Tuesday, January 27, 2026

 

 

How Can I Help?
Over the past few weeks, many people from outside of Minnesota have asked me how they can help. Below is my list of opportunities, which goes beyond “call your Senator” (though that can be important).
Truth-Telling
Much of what ICE is doing in Minnesota rests on a bed of falsehoods that are being endlessly repeated by Trump-affiliated politicians. Other than Trump and a few high-level cabinet members, they rarely get called on it. So, if your member of Congress or state legislator is saying that ICE is focused on the “worst of the worst,” or that Alex Pretti was a “paid agitator,” post on social media and elsewhere the evidence that this is not true. Start a web site cataloguing those lies by a particular individual. Go to their social media feeds and correct the falsehoods one by one and link to sources. They are living in a bubble of misinformation. Let’s burst it.
Donating
Yes, there are a lot of good organizations doing great work here. Many of them are catalogued at https://www.standwithminnesota.com/
A knowledgeable observer particularly recommends Manarca (https://monarcamn.org/) and MIRAC (https://www.miracmn.com/)
Encouraging
There are some real heroes here. If you read about someone doing something good, find their email or socials and give them encouragement. You would not believe how much that has meant to me and others—to hear from people outside of this mess that we are seen. I realize that many people on the internet read a lot but don’t interact. Usually that’s fine, but if you really care, give someone a shot of love (especially if you don’t know them).
Visiting
Many people have asked if they should come here to help, and I’m urging caution. After the murder of George Floyd, people from other states came here for looting and violence (it worked), and that has made some people very wary of outsiders. However, if you are going to work on a specific project or join in a big public daytime march, you will probably be welcome. Wear mittens. Also a hat. And long underwear.
Tipping
Finally, wherever you are there are scared immigrants, documented and not, who are working for you in places you do not see—in kitchens making your food, or cleaning your hotel room. They aren’t murdering and raping. They are making your life better. Be generous.
Please, please, please—this is not an exhaustive list! Put your own ideas in the comments. Stay safe. Be brave.

Monday, January 26, 2026

 

On winter ice

 We had a great batch of haiku this week on the ambiguous topic of winter weather! There was this from CraigA:

Bracing for big storm:
Shovels, brooms, window scrapers,
Lanterns, and blankets.

And I always love to hear from Sleepy Walleye:

For now, we have ice.
Long may it linger. I dread.
A summer of ICE.

IPLawGuy got the ambiguity, too:

I see what you did
Yes, those thugs are invasive!
And fragile snowflakes.

Then he had two more to explain why his first one was listed as "anonymous":

Forgot to sign in
Yes, that’s me, IPlawGuy
Not anonymous.

Did it work this time?
It should be easier to
Sign in on a phone.

This was a good anonymous entry:

Ice is for skating
Cooling a good drink, ice packs
Not for spreading fear.

Christine had the storm down South to worry about:

Calm before the storm
Hoping we don't lose power
Inevitable.

And this one might have been talking about the trees in our Minneapolis forest:

The branches are bare
But the forest holds itself
Tall, for each tree stands.

Sunday, January 25, 2026

 

Sunday Reflection: I'm ok. Our country is not.

 


Yesterday I was getting ready to go to the gym and listening to reports about the killing of Alex Pretti, a VA nurse, by federal agents who held him down and then shot him several times. 

It made me mad, something that had been building in me-- a righteous anger at what is being done to my city. I decided to go down to the scene of the killing and observe what was happening. 

The federal agents had blocked off an intersection at 26th and Nicollet and were massed at the far end. At the other end protesters were chanting and waving signs behind police tape. I walked past several police officers to get there on the sidewalk and wasn't stopped-- I did not cross a perimeter or anything, and there was no apparent effort to clear that area.

About a minute after I arrived and as I stood towards the back of that crowd, a canister of tear gas/chemical irritant landed very close to me and a toxic cloud enveloped me and those around me. Everyone began to run to get out from the cloud. I could barely see and couldn't breathe, which made it hard to run. It was like drowning. I finally turned a corner and fell into a snowbank to recover as people ran past.

It was a peaceful protest, taking place on the other side of the line that the authorities had established. The ICE officers were dozens of yards away, on the other side of the intersection.

The gas was terrifying, but I suffered nothing compared to many others. 

But... how is this not a spiritual crisis, not about the way we treat our neighbors? 


And the original, with lyrics:






Saturday, January 24, 2026

 

In the cold

 Yesterday was the coldest one I can remember in Minnesota as it got down to -23 and no higher than -8. And that is COLD, real hair-freezing, car-killing cold. And yet, this:




Friday, January 23, 2026

 

Haiku Friday: The Heart of Winter

 


Winter is coming hard all over the country. It is well below zero here, which should keep the ICE out, ironically. But winter here is a good thing, especially this deepest part-- it keeps the invasive species away, so that the ecosystem doesn't have a destructive jolt. It's purifying.

So let's haiku about any of it this week-- here, I will go first:

Don't walk outside now
If your hair is wet (or at all)
That sting is a smack.

Now it is your turn! Just use the 5/7/5 syllable pattern, and have some fun!


Thursday, January 22, 2026

 

PMT: Brave Brave Men of ICE!

 Here in Minneapolis, things are looking pretty bleak. Restaurants are closing, kids are staying home from school, and residents, regardless of immigration status are being assaulted or, you know, shot in the face.

The point can be made, of course, that this is the cost of identifying and removing from our country the "worst of the worst"-- those murderers and rapists that the brave, brave men of ICE are working hard to take down and deport. For example, they finally managed to collar and ship out Liam Conejo Ramos, pictured here:



Though he has been posing as a five-year-old at Valley View Elementary School, I have no doubt that Ramos's lengthy rap sheet justifies whatever measures were necessary. 

And the men of ICE are not only brave but resourceful! They used Ramos, whose family was described by a school official as here with legal status on an asylum case, as bait to catch other members of his family, according to MPRAnd with the Eighth Circuit's decision to stay a District Court judge's limits on ICE tactics, I'm sure we can look forward to even more such resourcefulness in the future. 






Wednesday, January 21, 2026

 

People who give us hope: Liz Oyer

 


On Wednesdays, I am profiling people that give us hope in these troubling times.

Back in 2022 when things seemed relatively boring, I knew Liz Oyer as the very-well-qualified US Pardon Attorney. She was excellent at that job: she hired great people and re-populated the office, pushed forward hundreds of good cases, and spoke publicly (and even in prisons) about the realities of the clemency process. I got to know her fairly well-- I introduced her at a DC hearing, met with her several times, and even had her speak to my clinic students.

Sadly, her good efforts and those of her staff were eventually undermined by the Biden administration, which too often ignored her recommendations and at the end went completely off the edge with pardons to friends and family and group grants that were poorly vetted within the White House. Trump turned out to be worse, and Liz was fired after refusing to quickly approve a restoration of Mel Gibson's gun rights. 

Then, something brave happened. Instead of backing into the shrubbery like most of the people leaving DOJ she spoke out-- and continues to speak out-- about the legal disasters the DOJ is creating. The risk to her is real, but she has been undeterred. Not only that, she is unfailingly calm and correct, two things missing from administration statements these days.

We need a lot more Liz Oyers, but I am glad that at least we have this one.

Tuesday, January 20, 2026

 

Indiana-- Wow!

 


Last night's championship D1 football game was held at Miami's home field-- the Orange Bowl-- but it sure looked like an Indiana home game in there with a sea of red. Indiana fans must have spent a lot of money to get in those seats, but they have been waiting a LONG time.

Indiana won the national championship over Miami 27-21, after beating Ohio State and demolishing Alabama and Oregon over the previous three games. They finished 16-0, the first time that has been done since Yale in 1894 (really). 

I grew up and have remained a fan of the Big 10, and Indiana did not seem a likely subject for this particular ending. They have been terrible for decades-- actually, for over 100 years-- and were the team that others tried to schedule for homecoming. Last year they broke through and made the playoff, and this year they began the season ranked #21-- a rare appearance in the AP rankings. Which, as it turned out, was 20 spots too low. 

As a midwesterner and Big 10 fan still, I'm thrilled to see this win-- and to have 3 different Big 10 teams win the championship over the last three years.


Monday, January 19, 2026

 

MLK Jr. and our challenges today

 


Usually I use Mondays to recap the haiku from the previous Friday. There were some great ones last week, and I invite you to go back and read them-- but right now, I am going to turn to something else. 

Several years ago, on the 50th anniversary of the death of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., I wrote a piece for the Memphis Law Review titled "Short of the Mountaintop." You can read that here. A thesis of that article was that despite the claims of Trump (first term) officials, the dream of racial equality and equity had not been achieved in the United States. 

Now, it seems we are even further away from that mountaintop, as in my city people are stopped and detained because of their race and ethnicity in "Kavanaugh stops," and DEI is demonized and the very mention of it scrubbed from official documents in the federal system.  

The memory of MLK raises this question: Who will be the leader to take us from this rolling tragedy?

Sunday, January 18, 2026

 

Sunday Reflection: Violence and State Power

 


Jesus lived in a place that was occupied by a military force from a far-away capital, which oppressed and controlled the people the with aid of some local collaborators (such as Herod). The Roman occupation is an important context to the Gospels, and to the individual and human dignity Jesus saw and championed in the oppressed people. 

Right now, many people here in Minnesota feel as if they are in an occupied place where a militarized force restricts their movement and freedoms. Make no mistake-- there are people, American citizens and legal residents included, who will not go to church this morning because they are afraid that armed, masked men will assault them in the street or drag them out of their cars, beat, and detain them. Perhaps even kill them-- and that fear is rational.

Think about that for a moment, the reason for that empty seat in church. That's where we are.

This isn't really about immigration, this massing and deployment of a huge militarized force. Look at the chart above-- Minnesota has a tiny fraction of the immigrant population compared to places like Texas and Florida. It's about a President who does not like the people who live and govern here, does not like that he lost this state three times, who becomes enraged at a woman in a hijab among our representatives, and wants to inflict pain.

If you don't think this is a spiritual issue, I wonder about your spirit.

Saturday, January 17, 2026

 

Awkward, but heartwarming

 



Friday, January 16, 2026

 

Haiku Friday: Siblings

 


One of the best things in my life is the relationship with my brother and sister, who constantly inspire me. We're different from each other, but that's part of what makes it good. Let's haiku about siblings this week-- here, I'll go first:

I may be oldest
But no way am I the best
Those two amaze me.

Now it is your turn! Just use the 5/7/5 syllable pattern and have some fun!

Thursday, January 15, 2026

 

PMT: Jesse Ventura re-emerges....

 


Things have been pretty weird in Minnesota lately. And, of course, that summoned former governor Jesse "The Body" Ventura, who is considering another run. If you aren't familiar with the backstory:

-- From 1969-1975, he was in the US Navy, serving as an underwater demolition expert.
-- In the late '70's he served as a bodyguard for The Rolling Stones and Grateful Dead.
-- In 1979, he began wrestling in the Minnesota-based American Wrestling Association.
-- From 1981 to 1987 or so, he wrestled in the WWF (later the WWE)
-- After that, he was a commentator on wrestling shows
-- He also turned to acting, and was the co-star (with Arnold Schwarzenegger) in the original Predator film.
-- In 1990, he ran to be the Mayor of Brooklyn Park, a Minneapolis suburb. He won, and served until 1995.
-- Then, in 1998, he beat the Republican (Norm Coleman) and Democrat (Skip Humphrey) as the Reform Party candidate for governor. He chose not to run for a second term. 
-- Most recently, he successfully pushed for the legalization of recreational marijuana in Minnesota.

Ventura went to Roosevelt High in Minneapolis, which has been the scene of at least one high-profile ICE take-down. He is (like most people here) upset about what is going on, and told columnist Leonard Greene this anecdote:

“I was in the Philippines the day Ferdinand Marcos declared martial law and went under dictatorship. We went from nobody to a guy with a machine gun on every corner. That’s what happens in a dictatorship. In comes the military. That’s what’s happening here, and people better wake up to it.”

Given the political actors in power in DC, we shouldn't be surprised that wrestlers can make more sense than they do.


Wednesday, January 14, 2026

 

People Who Give Us Hope: Joe Thompson, Melinda Williams, Harry Jacobs, and Thomas Calhoun-Lopez

 


In this second edition of Wednesday profiles of people who give us hope, I lift up the six people who resigned this week from the U.S. Attorney's office in Minneapolis (four of whom, named above, are known). Though I won't speculate about the exact reason they left, the resignations come as that office has been pulled into debates about the investigation into the killing of Renee Good.

Here in Minneapolis, this is a big deal-- the best prosecutor's office in the state has lost its top leadership short of the U.S. Attorney himself, who does not have a background in criminal law.

Again, I don't know what made these six lawyers quit, but I do know it was sudden, and that it comes at great personal cost. These are people who love the work they do, and are very good at it. I doubt they have a next job lined up-- they are simply unemployed. And they made this sacrifice for principle. 

Sacrifice for principle... we could use a lot more of that, but in the circle of power it seems to be out of vogue. 



Tuesday, January 13, 2026

 

Worth watching!

 Key line: "The Golden Globe for best video editing goes to... The Justice Department..."




Monday, January 12, 2026

 

A bit of encouragement....

 It was good to hear from old friends on a cold night. Welcome back to Sleepy Walleye:

In the great white north
A moose nibbles willow twigs
Content in the cold.

And Chris B brought some wisdom:

For me, goodness thrives
When we lead with compassion
For every person.

I see goodness when
Someone listens with respect
And helps another.

Christine, too:

I take a short walk
Bird song high in the tree tops
A joyful chorus.

And Anonymous isn't wrong:

You have a good Gov
A brave and thoughtful mayor
Residents who care.

Sunday, January 11, 2026

 

Sunday Reflection: Anger and mourning

 


Yesterday I went to a protest gathering here in Minneapolis. It's been a hard week in the wake of Renee Good's death at the hands of an ICE agent.

The mood here might be different than in other places. While Fox News coverage might make things look like riots, the truth is very different-- overwhelmingly peaceful, and emotionally compex.

Yes, one of the emotions people feel is anger, particularly in those neighborhood where ICE efforts have been concentrated. Minnesota has a very defined sense of self, and the seeming occupation by federal forces-- to solve a "problem" few people perceive as such-- feels like a territorial violation among other things. And there is anger at ICE for other reasons: for the killing, for the masking, for the general jackassery.  

But yesterday there was a strong note of sadness, too. I suppose this is a period of mourning for the loss of someone who seemed decent and kind, and that impacted even people who did not know her. As people stood at the protest in the cold (I suspect more ICE agents have been hurt by slipping on ice than anything else, ironically) there were many who had no sign, who just seemed to be present, and sad.

Perhaps that, too, has its own power.


Saturday, January 10, 2026

 

CraigA is going to have to explain this to me....

 



Friday, January 09, 2026

 

Haiku Friday: Tell me something good!

 


Things are pretty rough here in Minneapolis right now. It's hard to see such a good place go through so much in the span of a year: the murder of a beloved legislator, a terrible school shooting, and now this. Can you all tell me about something good? 

Now there's cold cold rain
Not what January promised
Lend me some sunshine?

Just use the 5/7/5 syllable pattern and have some fun!

Thursday, January 08, 2026

 

PMT: ICE Shooting in Minneapolis

 Here is what happened:




And here is how that event was described by President Trump:


Thoughts?

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