Info For Preparation

No doubt we’ve all seen that AG Bondi has contacted Gov. Waltz stating that if he will forward the MN voter rolls to her, the federal government violence will stop in MN. Last I knew, that offer was declined. Meanwhile, they’re still in MN, and now they’re raiding in Maine (I’m certain their Republican US Senator is deeply concerned, though not concerned enough to demand a turnaround.) Anyway, below are some links and snippets about preparation. The fact is that immigration enforcement has been around in every state for years, but they mostly haven’t been Gestapo-awful, or not at the massive numbers of people abused and killed, as they are currently. So, it isn’t as if things can’t happen instantaneously anywhere. If we still haven’t begun building local community, it’s definitely time. Aside from making sure we can take care of our neighbors and vice-versa, here are some good guidelines for dealing with our reality. We can do this. There is a place for everyone.

10 rules of resistance for #ICEOut

Americans can learn from the anti-Nazi leaflet “10 Commandments for Danes” by denying ICE everything it needs to function.

Rivera Sun January 21, 2026

snippet: Today, after a year of rapid, large-scale mobilizing, resistance to rogue immigration agents is seeing its own set of commandments emerge. From compiling strategies from across the United States, 10 Rules of Resistance for #ICEOut can be identified. Taken as a whole, they offer all of us a robust approach to denying ICE the basic necessities of their operation.

10 Rules of Resistance for #ICEOut

  1. No silence.
  2. No selling.
  3. No service.
  4. No hotel rooms.
  5. No entry.
  6. No informing.
  7. No looking away. 
  8. No collaboration.
  9. No transporting.
  10. No detention centers.

(You can add to this list, of course. There’s no limit to the ways we can resist.) 

Nonviolent movements succeed by strategically pressuring the pillars of support for an injustice to withhold or withdraw things like information, cooperation, funding, labor and more. These 10 Rules of Resistance for #ICEOut offer ways to deny immigration agencies the key resources they need to function effectively. ICE cannot function without detention centers, transportation of detainees, access to businesses and properties, staging areas in parking lots, surveillance, telecommunication, recruitment ads, deliveries, or even quiet and uninterrupted sleep at hotels.  (snip-more at link-the title above)

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What’s it going to take to get to mass strikes?

General strikes can have a tremendous impact, but to succeed they require an organized majority, networks of solidarity and resources to weather repression.

Daniel Hunter January 20, 2026

On Jan. 23, Minnesotans will witness a new tactical experiment in resisting authoritarian consolidation: a one-day call for no work, no school, no shopping — an economic blackout across the state (www.iceoutnowmn.com).

The call is coming from a rapidly growing coalition that includes the Amalgamated Transit Union Local 1005, Service Employees International Union Local 26, UNITE HERE Local 17, Communications Workers of America Local 7250, the Saint Paul Federation of Educators, the Minneapolis Federation of Educators, the Minnesota AFL-CIO, Sunrise Movement, and grassroots groups like Tending the Soil, among others.

That breadth matters — it’s not just a tiny group but an array of organized, powerful entities.

The action carries momentum. It follows the extreme violence carried out by ICE and other immigration agents in Minnesota — and the courageous, sustained pushback by Minnesotans who have stepped in to protect one another. The Jan. 23 one-day economic blackout is not the only tactic on the table. It sits alongside legal challengescorporate pressure campaigns targeting ICE enablers, mutual aid and direct servicesphysical interventions, and more.

This is how real movements tend to move: not in a straight line, but through overlapping experiments. (snip-see the rest by clicking the title above)

And more here:

Social strikes are emerging as a defense against ICE and authoritarianism

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And some progress:

Nonviolent discipline is helping turn the tide on ICE

Despite brutal provocation, the people of Minneapolis have been courageous and remarkably nonviolent, embodying the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr.

David Cortright January 19, 2026

The movement for justice and democracy is growing and has displayed significant political clout: mobilizing unprecedented millions in mass protest, resisting ICE attacks in Minneapolis and other cities, turning interim electoral outcomes against MAGA policies, and building pressure for National Guard withdrawals. Trump’s ratings have slumped to the lowest level of his second term. A recent poll shows a majority of Americans opposed to ICE’s aggressive tactics.

Now we are at a critical juncture, a moment of escalating risk, but also opportunity for political gain. Protests and protective actions have surged in Minneapolis, especially following the murder of Renee Nicole Good. Citizens and public officials in Minneapolis have condemned the brutality of ICE and Border Patrol operations and their blatant acts of racial and ethnic profiling. They are demanding the withdrawal of federal forces and a halt to the de facto military siege of city neighborhoods.

(snip-more on the page, not tl;Dr)

Anne Applebaum: The Trump WH appears to have given ‘masked thugs’ a sense of impunity

Very interesting report.  Seems that Noem and her boyfriend wanted wide spread round ups to create a spectacle because they felt it would look good for them on TV.  Others wanted to prioritize criminals which is what tRump kept saying.  Let’s be clear, Noem and that crew are die hard racists who want to terrorize nonwhite people and make sure that everyone understands that in their minds it is a white country with white people in charge.  They don’t see nonwhite people and immigrants as humans.   Hugs

 

“WHO ELSE IS GOING TO DO IT?” Regular Folks Standing Against ICE’s Inhumane Tactics

The Kids Aren’t Alright

A teacher calls in and explains to Sam that the kids are really scared.  Hugs

Alex Pretti shooting witness describes being detained by federal agents

 

Political cartoons / memes /and news I want to share. 1-26-2026

Image from Assigned Male

Hey there! So I’ve been juggling with this idea for some time, and I think now is the best time to launch it, a little more than one month before back-to-school.

As a former elementary school teacher, I know how limited classroom budgets are, but as someone who grew up trans, I also know how important it is for trans youth to be in contact with positive trans fictional characters. So here’s my idea :

I made this children’s book titled “A Girl Like Any Other” about four yearsago, about a young girl’s transition and her family and friends. It’s basically the book that launched my career as an author. It allowed me to meet some of the most amazing families that I know, and gave me the background setting for my comic.

As it’s almost back-to-school time, I want to send copies of the book for free to elementary teachers that are willing to have it in their classrooms. All they will have to do is to message me their school’s address on Tumblr or by email before August 15th. I will also send them a link to download my “Genderific Coloring book” for free.

The goal is to get the budget to print 200 copies as well as enough money to cover shipping fees for all over the world. I’ll adjust the goal if I see that the demand is higher than that.

It costs around 8$ to print one single copy, and we can estimate a 4$ median for the shipping (it’s 2.50$ for Canada – where I live, – 3$ for the US and 5.50$ worldwide). We need to add 7% for the handling of the money by GoFundMe and Paypal, so that’s 12.84$ per copy – and 2568$ for 200 copies.

If there’s any money left from the campaign, it will be donated to the Trans Lifeline.

To contribute : gofundme.com/7d4rbtvs

Please share widely (and pass the info to teachers)!

 

Image from Assigned Male

Image from Assigned Male

 

#addicted from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

#design from Typography by hand.

 

 

 

 

#The Mad Sonneteer from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

Image from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A panel reads Trumps Ten Commandments with text following.

Image from Healing from Narcissistic and Sociopathic abuse

 

Lee Judge for 1/14/2026

 

#republican assholes from Republicans Are Domestic Terrorists

 

 

Mike Smith for 1/22/2026

 

 

Jimmy Margulies for 1/23/2026

 

 

 

Mike Smith for 1/15/2026

#republican assholes from Rejecting Republicans

 

 

 

 

#white people twitter from White People Twitter

 

 

 

 

Lisa Benson 1/23/2026

 

 

 

Two people in a living room stand and talk in front of the TV.

“Want to watch coverage of the politicians encouraging fascism or the politicians doing absolutely nothing to stop it?”

Mike Smith for 1/16/2026

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Image from What Are You Really Afraid Of?

 

#sad from #confirmed

 

 

 

Image from WIL WHEATON dot TUMBLR dot COM

 

 

 

Chris Britt for 1/23/2026

 

 

 

Lee Judge for 1/23/2026

image

Conservatives had zero problem with Dylann Roof killing nine church goers. No cries for DOJ to investigate. The fake outrage for Don Lemon is clear white supremacy.

Imagine cops buying Don Lemon Burger King?

 

image

The pastor is an ICE agent. Jesus would have flipped every table in that church.

Christianity is about welcoming the immigrant and foreigner. It’s about how you treat ‘the least of me’. Loving thy neighbor.

Conservatives get their religion from FOX and Russia, a failed godless communist backwater of civility

 

Lee Judge for 1/16/2026

 

 

 

 

 

You can not reform this level of sadism and white nationalism. You can not reform an agency infiltrated by neo-confederates and fascists and run by pedophile protectors.

You can can only dismantle and abolish. Then prosecute and incarcerate the ICE goons.

I worked as an axillary sheriff’s deputy.   We had to be trained on everything we carried and we carried pepper spray.  There is a distance you must maintain to keep it nonlethal.  Directly in the face is lethal.   Plus we had to have all those nonlethal tools used on us.  I can tell you that pepper spray is debilitating.  Many of my fellow officers needed medical support after being sprayed.  Tear gas is a military agent and much stronger than pepper spray.   I got that in the military.  What this is clearly a private military force with no restraints who are only accountable to Stephen Miller.    Hugs

 

 

 

Jimmy Margulies for 1/16/2026

 

 

 

 

 

Jimmy Margulies for 1/22/2026

 

 

 

 

 

Political/Editorial Cartoon by Rick McKee, The Augusta Chronicle on Trump Demands Greenland

 

 

An alien points a ray gun at two frightened humans.

“We come in peace, and we think we deserve a special prize for said peace or we will destroy you.”

 

Joey Weatherford for 1/19/2026
Mike Smith for 1/20/2026
Lisa Benson 1/20/2026
Lee Judge for 1/15/2026
Jon Russo for 1/22/2026
Lee Judge for 1/22/2026
Mike Smith for 1/23/2026
Tom Stiglich for 1/23/2026
John Branch for 1/23/2026
Jon Russo for 1/21/2026
Jon Russo for 1/20/2026

MS Now clips show the issues with the ICE / DHS lies.

ICE rounded up all the witnesses that did not run from them and took their phones and warned them not to talk to people about what they saw.   ICE is out of control gang thugs that feel they do not have to follow any rules or laws.  They are an authority unto themselves and that might makes right.  One person in one interview said that ICE are racists who feel the US is in great danger as the white population declines and the non-white population increases.  They want a race war and they see whites who interfere with them ethnically cleaning the US as race traitors.  Hugs

 

Again the video below shows the lies that Bovino is trying to push, that the tRump people are trying to pus.  They want to claim just having a gun and being there makes Pretti a dangerous terrorist out to mass murder ICE thugs.  But as one host shows using videos Pertti was backing away from ICE gang thugs when they attacked him.  The government wants to make it so just protesting what Stephen Miller is doing is a crime worthy of death.  Hugs

Videos appear to show agent taking gun before Minneapolis shooting

 

 

Minneapolis: Bash presses Gregory Bovino on Alex Pretti shooting

Bash asks him straight out if Pretti had brandished his gun and Gregory Bovino dodges the question instead falling back to the talking points that they have all decided looks good for them.  They claim he was interfering, nope he was filming them with his phone.   They did not like that and attacked him for doing it.  They killed a person in anger for that person filming their illegal actions.   They want to be called police and pretend they have police powers but watch the videos again, one ICE thug lunges at a woman knocking her back and down for no reason except he wanted to feel tough and Pretti was trying to help her when another ICE thug peeper sprays him in the face at point blank range.  Remember that at that close it can stop the breathing.  Then they dog pile on him beating him while on officer steals his lawful gun.  Then they shoot him repeatedly.  Bovino wants to pretend that anyone filming ICE is interfering.  He keeps saying ICE police and police action but that is not true ICE has no police powers.  It is all lies to protect their need to remove nonwhites while he keeps saying they were there for a violent offender but they don’t say what offender, and then Bovino calls him a suspect and saying that just being there he was interfering.  It makes no sense what he is saying.   Well worth her questioning him to see how he shifts and lies.   They want people to disappear and obey like, the victim he claims are the ICE thugs there.  Damn.  And they don’t want people to believe their eyes.  Hugs

 

 

Alex Pretti

Lit Hub Florida!

Waiting for lunch to digest so I can go work on the driveway while the temp is over 10 degrees, I’m reading my weekly Literary Hub newsletter. And what to my eyes should appear, but them saying today is National Florida Day! I’d still rather not be in Florida (too humid for my sinuses,) but the idea is pretty good, in and around the doom and violence in some of the day’s events. There is all sorts of stuff on this page, including Dave Barry, but skip to following pages for better bits of escape. I’m going to post a snippet about FL literature (yes, literature comes from FL, too, and it’s darned good! I love Carl Hiaasen!)

Snippet:

Today, January 25, is National Florida Day.

Despite being the epicenter of contemporary American book banning, Florida has a lush literary history, and is the subject of ongoing fascination for both writers and readers across the country. To celebrate the literary pedigree of the Sunshine State, and to combat the winter weather that is burying pretty much everyone else this weekend, we present to you a Florida reading list. This is by no means meant to be complete, of course. Just a little something to get you warmed up:

Joy Williams, Ill Nature
Amy Hempel on Ill Nature: Joy Williams lived for years in Florida, in the Keys, and was lucky to have known parts of it that no longer exist. This is one of the occasions on which her anger is also a form of mourning. “Neverglades” chronicles the destruction of an enormous percentage of this singular ecosystem, leaving it “a horror show of extirpated species.” Of Big Sugar’s role in its destruction, Williams suggests we “think of the NRA with a sweet tooth.” “That the Everglades still exist is a collective illusion,” she writes, “shared by both those who care and those who don’t.” She describes the state as “attuned to growth, on autocatalytic open throttle.”

Zora Neale Hurston, Dust Tracks on a Road

 Richard Deming on Dust Tracks on a Road: Hurston’s hometown, Eatonville, located outside Orlando, was one of the first towns in the United States to be incorporated and run by African Americans. She described it as “a pure Negro town— charter, mayor, council, town marshal and all.” Zora’s handsome father, John Hurston, a rugged, physically commanding Baptist preacher with a gift for lyric turns of language—perhaps the one gift he passed down to his daughter—would even become a three‑ term mayor in the town.

Eatonville had been a defining place for her, and although she would be forced to leave it as a teenager, it stayed with her for as long as she lived. The town and its habits, its inhabitants, all pressed knowledge and lore into the topographic folds of her mind. On benches and apple boxes and milk crates sat people at Joe Clarke’s store, the “heart and soul” of the town. When it was really humid, they gathered on the porch, shirts loosened, shooing big Florida flies, and fanning gently their foreheads. Inside and out, people talked and gossiped, telling tales large and small, real and invented.

Lauren Groff, Florida

Grace Flahive on Florida: Some books are books. Other books are places. More than any story collection I’ve read in my life, Lauren Groff’s Florida feels like tearing through the page and stepping into a fully realized portrait of the state, living and breathing and dangled with Spanish moss, as panthers pass through the shadows. In “The Midnight Zone,” a mother staying in a remote cabin with her two young boys falls from a stool and hits her head and finds herself traveling outside of her body, amongst the thick of the trees. In “Eyewall,” a woman hunkers down as a hurricane slams her home, and when the storm passes, a miracle is revealed: a single, intact chicken egg sits, gleaming, where the front steps had been.

These stories are rich, at times hallucinogenic, and unforgettable.

Carl Hiaasen, the whole oeuvre

Neil Nyren on the works of Carl Hiaasen: The books are all set in Florida, because of course they are. Besides being the place where Hiaasen was born and raised, and lives in and loves, it is a place utterly unique in both its natural beauty and its level of venality. “Every pillhead fugitive felon in America winds up in Florida eventually,” muses a detective in Double Whammy (1987). “The Human Sludge Factor—it all drops to the South.” Another detective in Skinny Dip (2004), who is originally from Minnesota, concurs: “[In the upper Midwest] the crimes were typically forthright and obvious, ignited by common greed, lust or alcohol. Florida was more complicated and extreme, and nothing could be assumed. Every scheming shithead in America turned up here sooner or later, such were the opportunities for predators.” Tied to that, gloats a crooked (and entirely uncredentialed) plastic surgeon in Skin Tight (1989), “One of the wondrous things about Florida was the climate of unabashed corruption. There was absolutely no trouble from which money could not extricate you.”

Dantiel W. Moniz, Milk Blood Heat

Grace Flahive on Milk Blood Heat: Each of the stories in Dantiel W. Moniz’s collection are the type you experience twice. First, you inhale the story (Moniz’s spellbinding prose doesn’t offer any slower option). Then, each story lingers within you, as your mind digests the inflection points, the double meanings, the emotional dynamics that Moniz has laid bare.

Set primarily in Jacksonville, Moniz’s stories trace the contours of her characters’ inner lives, including private pains and unspeakable secrets, showing us ordinary people with extraordinary things broiling just beneath the surface. Each protagonist grapples with something too dark and unwieldly for one person to carry—girlhood grief, the loss of a pregnancy, hate spun from faith, and a near-death experience, just to name a few. But Moniz’s characters find agency in the impossible—in “Tongues,” a young girl defies her community’s hypocrisy, and in “The Hearts of Our Enemies,” a mother delivers a delicious act of retribution. The collection’s title hints at the visceral stories within, and the prose delivers—as well as milk, blood and heat, this is a fully embodied world of sweat, tears, ocean water, and tiny, haunting limbs. As a reader, I let myself be swept away. As a writer, I was taking notes on Moniz’s endless skill.

Read more here.