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Month: January 2026

Food At Home, Food Away From Home

It’s still getting pricey

Everybody was touting the fact that inflation isn’t as high as some thought it would be in December. But I have some bad news for the administration. The aggregate number doesn’t mean much when this is happening. Just ask Joe Biden:

Grocery prices rose at the fastest pace in three years, keeping pressure on household budgets even as overall inflation held steady in December.

The jump in costs highlights the challenge for the White House in the lead-up to midterm elections. Broad inflation relief is little consolation for Americans if they aren’t seeing it reflected in grocery bills.

Grocery prices (or “food at home,” as the Bureau of Labor Statistics calls it) rose by 0.7% in December, the largest monthly gain since the peak inflation period in August 2022.

  • Food inflation was evident at restaurants, too: Costs for dining out (or “food away from home”) rose by a similar amount, the largest monthly gain in three years.

Grocery prices were up roughly 2.4% in December compared to the prior year.

  • But that masks double-digit price increases for a slew of household staples over the past 12 months, including coffee (+20%), beef (+16%) and candy (+10%).

None of that matters, not really. Because:

There is some relief elsewhere in the grocery store: Egg prices, for instance, are down more than 20% from a year ago, with an 8% decline in December alone.

It’s the hottest country in the world! And omelettes have never been cheaper!

If You Build It They Will Use It

America has been through plenty of dark times in its history, from a Civil War to depressions and two bloody world wars that leveled much of the world. But for most of us alive today, those events all happened before we were born. Aside from the ongoing menace of nuclear annihilation, the biggest threat we’ve faced as a country was 9/11 when the country’s mainland was attacked by al-Qaeda. It led to what we quickly dubbed the War on Terror, an absurd misnomer that had the effect of not only empowering the George W. Bush administration to invade a country that didn’t attack us, but also opened the door to a new era of domestic government police powers with very little oversight. 

While the War on Terror may be something of an anachronism today, the bureaucratic relics of that time are still with us — and they have become exactly what we feared it would be: a domestic police force that has led not only to the repression of basic rights and liberties, but also to a creeping authoritarian state.

As the nation still reeled from the attacks in September 2001, the administration and its enablers in Congress set about enacting many of the repressive laws, having sometimes chafed at the restrictions imposed by post-Watergate reforms reining in the various police and intelligence agencies that had gone wild during the Cold War. 

Within 45 days, Congress passed the USA Patriot Act with overwhelming bipartisan support, vastly expanding the government’s spying authority and capability, and lifting much of the oversight which protected citizens’ civil liberties. The bill also gave the government new authority to designate individuals as part of a terrorist group, seize property and jail immigrants indefinitely. Such was America’s fear and angst that its leaders were more than willing to toss aside the nation’s hard-won privacy protections in a moment of shock. 

Over the years, there has been tremendous pushback from civil libertarians, and while the legislation expired in 2020, many of its provisions are still in effect thanks to the USA Freedom Act of 2015, which included some reforms but left the country with a more repressive system overall. 

Even before 9/11, officials in national security circles had discussed changing the structure of some of the agencies to deal with the urgent threat of terrorism following the end of the Cold War. The previous decade had seen a number of attacks, starting with the first World Trade Center Bombing in 1993, Oklahoma City in 1995, the embassy bombings in East Africa in 1998 and the bombing of the USS Cole in 2000. There had been ongoing debates about ways to confront this new threat, although they didn’t make much headway. After 9/11, everything changed.

Learning that there had been warnings and clues about the attacks that weren’t communicated to other agencies, the government quickly adopted an idea that had been floating around for some time to consolidate many of the agencies under a couple of big new umbrellas. One would be the director of National Intelligence, a position that would coordinate between all the security agencies such as the National Security Agency and the CIA. The other would be a massive new domestic police agency, combining some of the agencies that had either been independent or housed in other departments including Transportation Security Administration, Federal Emergency Management Agency, Customs Service, Coast Guard and the Secret Service, along with parts of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS). 

From the moment they called it the Department of Homeland Security, many civil libertarians and historians knew we were looking at trouble. The word “Homeland” carries a lot of freight, evoking the German heimat, a word that was used liberally by the Nazis.

From the moment they called it the Department of Homeland Security, many civil libertarians and historians knew we were looking at trouble. The word “Homeland” carries a lot of freight, evoking the German heimat, a word that was used liberally by the Nazis. As James Traub wrote in the New York Times, the word “points to a world of solidarity forged through blood ties, through ancient ritual and legend” which “America’s founding generations gratefully left behind when they reached the New World, where they built a nation out of acquiescence to a shared social contract.” Even right-wing pundits like the Wall Street Journal’s Peggy Noonan said they should change the name because “it grates on a lot of people, understandably. Homeland isn’t really an American word.” 

It certainly grated on people who were concerned that building a gigantic, centralized, domestic police agency with virtually unaccountable new powers would very likely lead to repression and authoritarianism. They were dismissed as hysterics, as usual.

The fervent embrace of that word — “homeland” — should have been a clue that it was a feature, not a bug. We know that now. DHS is a vast bureaucratic organization, which is currently in the process of abdicating its duties to functions like disaster relief and airline security and focusing its massive budget on what is essentially operating as a secret police agency. 

That agency is the Immigration and Customs Enforcement, which was created out of whole cloth in 2003 as part of the DHS, as was Customs and Border Protection, which merged the functions from Customs Service, Border Patrol and certain aspects of INS. Despite the fact that these new domestic agencies were allegedly conceived for counterterrorism purposes, immigration at the border became a top conservative issue during the same period.

ICE was given jurisdiction to chase down undocumented workers throughout the nation’s interior, unlike border patrol, which was confined to 100 miles from the border. Under Barack Obama, ICE deported more immigrants than any administration in history, but they focused on new immigrants and didn’t go into the country’s interior to grab long-time residents. The idea, at the time, was to prove they were serious about border security to get buy-in for comprehensive immigration controls from Republicans. That, of course, As usual, that was a pipe dream.

Donald Trump, with the guidance of White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, has now unleashed this huge police force on the entire country to terrorize cities and towns all over the country with faces covered, dressed in military gear and armed to the teeth. ICE forces are not only brutalizing immigrants (and anyone they think looks like they might be one), they are aggressively confronting protesters and citizens who are filming them doing what they’re doing. Last week they shot and killed one such citizen activist, Renee Nicole Good, in Minneapolis. 

As feared from the moment DHS was given a name that echoed authoritarian governments of the last century, these secret police are being used for political purposes. Trump has sent them into Minnesota to target a specific Black, immigrant and Muslim community, and to exact vengeance on his perceived enemies, Gov. Tim Walz and Rep. Ilhan Omar, both Democrats. Now they are calling that young, liberal, white, female protester who was shot in the face at close range by an ICE officer a domestic terrorist. It ticks all the boxes of their agenda. 

The danger was clear from the beginning. If you build a giant police organization and give it virtually unlimited money and unlimited power, they will use it. To paraphrase Trump, if you create a secret police force you won’t have a democracy anymore. We are perilously close to losing ours.

Salon

The Escalation

The boy who cried “witch hunt” goes witch-hunting

The Donald Trump administration assumed that AMERICANS pissed off at being treated like subjects by a totalitarian government would react like frightened cocker spaniels. They were mistaken.

But Americans would be mistaken to presume that Trump’s enforcers will back down in the face of unanticipated public resistance. And they are meeting resistance.

This YouGov poll on ICE is really eye-opening. Public opinion has really swung against DHS/ICE and their terror regime. d3nkl3psvxxpe9.cloudfront.net/documents/IC…

Simon Rosenberg (@simonwdc.bsky.social) 2026-01-13T00:12:57.846Z

Conservative extremists’ first instinct, as always, will be to double down. They have already quietly prepared the ground.

On September 7, Trump issued National Security Presidential Memorandum (NSPM-7) called “Countering Domestic Terrorism and Organized Political Violence.” Among other things, it adds non-Trumpy nonprofit groups and their donors to the government’s list of potential “domestic terrorists.”

They are now using NSPM-7 to target activist groups connected to Renee Good.

The New York Times reports that Trump, in his usual fact-free manner, wants to identify and punish imagined “professional agitators” and whoever is financially supporting them (gift link):

The decision by the F.B.I. and the Justice Department to scrutinize Ms. Good’s activities and her potential connections to local activists is in line with the White House’s strategy of deflecting blame for the shooting away from federal law enforcement and toward opponents they have described as domestic terrorists, often without providing evidence.

Justice Department officials under Mr. Trump have long maintained that investigating and punishing protesters who organized efforts to physically obstruct or disrupt immigration enforcement is a legitimate subject of federal inquiries. But casting a broad net over the activist community in Minneapolis, former department officials and critics of the administration said, raises the specter that forms of political protest traditionally protected by the First Amendment could be criminalized.

Be advised, efforts like NSPM-7 designed to clamp down on the First Amendment (and to pretty much gut the rest of the Constitution) are well underway.

For his friends, everything; for his enemies, the law 

A rule published in the Federal Register last June modified 41 CFR 102-74, the rule governing the Federal Protective Service, or FPS. Originally set to take effect on Jan. 1 of this year, the new rule’s effective date was moved up to Nov. 5. If you’ve wondered what allows DHS goons to step off federal property and cross streets to assault protesters on a public sidewalk, here it is.

The Justice Guy’s substack reported in December:

It did not come from Congress and it did not come from a court. It arrived quietly, tucked into the Federal Register, written in the dry language of administrative housekeeping. Yet the practical effect is this: it expands where federal officers can detain you, and for what reasons, and it does so in a way that directly touches the right to protest and to document government action.

[…]

The new rule, codified at 6 CFR Part 139, rewrites the jurisdictional line. Instead of limiting enforcement to federal property, the rule now applies to areas outside federal property whenever the conduct in question affects federal property or the people on it. The text says that FPS jurisdiction extends to public areas whenever it is necessary to protect federal property or personnel. It also says that prohibited conduct now includes actions that occur off federal property if they affect, threaten, or endanger federal property or persons on the property.

https://www.ecfr.gov/current/title-6/chapter-I/part-139

Administration bluster has ramped up in an attempt to maintain the fiction that it is firmly in control. Trump’s “truthful hyperbole” is now state-sponsored propaganda supporting state-sponsored terrorism. Nonetheless, there is evidence that Trump 2.0 is back on its heels somewhat.

Ken Klippenstein claims that even as the Border Patrol boasts that it’s adding a massive number of agents to its Minnesota operation, that the agency is having trouble recruiting volunteers for an increasingly unpopular mission. He further claims to have obtained a Border Patrol “Legal Refresher” memo issued Monday by Tactical Commander Greg Bovino that cautions agents to review the rules for “reasonable” use of force in interactions with the public.

To be determined: Will any of that make a difference to the goons under Bovino’s command? We know he can posture, but can he control his men? They’re all working for the clampdown.

Consequences For Dumbasses

Over the top, but fair

Where are the Epstein files? A social media poster on Monday noted, “So when an ICE officer tells you to get out of the car, you’re supposed to get out of the car, what are you supposed to do when a judge tells you to release the Epstein files?”

Thus in the field failure to comply with orders barked by kitted-out and under-trained DHS enforcers merits a bullet to the head. Yet failure of AG Pam Bondi’s DOJ to comply with the Epstein Files Transparency Act, passed overwhelmingly by Congress and signed by Dear Leader, seems not to merit not even a slap on the wrist. Immediately after the killing of Renee Good in Minneapolis, the right claimed her death was the consequences of her own choices.

Donald Trump’s “Great Again”: For my friends, a pardon; for my enemies, a bullet to the head. God bless America.

Here’s a choice a fine Republican from Florida’s 6th District made on Monday: H.R.7012 – To authorize the annexation and subsequent admission to statehood of Greenland, and for other purposes.

Is it a troll by a Trump brown-noser? The image suggests that that is likely. But these days, who can tell? Rep. Randy Fine has one cosponsor. Greenland has a tenth the population of Wyoming and no love for Donald Trump. Fine would likely oppose statehood for Puerto Rico or the District.

“By acquiring Greenland, we would prevent our adversaries from controlling the Arctic Region and secure our northern flank from Russia and China,” writes Fine.

Malcolm Nance, former naval intelligence officer, foreign policy analyst and pundit, itemized for Fine a few consequences of annexing Greenland. One assumes from the worst-case rant (and a few misspellings) that Nance is emptying both barrels at the former gaming executive. Nance’s response on X is over the top, but satisfying nonetheless:

CONSEQUENCES FOR DUMBASSES: You are an F’ing idiot. If we invade Greenland we go to war with 31 nations. NATO stays together but without us. Its HQ is in Brussels, not the Pentagon. Our global reach across the Atlantic will end with our closest refueling base in Israel or Egypt. 100,000 American soldiers will be forced to board civil airliners and sent home or be taken as POWs/Detainee sWITHOUT WEAPONS OR EQUIPMENT. Canada will close its airspace and sea space. US Ballistic Missile Defense at Pettufik and Fylingdales ENDS, which means we see nothing except what space sensors can see. US Intelligence is reduced to Fort Meade, Ft Gordon and Colorado Springs and Hawaii. CIA spies will be rolled up by their former friends in HOURS. NO ONE WILL SHARE ANYTHING WITH US. ALL GLOBAL SHIPPING WILL BE CLOSED TO US. Denmark operates the largest shipping company in the world. SIX OUT OF TEN global shipping companies are in Europe … Worlds Biggest container ships? DENMARK! Australia, NZ, Canada are Commonwealth so they will cut ties with us or be neutral too.

PS Denmark & locals tun all life support and generators at Pittufik and Canada resupplies it … all 150 US Spece force personnel would become POWs to guys on sleds. FYI They have troops there now and 35,000 Caribou hunting rifles.

FYI France and UK have nukes. Hundreds of them so you cannot intimidate them with that.

Oh and they collapse the US economy by sanctioning us and selling off 2.3 Trillion in US treasuries simultaneously. Also no Botox, Ozempic or insulin. Its made in Denmark.

Ya fucking dope.

That’s fair. Over the top, but fair. (I especially appreciate Nance’s observation about the potential loss of strategic refueling bases.)

Marcy Wheeler already pointed out that Trump admitted to the New York Times that his need to possess Greenland stems from a personal problem.

Elon Musk’s own AI already reported that not owning Greenland is no impediment to building new U.S. bases there or expanding existing ones. As for mining, several reports observe that if whatever useful minerals lie buried in Greenland, if they were “getable,” mines would already be in operation:

Researchers say it would be extremely difficult and expensive to extract Greenland’s minerals because many of the island’s mineral deposits are located in remote areas above the Arctic Circle, where there is a mile-thick polar ice sheet and darkness reigns much of the year.

Not only that, but Greenland, a self-ruling territory of Denmark, lacks the infrastructure and manpower required to make this mining dream a reality.

“The idea of turning Greenland into America’s rare-earth factory is science fiction. It’s just completely bonkers,” said Malte Humpert, founder and senior fellow at The Arctic Institute. “You might as well mine on the moon. In some respects, it’s worse than the moon.”

So is our sitting president. Pray for consequences for him.

QOTD: Who Else?

Speaking to The New York Times (gift link) on Wednesday, Mr. Trump echoed grievances amplified by Vice President JD Vance and other top officials who in recent weeks have urged white men to file federal complaints with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

When asked whether protections that began in the 1960s, spurred by the passage of the Civil Rights Act, had resulted in discrimination against white men, Mr. Trump said he believed “a lot of people were very badly treated.”

“White people were very badly treated, where they did extremely well and they were not invited to go into a university to college,” he said, an apparent reference to affirmative action in college admissions. “So I would say in that way, I think it was unfair in certain cases.”

I think that says it all don’t you? Little Richie Rich’s daddy paid someone to take his SATs and he barely made it through, but it’s the young Black or female students, who’d never even been considered because they weren’t white males, who screwed over the white men. Ok.

I think this is worth thinking about too:

President Trump said during an interview with The New York Times that he regretted not ordering the National Guard to seize voting machines in swing states after his loss in the 2020 election, even though he doubted whether the Guard was “sophisticated enough” to carry out the order effectively.

The remarks by Mr. Trump in the interview last week harked back to one of the most perilous moments from his first term in office, when he was urged by some advisers to order his national security agencies to take control of machines manufactured by Dominion Voting Systems in an effort to find evidence that they had been hacked to rig the election against him.

The statement also came as he has continued his attacks on digital voting machines, saying that he wants to “lead a movement” to get rid of them altogether in advance of this year’s midterm elections.

That link to the NY Times above has the whole transcript and tape of the interview and you should click over when you have the time. He is really on a roll. I’ll be writing more about this over the next few days. It’s a doozy.

Imperial Wet Dream

Maybe Dana White for president of Greenland? Kid Rock for Canadian Viceroy? Why not?

It’s trolling, of course, but I think it’s a mistake not to acknowledge how much the Trump base is loving this stuff and has very quickly recalibrated their definition of “America First” to mean world domination. I know that sounds hyperbolic but it’s real. I think we can probably count on most Republicans to go along with whatever he does. They always do.

A Culture Of Violence

CBP knew about it 13 years ago

Ryan Goodman, co-editor-in-chief of Just Security, unearthed a report on the U.S. Customs and Border Protection’s violent culture from 13 years ago. CBP commissioned it and then tried to bury it:

The 2013 report found a deeply concerning pattern of conduct:

“It is suspected that in many vehicle shooting cases, the subject driver was attempting to flee from the agents who intentionally put themselves into the exit path of the vehicle, thereby exposing themselves to additional risk and creating justification for the use of deadly force.”

The independent review was conducted for CBP by a nonprofit organization, Police Executive Research Forum (PERF), which works closely with law enforcement agencies. The review covered cases from January 2010 to October 2012. As a mechanism to avoid misconduct in future, the PERF report recommended:

“Training and tactics should focus on avoiding positions that put agents in the path of a vehicle and getting out of the way of moving vehicles.”

That recommendation is relevant not only in consideration of the Renee Good killing but also in reflection of the Wall Street Journal and other media outlets reporting on other potentially illegal uses of deadly force by ICE agents against people in vehicles in recent months.

Back in 2013, CBP initially rejected PERF’s major recommendations for policy change on the use of deadly force. CBP also tried to keep the report secret, even from Congress. As the LA Times reported in 2014:

“U.S. Customs and Border Protection, which had commissioned the review, has tried to prevent the scathing 21-page report from coming to light.

House and Senate oversight committees requested copies last fall but received only a summary that omitted the most controversial findings — that some border agents stood in front of moving vehicles as a pretext to open fire and that agents could have moved away from rock throwers instead of shooting at them.” (emphasis added)

The report which later became public is linked here.

After the LA Times obtained the full report and CBP’s 23-page internal response, the agency shifted course. Eight days after the LA Times report, Border Patrol Chief Michael J. Fisher issued the following Directive “effective immediately”:

In accordance with CBP’s current Use of Force policy, agents shall not discharge their firearms at a moving vehicle unless the agent has a reasonable belief, based on the totality of the circumstances that deadly force is being used against an agent or another person present; such deadly force may include a moving vehicle aimed at agents or others present, but would not include a moving vehicle merely fleeing from agents. Further, agents should not place themselves in the path of a moving vehicle or use their body to block a vehicle’s path.

On May 22, 2014, the ACLU sued the CBP for release of the PERF report under the Freedom of Information Act. Again it was just eight days later that CBP then released the PERF report (though not the agency’s internal response) and made its revised handbook on the use of force public.

But has CBP made its handbook mandatory reading for the belligerent, masked thugs it’s hiring, arming, handing badges, and sending to snatch people off the streets, out of their cars, the ones turning this country into a totalitarian dystopia?

(Aside: Look at how haphazardly any gaggle of CBP agents are “uniformed.” IN any group they may be variously branded FEDERAL AGENT, ERO, CBP, HSI, ICE, or simply POLICE. It is as if CBP fits out its agents with uniforms and tactical gear randomly pulled out of bins for maximum public confusion.)

Looking for loopholes

Goodman provides a list of CBP policies on the use of deadly force against vehicles going back to 2010 at Just Security. He adds, “It gives you a sense of changes made over time and the current policies in place when ICE agent Jonathan Ross shot and killed Renee Good.”

From 2023:

C. Use of Safe Tactics

1. DHS LEOs should seek to employ tactics and techniques that effectively bring an incident under control while promoting the safety of LEOs and the public,and that minimize the risk of unintended injury or serious property damage. DHS LEOs should also avoid intentionally and unreasonably placing themselves in positions in which they have no alternative to using deadly force.

Do their policies also include not drawing and aiming weapons at unarmed bystanders and angrily threatening to shoot them?

Does training include discussion of the Fourth Amendment, the one that insures the “right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures” except upon issuance of a warrant by a local or federal judge?

Apparently not. If CBP studied its own use-of-force guidelines, it was for loopholes.

The warrant agents display here does not look like a judicial warrant. This home invasion is not a legal police action.

Great. Victims may file an administrative tort claim with CBP “for property damage or loss, or personal injury, or death resulting from the negligent or wrongful acts or omissions of an employee of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).” Good luck with that. Especially if you’re dead.

Or you might file a civil rights complaint with the Department of Homeland Security. Good luck with that too. (See American Grotesquerie for legislative long-shots in the pipeline.)

A ray of hope

“So, this all seems horrible,” as Bruce Banner said in The Avengers (2012). He was talking about an invasion from space, not a home invasion. Whatever.

Anand Giridharadas wants to add some glass-half-full to the discussion. This chaos is not the beginning of something, he argues, but the bitter end of the backlash:

We must understand that what we’ve been living through is backlash. Backlash. It’s not the engine of history. It is the revolt against the engine of history. Then we might remember — just to pat ourselves on the back for a second — that what we are actually endeavoring to do right now is to become a kind of society that has seldom, if ever, existed in history. Which is become a majority-minority, democratic superpower.

[…]

And what we have to do is get smarter than those powerful people. Get more organized than them, and understand that there is a different story to tell those who mistakenly went to the Mall and the 12 percent of Americans who actually supported that terrorist attack, and everybody else — a story to tell them about something great we are trying to do. We will actually create a country that’s better for every single person. But we have to be willing to tell that story forcefully. We have to be willing to fight those people tooth and nail, and we have to fight to win.

We are living through a revolt against the future. The future will prevail.

Until then, we fight.

If You Saw This In Another Country—

It is not against the law to “disrespect” law enforcement. Trump certainly believes this when it comes to his precious “January 6th hostages” who beat the shit out of the cops who showed the professional restraint that his ICE goons aren’t required to have.

Vox spoke with David Hausman, a UC Berkeley School of Law assistant professor and the faculty director of the Deportation Data Project, a database of individual-level immigration enforcement cases about the changes in ICE procedures under the Trump regime.

He assured me that none of what we’re seeing in Minneapolis is normal — and that these kinds of operations are about more than just immigration.

How does domestic immigration enforcement now compare to how it used to work before Trump?

Before this current administration and going back to at least the first Obama administration, ICE was really an agency that didn’t conduct many arrests. The vast majority of arrests that ICE used to conduct were really transfers of custody from a state or local authority to the federal government. And as a result, ICE arrests out in the community were very, very rare. I think it’s fair to say that ICE didn’t have that much arrest capacity, and that’s part of the reason that, now that it’s under so much pressure to create arrests, it’s going about it so indiscriminately.

How did it evolve in the Trump administration?

I think the difference between the first and second Trump administrations in ICE arrests is the sense that this administration is just not acting subject to constraints. An additional difference is that Congress recently allocated a huge amount of money for building additional detention centers, which gives ICE more capacity to imprison people after arrests now. And then one last difference is that arrests at the border are very low now, whereas they were relatively high, especially towards the end of the first Trump administration. And that also means there’s more detention capacity for people who’ve been arrested inside the United States.

I think the easiest way to see the lack of constraint is the obvious one: We just see ICE and CBP randomly arresting people, often openly, or almost openly, on the basis of race. The scale of that phenomenon is new with this administration.

It’s to fulfill the Trump administration’s mass deportation promises, right?

That’s right. ICE is under tremendous pressure from the administration to increase arrest numbers. And there just aren’t enough people who are noncitizens in jails and prisons for them to meet those numbers, which is related to the more general point that there just aren’t that many noncitizens who’ve been convicted of crimes. And that’s why, under the new administration, such a small proportion of people they’re arresting have any criminal convictions.

What effect does that have on neighborhoods, on people’s perceptions of ICE and their communities? What is this doing to our understanding of public spaces if ICE is suddenly monitoring those spaces?

Anecdotally, we’re hearing about people being afraid to go out, afraid to do normal things. There’s research from the Obama era actually showing that the intensity of immigration enforcement back then had all sorts of bad effects in communities, including unemployment and health outcomes. So there’s every reason to think that those effects would be even larger now.

It’s important to recognize that a lot of what’s happening is not about immigration. We can see that most directly in the many arrests of citizens or people with lawful immigration status in these raids. But having masked men roving the street, seemingly randomly arresting people, obviously has implications well beyond immigration.

Border Patrol is used to manhandling immigrants at he border and nobody has ever really cared about it. Recall that they were putting barbed wire in the Rio Grande and letting people die of thirst in the desert for years. But neither CPB or ICE have any training or experience dealing with protesters, traffic stops or any kind of law enforcement in neighborhoods and streets of America. Neither have they ever been granted anonymity by being allowed to wear masks and intimidate anyone who confronts them or given “absolute immunity” (largely due to the president promising to pardon them for anything they do.) They are particularly confrontational toward those who are filming them.

This is causing scenes that I don’t think anyone has seen in this country since the days of Bull Connor turning the fire hoses on protesters during the civil rights movement.


Those are all from just the last few days in Minneapolis.

Meanwhile, Trump is promising to bomb Iran for brutalizing its protesters.