Tuesday, January 27, 2026

A Line Crossed - 1.27.2026

The detention of a two-year-old girl in Minnesota alongside her father by immigration agents is not law enforcement—it is moral failure. No nation that claims to value family, due process, or basic human dignity should place a toddler into the machinery of detention. This is not about borders; it is about boundaries of conscience.

A child that young cannot understand handcuffs, custody, or commands. She understands only fear, separation, and trauma. Dragging a child into an enforcement action violates not just international human-rights norms, but the most elemental instinct to protect the vulnerable. It shames us.

Officials will insist they were “following procedure.” History teaches us that procedure is often the last refuge of injustice. When rules produce cruelty, the rules—not the children—are what must be stopped.

Minnesota did not consent to becoming a testing ground for such excesses. Communities have the right to demand restraint, transparency, and accountability from federal agents operating in their neighborhoods.

Release the child. Reunite the family without coercion or intimidation. And end practices that treat children as collateral damage. A country reveals its character not by how it punishes, but by how it protects those who cannot protect themselves.



Mass Displacement Is a Crime - 1.27.2026

The United Nations reports that more than 37,000 Palestinians were forcibly displaced in the occupied West Bank in 2025. This is not an abstract statistic. It is the deliberate uprooting of families, the erasure of communities, and the normalization of collective punishment under military occupation.

Forced displacement is a grave breach of international law. Yet it continues openly, systematically, and with near-total impunity. Homes are demolished, land is seized, and entire villages are pressured to leave—often at gunpoint or through sustained harassment—while the world issues statements and moves on.

What is unfolding in the West Bank is not a temporary security measure. It is a sustained campaign to alter demographics and permanently entrench control. Silence and inaction do not preserve neutrality; they enable abuse.

If international law is to mean anything, it must apply to everyone. Accountability cannot be selective. Human rights cannot be conditional.

The displacement of tens of thousands of Palestinians demands more than concern—it demands consequences, protection for civilians, and an end to policies that treat forced removal as governance.

History is watching, and excuses will not age well.



Trump Just Proved Carney’s Point - 1.27.2026

Donald Trump has once again demonstrated the very instability Mark Carney warned the world about: that the United States, under Trumpism, is no longer a reliable anchor of the global economic order. Carney’s argument was not ideological—it was structural. When economic power is wielded impulsively, norms collapse.

Trump’s renewed threats of tariffs, trade retaliation, and economic coercion confirm that point in real time. Markets depend on predictability, alliances depend on trust, and global finance depends on rules that outlast any single leader. Trump rejects all three. His approach treats the world economy as a zero-sum contest driven by grievance rather than cooperation.

The result is not American strength but accelerated fragmentation. Allies hedge. Rivals adapt. Capital flows elsewhere. Institutions designed to stabilize crises are weakened precisely when they are most needed.

Carney argued that leadership is about stewardship—protecting systems that benefit everyone, including the United States. Trump’s actions prove the opposite lesson: when a nation weaponizes uncertainty, it forfeits moral authority and economic influence.

In proving Carney right, Trump underscores a sobering truth: the danger is not global competition—it is global chaos, self-inflicted.



A Line Democrats Must Not Cross

Democrats are right to refuse support for a funding bill that props up a Department of Homeland Security increasingly divorced from law, accountability, and basic decency. This is not a routine budget dispute. It is a moral line being drawn.

DHS today is not merely underfunded or overstretched; it is empowered without restraint. From aggressive immigration enforcement to surveillance practices that erode civil liberties, the department has expanded its reach while evading meaningful oversight. Funding it blindly is not governance — it is complicity.

Republicans demand “security” funding with no conditions, no transparency, and no reforms. Democrats should reject that false choice. Public safety does not require abandoning constitutional principles, nor does border policy require the normalization of abuse and excess force. A funding bill that ignores these realities asks lawmakers to trade values for expediency.

Refusing to back this bill is not obstruction. It is leverage — the only tool available to force accountability and insist on guardrails. Democrats must use it.

Budgets reflect priorities. If Congress continues to bankroll DHS without limits or reform, it signals that power matters more than rights. Drawing a hard line now is not risky. What’s risky is pretending this is just another funding vote when it clearly is not.



Monday, January 26, 2026

Justice for Alex Pretti - 1.26.2026

We write with profound grief and outrage over the killing of Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse and respected caregiver at the Minneapolis VA Health Care System, who was fatally shot by federal immigration agents on January 24, 2026. Mr. Pretti, an American citizen with no serious criminal history, was widely described by friends, family, and colleagues as compassionate, dedicated, and committed to helping others.

Available video and witness accounts show Pretti was holding only a phone and attempting to assist a woman being shoved by agents when he was pepper-sprayed, tackled, and repeatedly shot at close range. These disturbing images have sparked massive protests in Minneapolis and across the country, with local officials, residents, and leaders demanding accountability, transparency, and an end to the unchecked deployment of federal immigration agents.

We urge an impartial federal investigation into the circumstances of Mr. Pretti’s death, full release of all evidence, and meaningful reforms to prevent further loss of life. American citizens must be able to exercise their rights without fear of lethal force from those sworn to protect them.



Sunday, January 25, 2026

SEASIDE RESORT ON A MASS GRAVE - 1.25.2026

On January 2, as Israel killed four more Palestinians in Gaza, Jared Kushner delivered a speech that will live in infamy. With the cold confidence of a real estate pitch, he spoke of Gaza not as a place of human suffering, but as “valuable waterfront property” — a seaside opportunity waiting to be developed once the people are removed.

This was not ignorance. It was erasure.

While families bury their dead, while children starve under siege, Kushner reduced genocide to a redevelopment plan. He transformed the barbaric crimes inflicted by Israel, backed and armed by the United States, into a “practical” vision of profit. In doing so, he revealed the moral logic at work: Palestinian lives are an obstacle; their land is an asset.

Such language is not merely offensive — it is dangerous. It normalizes ethnic cleansing by framing it as inevitability. It launders mass death through the vocabulary of markets and resorts. It treats suffering as a temporary inconvenience on the path to luxury.

History will not remember this as strategy or realism. It will remember it as cruelty — calculated, mindless, and obscene. A disgraceful speech for a disgraceful moment, spoken while Gaza burns and the world is asked to look away. 



Friday, January 23, 2026

A MORAL LINE CROSSED - 1.23.2026

The detention of five-year-old Liam Ramos by ICE is not merely a bureaucratic failure—it is a moral collapse. A government that claims to uphold law and order has instead chosen fear over humanity, power over decency, and punishment over protection.

A child is not a threat. A child is not a case number. A child should never be handcuffed by a system that knows better but acts otherwise. Detaining a five-year-old sends a chilling message: that cruelty has become routine, and accountability optional.

This is not about immigration policy. It is about values. It is about whether we accept a nation where federal agents traumatize children in the name of enforcement, while leaders hide behind procedure and silence. History will not be kind to those who normalize this abuse.

If there are no consequences for detaining a kindergartener today, what line will be crossed tomorrow? Democracies do not erode all at once—they are hollowed out by moments like this, when outrage is met with shrugs.

Liam Ramos deserves safety, not a cell. And the public deserves answers, responsibility, and an immediate end to practices that shame us all.