller called Pretti “an assassin” on X, which JD Vance then amplified. (Axios)

4/ Trump’s immigration policies coincided with a year-to-year drop in U.S. population growth, which fell to 0.5% in 2025 from nearly 1% in 2024. The population grew by 1.8 million in 2025, the slowest rate of growth since the Covid-19 pandemic. Net international migration dropped to about 1.3 million from roughly 2.7 million a year earlier, a decline Census researchers said reflects tighter border controls late in Biden’s term and Trump’s immigration crackdown in the first half of his first year back in office. The Census Bureau projects that net immigration could fall to about 321,000 by mid-2026 if current trends continue. Births, meanwhile, barely exceeded deaths. (Associated Press / Washington Post / Wall Street Journal)

5/ U.S. consumer confidence fell in January to its lowest level since 2014 as Americans grew more pessimistic about the economy and the job market. the Conference Board reporting its index dropped 9.7 points to 84.5 – weaker than during the pandemic and missing all economist estimates. A separate expectations index, which measures consumers’ outlook for business conditions, jobs, and income over the next six months, fell 9.5 points to 65.1 – well below the recession warning threshold of 80. It’s the 12th consecutive month that the reading has come in under 80. (Bloomberg / ABC News / CNN / Associated Press)

The 2026 midterms are in 280 days; the 2028 presidential election is in 1,015 days; and it’s been 40 days since the Trump administration was required by law to release the Epstein files.



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mellowtigger: (cooperation)

For those who don't know the history of Fort Snelling, here in Minneapolis, there is this good page by our state historical society. If you ever visit Minneapolis, the museum and site is worth a visit. You may, however, have heard of Dred Scott. Fort Snelling also features prominently in that historical lesson too, with videos available at this page.

I mentioned earlier that I emailed my Minnesota state senator and representative, asking them to convert our National Guard into a state defense force, which the federal government could never command against the interests of our people.

Today, I emailed them again with the following message:

subject: return land of Fort Snelling to the Dakota nation
body:

I've seen the news that the federal government intends to take over Fort Snelling. This move is bad in the long term for the interests of Minnesota's citizens.

It is my understanding that the land area of Fort Snelling is still Minnesota territory, though not organized with smaller authorities like counties or cities.

Could Minnesota gift that land (or sell it for $1 or something similarly trivial that the Dakota people still value) to a native tribe, granting it sovereign nation status, so the federal government loses the right to station troops or materiel there?

If so, then please craft the necessary legislation. As a condition of the sale, ask the Dakota nation to continue allowing the Minnesota Historical Society to continue operation there with their excellent museum that does not shy away from the fort's dark history. Never forget.

Please, do SOMETHING to resist this federal occupation.

resident of district [district #]
[name, address, phone]

I wish I could take credit for the core idea, but I saw it somewhere on social medial in the firehose of resistance information out there.

Day 1833: "Productive."

Monday, January 26th, 2026 04:04 pm[syndicated profile] wtfjht_feed

Posted by Matt Kiser

Day 1833

Today in one sentence: Trump agreed to “look into reducing the number of federal agents in Minnesota” after a Border Patrol agent killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and U.S. citizen; Trump sent border czar Tom Homan to Minnesota to oversee ICE operations; Senate Democrats threatened to block the House-passed funding package unless Republicans strip out the Department of Homeland Security bill; the CDC’s vaccine advisory panel said polio, measles, and possibly all shots should be optional; and the American Academy of Pediatrics told parents to ignore the CDC’s revised federal guidance and instead follow its full childhood vaccine schedule.


1/ Trump agreed to “look into reducing the number of federal agents in Minnesota” after a Border Patrol agent killed Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and U.S. citizen. Early Saturday, DHS claimed agents were on Nicollet Avenue for a “targeted operation” when Pretti “approached” them with a 9mm handgun intending to “massacre law enforcement,” and that he “violently resisted” efforts to disarm him. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem claimed Pretti had been “brandishing” a weapon, while Stephen Miller called Pretti a “domestic terrorist” and an “assassin.” Bystander video, however, shows Pretti holding a phone when agents first confront him. An officer then appears to remove a handgun from Pretti’s waistband area and step away. Less than a second later, an agent fired several rounds. In total, at least 10 shots were fired within five seconds. DHS claimed the Border Patrol agent fired in self-defense, but said investigators are reviewing body camera footage from multiple agents in the fatal shooting. On Sunday, Trump blamed the death on “Democrat run Sanctuary Cities and States” that said they’ve “created dangerous circumstances for EVERYONE involved” by “REFUSING to cooperate with ICE.” But on Monday, Trump said he had “a very good call” with Gov. Tim Walz and that they “seemed to be on a similar wavelength.” Walz’s office called the conversation “productive” and said Trump agreed to speak with DHS about ensuring state investigators can conduct an independent investigation. The White House later said Trump “does not want any Americans to lose their lives in the streets of America,” but press secretary Karoline Leavitt continued to blame Democrats, saying, “This tragedy occurred as a result of a deliberate and hostile resistance by Democrat leaders in Minnesota for weeks.” Pretti’s killing followed the Jan. 7 shooting death of Renée Good, another U.S. citizen in Minneapolis, that federal officials also defended as justified. (New York Times / Washington Post / Wall Street Journal / Axios / NBC News / CNN / New York Times / CNBC / NBC News / Wall Street Journal / Politico / Washington Post / New York Times / Wall Street Journal / New York Times)

  • U.S. District Judge Eric Tostrud blocked the Department of Homeland Security from “destroying or altering” evidence related to the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by a Customs and Border Protection agent. Minnesota’s Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, Hennepin County officials, and the state attorney general sued DHS, ICE, CBP and the U.S. Border Patrol after state officials were blocked from participating in the investigation. DHS called accusations it would destroy evidence “ridiculous.” (ABC News / Bloomberg / Wall Street Journal / NBC News / The Hill)
  • EARLIER: FBI supervisor Tracee Mergen resigned after being pressured to drop a civil rights investigation into the ICE officer who killed Renee Good. Senior Justice Department officials said there are no plans to investigate whether officer Jonathan Ross used excessive force, and the department instead opened an investigation into Good and her partner. (New York Times)

2/ Trump sent border czar Tom Homan to Minnesota to oversee ICE operations, and administration officials said senior Border Patrol commander Gregory Bovino was expected to leave Minneapolis. Bovino had become the public face of “Operation Metro Surge,” appearing alongside agents and publicly defending the killing of ICU nurse Alex Pretti while asserting without evidence that Pretti intended to “massacre” officers. The Trump administration positioned Homan as the new on-the-ground point person and insisted that Bovino would still lead Border Patrol nationally. Meanwhile, about 140 House Democrats have signed on to articles of impeachment targeting Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem. (ABC News / New York Times / Axios / NBC News / CNN / Wall Street Journal / Politico / Axios / Associated Press / Bloomberg / The Hill)

3/ Senate Democrats threatened to block the House-passed funding package unless Republicans strip out the Department of Homeland Security bill. Democrats said they won’t vote to fund ICE and Customs and Border Protection without new guardrails and accountability after Border Patrol agents killed Alex Pretti in Minneapolis. Republicans have, so far, signaled they they’ll move ahead with the full package anyway as the White House said it didn’t want DHS funding separated out. Government funding is set to expire at the end of the week, and Republicans need at least seven Democratic votes to clear the 60-vote threshold in the Senate. (Associated Press / Washington Post / Bloomberg / Politico / CNN / The Hill / Politico)


✏️ Notables.

  1. The CDC’s vaccine advisory panel said polio, measles, and possibly all shots should be optional. Kirk Milhoan argued personal autonomy outweighs preventable deaths. (New York Times)

  2. The American Academy of Pediatrics told parents to ignore the CDC’s revised federal guidance and instead follow its full childhood vaccine schedule. The AAP still recommends immunizations for 18 diseases—adding back shots like flu, Covid-19, and hepatitis A and B. (Wall Street Journal)

  3. Moderna’s won’t fund new late-stage vaccine trials because of U.S. hostility to immunizations. CEO Stéphane Bancel said regulatory delays and narrower U.S. eligibility under HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. have shrunk the market and undercut returns. (Bloomberg)

  4. Trump threatened 100% tariffs on Canadian imports if Ottawa makes a trade deal with China. The warning comes after Canada announced a new strategic partnership with China. (CNN)

  5. Trump said he will raise tariffs on South Korean autos, pharmaceuticals, and lumber from 15% to 25%. He blamed Seoul’s legislature for not approving a July 30, 2025 trade deal. (CNBC)

The 2026 midterms are in 281 days; the 2028 presidential election is in 1,016 days; and it’s been 39 days since the Trump administration was required by law to release the Epstein files.



Support today’s essential newsletter and resist the daily shock and awe: Become a member

Subscribe: Get the Daily Update in your inbox for free

thewayne: (Default)
GitHub is software mainly intended for programmers and developers as a software repository. Very useful stuff, very widely-used. And now about to get a lot more expensive for large teams.

Microsoft bought GitHub a few years back, and a month ago, announced that it would start charging people who ran it on their own hardware $0.002 per minute charge for "self-hosted runners executing jobs on private GitHub repositories. At the same time, GitHub noted in a Tuesday blog post that it's lowering the prices of GitHub-hosted runners beginning January 1, under a scheme it calls "simpler pricing and a better experience for GitHub Actions." Self-hosted runner usage on public repositories will remain free, we note." This was to go into effect in March.

One person contacted noted that they had run the numbers and it would cost them $3,500 a month on top of their normal monthly fee for using GitHub.

There was a large hue and cry, and pretty much the same day Microsoft announced that they were rescinding the charge.

HOWEVER, as The Register article points out about the later MS announcement, "We note that GitHub didn’t say it won’t ever go forward with charging for self-hosted runners, only that it’s postponing the change. As one commenter on the community thread pointed out, that means charging for self-hosted runners may be a foregone conclusion."

The Slashdot article lists many completely free, open-source alternatives to GitHub and I expect people are making migration plans as we speak.

https://www.theregister.com/2025/12/17/github_charge_dev_own_hardware/

https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/12/17/2042247/github-is-going-to-start-charging-you-for-using-your-own-hardware
thewayne: (Default)
I'm not going to bother talking about the nominees. There was a point in time where I had a minimal interest in that, but not anymore. Most of the Best Picture nominees never show at my local theater, and my theatrical movie watching has really declined over recent years.

The thing that I find interesting is that in two years, we'll have the last broadcast on broadcast television. It is estimated that ABC/Disney paid over $100,000,000 for last years broadcast, and were looking for lower fees as viewer numbers have been declining. With the broadcast going streaming, there's no time limit: as the article says, the broadcast could be six hours long with Mr. Beast hosting.

It will be mildly interesting to see what kind of viewership numbers YouTube/Google can pull. Most people with streaming can pull it up on the same TV with which they watched it on ABC, but now they can easily view it in more countries than ABC/Disney was able to reach. And people can probably watch it more easily on devices while at work.

But I still don't really care.

https://variety.com/2025/film/news/oscars-youtube-2029-1236610989/

https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/12/17/210247/the-oscars-will-abandon-broadcast-tv-for-youtube-in-2029
duskpeterson: The lowercased letters D and P, joined together (Default)

If you want to thank someone in Emor for your inn's lavatory, this is the place to do so. Emor's engineers are the best in the world and are admirably eager to spread their wonderful inventions outside of Emor. If you wish, you may make arrangements here to have your own tribe's housing improved; some engineers are willing to travel as far as the mainland, if the job is interesting enough.

As you may have guessed by now, "Engineering Academy" means that engineering students are trained here. While the Law Academy and Medical Academy train only peninsulareans, the Engineering Academy opens its doors to mainlanders as well. You may apply for entrance into the Academy while you are here.


[Translator's note: The Emorian engineers are so discreet in their work that they aren't often seen. However, their Marcadian colleagues are the ones to blame for the terrifying catapult used in Empty Dagger Hand.]

andrewducker: (Default)
In a slightly more sensible world this would be a perfect time for the One Nation/Moderate Conservatives to say "Thank goodness all of the far right monsters have left the party, time to pull the party back towards the center".

But I'm not convinced there are more than a few of them left.

theme song: ICE, F**K YOU

Monday, January 26th, 2026 08:15 am[personal profile] mellowtigger
mellowtigger: (music)

The word for today is "indignation". That summary comes from the USA's own history via a USA historian, one of the two that I keep mentioning so often. That pair of USA historians called the USA officially a fascist government several days (weeks?) ago. In that same vein, I didn't catch this news originally, but this morning I saw that our Minnesota Governor Walz compared events now to Nazi occupation.

Which brings me to today's theme song. The lyrics feature the primary chant during the march where one group called out "F**K ICE!" and the other group responded with "ICE OUT!" We continued that process occasionally throughout the 2+ hours that I was at the march. Another chant was the ever popular "This is what democracy looks like!" CAUTION: This video is loud, and it uses the same crude language throughout. I would normally include the great lyrics, written below the video as is my custom, except for the same crude language. It's appropriate, though.

I like this video primarily because it has excellent drone footage of the downtown march in Minneapolis during the general strike on Friday last week. I need to find an original source for it. The crowd was enormous. Tens of thousands of people. This video footage is great. The crowd attendance was great.

icefall, rain, melt

Sunday, January 25th, 2026 11:56 pm[personal profile] darkoshi
darkoshi: (Default)
A small layer of ice accumulated last night, on plants, grass, fallen leaves, metal railings, rooftops, exposed cars, and trampolines. The walkways and roads near my house remained clear. The first time I went outside today, it even snowed, in the shape of tiny spikes. Later, I went for a walk. It was nice. Frosty, quiet; two dogs barked at me, one wearing a pretty green sweater.

On my way out, I saw 2 cars on a neighbor's driveway, one with its lights on, either just arrived or getting ready to leave. On the way back only one car was there, but its back windshield appeared to be broken, missing glass. That reminded me of the warnings I'd read yesterday against throwing hot water on your windshield to melt the ice.

Near my house, wind suddenly kicked up, ominous and exciting. It started raining, and I went inside.

It rained and/or sleeted a lot. But now it has stopped. The roads & walkways are still clear; the ice on other surfaces is melting. The temp is slightly above freezing and expected to remain above freezing until tomorrow night. So it will all melt.

cloak-and-dagger

Sunday, January 25th, 2026 08:02 pm[personal profile] mellowtigger
mellowtigger: (nazi Republican 45th president)

I'm pretty sure that I'm not up to the task for all of this cloak-and-dagger stuff in my life at the moment. I mean, I understand that I'm being increasingly dramatic, but... I'm short on sleep, and, seriously, this is what's happening in my actual city and my actual life right now.

I'm in the middle of taking virtual training courses, and I'm already having to rethink how I want to participate. So, I think that means the first session was excellent. I now understand much more about legal observer tactics. And apparently the neighbor-to-neighbor community networking method that is being used here in Minneapolis is modeled after one developed a decade ago for Rogers Park in Chicago.

A few hours before that training session, the neighborhood security response chat (loosely described in this video) was compromised shortly after I joined it. It made me wonder, "Hmmm. I certainly didn't share details, but the timing is strange. I wonder if my Yahoo email account is monitored, since the needed details were there with my invitation?" Which then led me to wonder about the appointment I have tomorrow after work to meet a total stranger at the nearby Cub grocery (aka "public space" which is open to ICE intrusion). I never really understood why meeting a unionist in Minneapolis would be necessary before I could talk to the IBT Local 8 (in Pennsylvania) about what it would mean for me to join from another state. I did ask IBT Local 8 about it, using my Yahoo email address. Later, a random person contacts me to meet in person about unions and cross-state involvement. "Sure, " I say, simplemindedly. Now, though, I wonder. Should I ask the local network to have someone there at that time, to record the interaction, just in case? Or is this just part of the Teamsters' own cloak-and-dagger protocol? They certainly have their own history of corruption and violence. *sigh*

Fascism sucks. It ruins everyone, I think. Trust is hope is antidote... maybe? We have to choose which life, which world, we want to inhabit. I'm certain of that much, at least. The rest of this Andor political intrigue is just not my specialty. I prefer everything out and visible on the proverbial table.

I've seen lots of good and interesting videos recently. I'll leave you with this one primary recommendation, though. I mentioned the high-quality Legal Eagle channel back in 2024, and here is their main lawyer in a very uncharacteristically emotional video with good review of what's happening. He gets bonus points for mentioning stochastic terrorism, which I've also called out a few times over the years.

D’oh!

Sunday, January 25th, 2026 08:08 pm[personal profile] conuly
conuly: (Default)
Made dinner - left it home.

And there’s no delivery because of all this snow. Also, they’re nearly out of food.

Good thing I waited for the bus at the corner store - I have cheezits, coke, and a cupcake, a c food diet. (And in the morning I’ll eat some of their Cheerios!)

I nearly didn’t make it in. Couldn’t get a car, and my bus kept getting canceled, but finally one made it out of the terminal.

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