Rip van Winkle and the unbelievable breaking news

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Rip van Winkle woke up every day and read the paper and said, “Unbelievable!”

Roosevelt gets a third term – “Are you kidding?”
Germans, the country of Beethoven – “What’s with this thing about Jews?”
Military-industrial complex? “Sounds like a mall.”
Someone shot Kennedy? “No way. Why was he in Texas?”
Tanks on the streets of Detroit: “Impossible.”
Both Martin Luther King and Malcom X? “Unbelievable! Why would anyone?”

He thought the Moon Shot was great; he enjoyed that, it was not incredible.
But the photos coming out of Vietnam were “unbelievable.” 
Some of it just went over his head. The Kent State killings, for example. Jackson State? No clue.

The volunteer army? “Well, maybe.” 
He liked “Morning in America.”
Tax cuts? Can’t hurt.
But his local post office closes – “I can’t believe it.”
The price of medical care? “Unbelievable.” 
That 6-lane bridge that fell in Milwaukee: “Are you kidding?”
The Twin Towers – “Why them? They’re not military. They’re office buildings. I don’t get it.”
“What kind of nutcase takes a mortgage with an APR? What’s a tranche?” 
Gaza – “Good god, how did we get here?”
And “No more fireflies? What’s with that? There were always fireflies.”

Now this guy – “You’re not going to believe this. Incredible.”

Tell Rip to read this poem backwards. Maybe push it back 150 years. Your assignment: help Rip believe.

The DisState of the Union

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As the nation waited, and took a breath to watch the president hold forth on the State of the Union, Trump was hit with a week’s worth of fresh crises.

We learned last Tuesday, that the DOJ and the FBI have been scrubbing the president’s name from the Epstein files before they’re released to the public.  The NYT reported on February 25th that one of those files held back are investigative notes of a 13 year old girl who reported Trump raped her.

That would blow up a State of the Union speech of any other president. But he has no sense of shame or accountability or any boundaries.

June 19th, PBS reported that America’s top Catholic leaders issued a damning statement about Trump’s ICE and immigration policy. They included a number of  policy demands and criticisms of both DHS and ICE. 

They call for human rights for immigrants, for supporting not destroying immigrant families, for a new immigration policy with a path to citizenship and provide a way to stay for immigrants who’ve made a life here and “work for the common good”.

While he was preparing for his speech, polling from different sources show the alleged pedophile, convicted sexual abuser president has the lowest approval rating of both his terms. His approval rating is below 40%. Sixty percent of Americans disapprove of him as president.

He started his speech with a list of data points liberally sprinkled with half truths, bad numbers and outright lying. 

He lied liberally about the economy. He blamed (how many times) Biden for the inflation that still plagues us. Of course, anyone who understands economics knows that the Trump tariffs are sales taxes on imported goods that keep prices up, even raising them.

Jarringly, he reported that the US has taken 80 million barrels of oil from Venezuela since the kidnapping of their president. War for Oil?

After bragging about assaulting the environment with huge increases in oil drilling, he crowed  his “Drill Baby Drill” chant.

He claimed to have cleaned up several major American cities including Memphis, Washington, DC and others.

The rest of the speech was the con man’s games and tricks. He wrapped himself in glory that he didn’t earn or deserve: introducing military heroes soaking up their applause as though he had ever known the sacrifice, discipline and sheer terror and trauma that comes from all combat and defines what is given and taken in mortal struggle.

I couldn’t help but notice that every time he delivered an applause line he turned his head, preening with his silhouette.

The chamber was obviously more split than usual after the war Democrats have experienced from Trump including trying to prosecute Democratic war heroes like Senator Mark Kelly, basing federal aid on the way a state votes, flooding city streets with corrupt cops called ICE to remove as many brown and black people as possible. The Democratic side of the aisle had many open seats as many boycotted the speech.

While at one hour and forty-seven minutes, and forty seconds, the address was the longest in history. But not as long as rumors, and leaks, had predicted leading to speculation that some were using inside information to play the betting market on the speech’s length.

In the end the whole effort was about shoring up his slipping base. Of course, that just reinforces the status quo which is a disaster for Trump.

In the upper Potomac Valley we are facing two distinct crises piled on us by the GOP Administration.

Trump and his maga crowd are determined to build an ICE detention center just across the river in Maryland. And here in West Virginia the MAGA GOP Governor wants our state to create the most data centers in our nation. It will soak up our ground water, and suck up electrical power, driving up our electric bills.

It’s happening all over the country. Trump and the GOP are trying to sell the earth beneath our feet as they turn our children and grandchildren into high tech serfs, who only matter for giving themselves to a virtual boss and robotic existence.

Time to turn it around in November.

Jesse Jackson Was a Labor Leader

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Jesse Jackson. April 2011. Creative Commons

The Reverend Jesse Jackson was a labor leader of the most visionary kind, in the great tradition of WEB Dubois, Paul Robeson and Martin Luther King, 

Like Dr King, who identified the “Triple Evils” of poverty, racism, and militarism”, Reverend understood the links between class/race and US foreign policy in a way that few labor leaders do, recognizing that making these connections was essential to building a powerful workers movement in the US and beyond.

I know that because I saw him in action repeatedly in the 2-year period, 1992-1994, that I worked for him at the National Rainbow Coalition as his labor deputy.

In 1988, while helping to build Labor For Jackson in Boston, and prior to my time at the Rainbow, I was inspired by Reverend’s emphasis on  peace in the Middle East and Palestinian rights in his Presidential campaigns. This encouraged me to visit the West Bank as part of a labor solidarity delegation sponsored by the ADC (Arab American Anti-Discrimination Committee). Palestinians are workers, and I got to see firsthand the incredible obstacles they face to be respected as workers.

In 1990, while Bush was planning a massive deployment of troops to Kuwait, Reverend traveled to Iraq, met with Hussein and brought back a large group of Americans trapped there. Meanwhile, I was helping to form an Anti-Gulf War labor group in DC.  This experience helped plant the seeds for the founding of US Labor Against the War in 2003 when the Iraq war broke out. Reverend of course opposed that war even before it started.

In 1992 I became his Labor Deputy as the fight against NAFTA was moving center stage in the US.  I watched as Reverend repeatedly educated African Americans in churches about the dangers to all working-class people of a pro-corporate trade agreement that didn’t include them.  Crossing borders, like Robeson and Dubois did, we organized two Rainbow sponsored labor rallies on the US-Canada border. One was near Niagara Falls and one in the Peace Park on the Washington State/British Columbia border. Mexican representatives participated in both rallies. Then Reverend sent me to Mexico to attend the Tri National Conference to oppose NAFTA. 

In September 1993, I was with Reverend when he led a militant march and civil disobedience action with workers organizing for a union with ACTWU at Earle Industries in rural Arkansas.  He then pressured the CEO to allow a vote that brought in the union. As the events there were concluding Reverend rushed off to charter a plane to join the signing of the OSLO accords in DC and meet with Arafat. Reverend was not invited to the signing, despite his years of Middle East peace work, but that didn’t stop him.

In 1993 in St Louis, I did the advanced planning for a city-wide pre-strike janitors rally.  At the rally, the excited janitors were disappointed when they saw me coming on stage to read my remarks instead of Reverend. (very embarrassing role for me). At the last-minute Reverend had been asked by President Clinton to fly to South Africa to represent the US at the funeral of anti-apartheid leader Oliver Tambo, a friend of his.  Reverend had been to South Africa as early as 1979 and was deeply involved in the Anti-Apartheid movement. But he also cared about the janitors in St Louis.

In 1993, when Nelson Mandela visited the US, Reverend planned a large rally for him in DC. My job was to raise the money for the event from Johnny Morris, the powerful leader of the Pennsylvania Conference of Teamsters and a big fan of Reverends.  At an earlier statewide meeting of the Conference, I watched Reverend exhibit his insight into workers and their union leaders. When Reverend arrived at the podium to speak, accompanied by a loud applause, Johnny reached out to shake his hand. Instead, Reverend bent his knee and kissed Johnny’s ring, embarrassing him and shocking the amused workers in the room. No one did that to Johnny Morris. Then Reverend gave a powerful well received speech. Later Johnny agreed to provide the money as long as he and his team could get a photo with Mandela. My job was to arrange it. It was a great example of bringing solidarity with South Africa from an unlikely labor partner. And of course, it was an honor to watch Reverend and Nelson Mandela interact at this huge event, two great world leaders and friends.

In October 1993 Reverend was invited for the first time to speak at the annual AFL-CIO convention. Walter Johnson, the progressive SF Labor Council President called an outside rally, allegedly one of the first rallies ever held at an AFL-CIO convention. Although AFL-CIO President Lane Kirkland didn’t want Reverend to speak, Johnson declared it was his town and his rally. Reverend gave a powerful speech about NAFTA to a large cheering crowd.

Just as Reverend couldn’t resist an opportunity for righteous acts of international solidarity, he couldn’t resist a big worker fight. Another example was in Providence, RI prior to an election for a large unit of service and maintenance workers at the Rhode Island Hospital with the Teamsters, under Ron Carey. With great organizers on the ground (Bob Muehlenkamp, Valerie Ervin and Gary Stevenson) Reverend led a large rally with the workers in front of the hospital. Many of them had walked out to join him. The viciously anti-union CEO came out, thinking he could talk Reverend into a private meeting. Instead, Reverend led the rally into the hospital lobby and sat down with the CEO and organizing committee. He asked them to join hands and began a call and response prayer asking God to assure a fair election and contract for the workers. He then led large entourage through the hospital, promoting the union in every department, while the CEO trailed helplessly behind the workers, begging him to stop and meet alone with him. The Teamsters won the election.

Like Dr King, who identified the “Triple Evils” of poverty, racism, and militarism”, Reverend understood the links between class/race and US foreign policy in a way that few labor leaders do, recognizing that making these connections was essential to building a powerful workers movement in the US and beyond.. Photo credits, left to right-top: David Bacon; WikiCommons. Left to right-bottom: David Bacon; WikiCommons

Another big labor issue of this period was striker replacement and the  “Cesar Chavez Workplace Fairness Act”  in Congress, to prohibit employers from hiring permanent replacements for striking workers.  The AFL-CIO showed no interest in working with the Rainbow to promote this new bill, so Reverend asked me to organize a march. He loved marches for justice. In Atlanta, I worked with CLC President Steward Acuff and the legendary civil rights leader James Orange, to organize a two-day march in support of 150 high paid white male printing workers from GCIU in Doraville, GA, 15 miles into Atlanta. The workers had been permanently replaced during a 5-month strike. Reverend brought Al Sharton down to march with us “to give him more experience with labor,” he explained. Along with 1199 SEIU President Dennis Rivera, they marched in the front of this contingent of white male workers ending up in the offices of Georgia Senator Sam Nunn. To this day, the right of employers to permanently replace workers on economic strikes is a major impediment to holding companies accountable.

One last example of many that shows Reverend’s commitment to building a militant labor movement was in collaboration with the highly regarded, president of 1199 SEIU in Connecticut, Jerry Brown.  1199 was staging a statewide strike of nursing home workers and they invited Reverend to join them in blocking the main bridge in New Haven during rush hour and taking arrests.

Enroute to New Haven, at HERE’s request, Reverend led a march through a Westchester country club of service workers who were involved in a tough contract struggle. Reverend marched in the front with an older white woman worker, passing by the refurbished chicken coups that served as the workers’ housing. The women worker marching with Reverend had been the nanny for the now CEO when he was a child.

From there we were driven to the large New Haven rally and greeted by cheering women CNAs. He gave a rousing speech, including one of his favorite lines, “you take the early bus and then you work the late shift,” followed by a group chant “I am somebody.” He understood the powerful capitalist strategy to make workers feel like they are worthless and therefore shouldn’t complain. After essentially shutting down New Haven during rush hour Reverend demanded that the police arrest him, which they did reluctantly, and then escort him out of town to get to La Guardia in time for our flight home.  Another day in the life. 

Even during the short time I was with Reverend Jackson I witnessed many other dramatic examples of labor and international solidarity. Can you imagine how many of these happened during his lifetime? Jesse Jackson was a labor leader.

In January 1994 my wife Evie and I traveled to St Petersburg, Russia to adopt our daughter for life from an orphanage. As a caring gesture, Reverend wrote a letter for me to carry that essentially said, politely, “To Whom it May Concern; Don’t mess with all the paperwork approvals Gene needs, or you will have to mess with me.” Given his international renown, I knew things would go well.

Long live Reverend Jesse Jackson

Keep Hope Alive

Gene Bruskin with Reverend and daughter Nadja

We Have to Arm Ourselves With Knowledge

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In order to defeat the Chief Nazi leader Stephen Miller, the Gestapo green shirt army, the Fascist KKK Trump Regime and the Deportation Industrial Profit Making Complex, we have to arm ourselves with knowledge. We have to have the courage to take collective  actions for justice with each other.

The brutal campaign of violent policies, terror, kidnappings, incarceration in concentration profit making detention centers and the violation of immigrant and American People’s civil and human rights is no way near its apex.

Nazi Stephen Miller has unleashed his personal Gestapo green shirt army of terrorists across cities throughout the USA to inflict fear and terror upon not only Mexicans and other Latinos, who make up the majority of undocumented in the USA, but also Asian Pacific, Middle Eastern, African and Caribbean immigrant families.

Nazi Stephen Miller has made it a point to unleash government controlled violence on its citizens to ensure that his plan inflicts as much physical pain, hatred, racism, economic disparity, damaging the local economy and businesses across the country. He is causing the separation of families, and creating more unemployment and homelessness.

Where are the 1200 people who were housed at Alligator Alcatraz in Florida? The families do not know where ICE moved them.

The Nazi Stephen Miller, who directs the Fascist Trump administration and all of Trump’s murderous cabinet members all need to be arrested, and charged for crimes against humanity, human rights abuses, incarcerating and putting children in cages and for ordering the killing of American citizens and immigrants.

The Deportation Industrial Detention Complex GEO and CoreCivic Companies have detention centers in all 50 States across the USA and have been given government contracts making $40 to $50 million a year in this shadow economy. The GEO Group controls every aspect of the deportation pipeline, from ground transportation to air flights according to ReelNews. ICE is getting ready to contract with the GEO Group and CoreCivic with $50 billion dollars to turn all these warehoused into illegal detention centers

Todd Lyons the acting Director of ICE in April, 2025 at a private prison convention in Mirror, Arizona according to Reels said “ We need to start treating this like a real business like Amazon but with humans”.  State Street, BlackRock and Vanguard are the largest shareholders in the GEO incorporation. 

The Los Angeles Blue Dodgers and LA Lakers owners group, “The Guggenheim Baseball Management Partners” with controlling interest of Owner Mark Walker are investors in the Deportation Industrial Detention Complex. Mexicans and Latinos make up the majority of Dodger fans in LA and a large portion of the LA Laker fan base. 

Mark Walker and other Laker, Dodger investors including Laker great Magic Johnson are fan money to help GEO and CoreCivic the leading companies in the Deportation Industrial Detention Complex.

NO FAN MONEY FOR DETENTION CENTERS!  

This is not morally acceptable! Make the call to the Dodger owners to divest and remove the money we pay at the Dodgers and Lakers games from the corporations like GEO and CoreCivic. 

We have to call on the AFL-CIO leadership and all the building trade unions to tell their workers- electricians, laborers, cement roofers, pipe fitters, etc., to refuse to work on the construction of these detention incarceration centers. They need to refuse to be part of violating the civil and human rights of children and immigrants in the USA. Their legacy for justice and the fight against Fascism, demands they refuse to work on these sites.

There is no room for neutrality here. The AFL-CIO leadership and its labor affiliates need to find courage and boldly lead the American working people in shutting down this country against fascism.  The AFL-CIO must call upon every worker in every industry from AFSCME, SEIU public sector workers to UFCW retail workers, janitors, home health care workers, to the UFW farmworkers in the agricultural fields, to the Teamsters in the trucking and distribution warehousing industry, workers in the packing and slaughter houses, to the Longshore Unions at every port throughout the country, to the Building Trades unions, to municipal and school bus drivers in every city, to the pilots, flight attendants, ground crews, to all the professors, teachers in every school district and college, and calling on all students across the country to take part in a national strike on May 1st 2026.

We have to call on every pastor, reverend, priest, rabbi, Imam, of every religious denomination to preach to their flock about joining the call for moral action in helping to boycott stores and shut down America for justice. 

Our moral responsibility is to stop the incarceration of children in cages, separation of families, the violations of human and democratic rights and an end to beating and killing of immigrants and US citizens. The loud call for abolishment and defunding of ICE has to reverberate across the USA. We have to demonstrate by the millions in the streets exercising our First Amendment right to freedom of speech,  “ABOLISH ICE”. The loud call for the abolishment and defunding of ICE has to reverberate across the USA with demonstrations in the streets by millions exercising our First Amendment rights to freedom of speech.

We have to arm ourselves with our civil and human rights knowledge to  educate everyone in our communities starting with elementary, middle, high school, college students, businesses and every neighbor in our communities across the country.

The  study of our civil and humans rights is one of many ways that will help our communities to defend themselves. 

We have to have a coordinated national boycott against Walmart, Home Depot, Amazon, and Target. These are some of the corporations that contribute to the Fascist Trump Regime and are in every community in the USA. 

WE NEED TO BOYCOT THEM NOW!

We have to collectively have the courage and come together in bold action in an American act of kindness by shutting down this country and striking for each other in order to preserve our civil, democratic and human rights today and for generations to come.

About the author

Jorge H Rodriguez

Jorge “Coqu"i H. Rodriguez is a union member of the National Writers Union, a long time labor, immigration and civil rights activist.  He was part of CASA’s 15 year national campaign, 1971n to 1986, fight to gain amnesty for 5.5 million undocumented families in the US. Jorge has led several historical labor organizing campaigns wins in California. View all posts by Jorge H Rodriguez →

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New Bio of Famous East Bay Author Recalls Fine Old Conflict in Richmond

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During World War II, the shipyard workforce in Richmond, CA. numbered one hundred thousand—and 20 percent was non-white.  By 1945, Richmond had the largest public housing program in the nation, with seventy-three thousand residents. Eighty percent of Richmond’s black residents lived in these hastily constructed units but in racially segregated fashion.

As a “thank you” for their service building ships to defeat fascism in Germany and Japan, Richmond’s fourteen thousand African Americans became victims of renewed housing and job discrimination and wholesale displacement efforts, after the war.

The city’s federally funded projects became a major postwar battle- ground because of decisions made by the powerful, all-white Richmond Housing Authority (RHA). In the late 1940s and early 1950s, nonwhite public housing tenants were showered with eviction notices warning that their apartment buildings were about to be torn down.

The RHA’s demolition plans were protested by the local National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) because they were clearly designed to drive African Americans out of town. Black tenants responded by signing petitions and attending mass meetings, picketing the RHA, and organizing rent strikes, all of which slowed the process. Nevertheless, by 1953, all seventeen of the public housing projects near Richmond harbor had been dismantled.

Private housing options in the city were far more limited for blacks than whites, as navy veteran and American Legion post vice-commander Wilbur Gary discovered. He tried to move his wife, Borece, and their seven children from the Harbor Gate wartime housing project when it was scheduled for destruction. Their new home, purchased through a black real estate agent, was located at 2821 Brook Way in a subdivision of eight hundred single-family homes called Rollingwood. During the war, it was a neighborhood almost exclusively occupied by white defense industry workers.

The Gary family was greeted by white racists who planted a KKK-style cross on their lawn. The downtown Richmond office window of their realtor, Neitha Williams, was shattered by a brick. On the night of March 7, 1952, after the family actually moved in, a menacing crowd of four hundred white men and teenage boys gathered outside their new home to curse at them, hurl insults, and throw rocks.

The unruly mob ignored the county sheriff when he read parts of a US Supreme Court decision outlawing restrictive covenants of the sort that white homeowners wrongly assumed would continue to protect them from new neighbors of the wrong color.  The white protestors were similarly unmoved by the arrival of three white ministers who carried a US flag and a copy of the Constitution. The sheriff’s department made no arrests and little effort to defuse the situation.

Fortunately, hundreds of Bay Area progressives, both black and white, rushed to the scene that night–and for as long as it took thereafter–to defend the Gary family.  They formed a “human chain” around the house facing the screaming mob, in what became round-the-clock shifts. Among the first to arrive from Oakland was a key organizer of this fight, an immigrant from Britain whose activist career is now the subject of a new biography calledTrouble Maker: The Fierce, Unruly, Life of Jessica Mitford. (Harper-Collins, 2025)

Written by literature professor Carla Kaplan, this book cites many other examples of Mitford’s exemplary 20th century solidarity with causes ranging from fighting fascism in Spain in the 1930s to saving the lives of unjustly convicted death row prisoners in the U.S.

Despite coming from an extremely privileged background—described in Mittford’s own 1977 memoir A Fine Old Conflictshe was able to “transform herself into an engaged, effective ally because she sought others out who had reshaped their lives through personal sacrifice. She read. She listened.”

In the Gary case, her more experienced partner was Buddy Green, a fellow Communist Party member, military veteran, and leader of the East Bay branch of the left-wing Civil Rights Congress (CRC). As Kaplan reports, the CRC took a “a more activist approach to the fight for civil rights—not only in court but in the streets—to picket and do things that were considered, at the time, beneath the dignity of the NAACP.”

Green and Mitford’s hurried consultation with the besieged Gary family led to “a many-pronged approach: physical protection of the house, trade union resolutions demanding police protection, and distribution of leaflets, drawn up by the CRC, throughout the Bay Area.” While keeping its distance from the CRC, the Richmond NAACP mobilized its members, to join more radical out-of-towners. Eventually, two dozen white home-owners broke ranks. They wrote a letter welcoming the Gary family to their neighborhood, which Green and Mitford widely publicized.

Community and labor campaigners then demanded that the Richmond city council ban segregation in post-war public housing. A special council session heard complaints about joblessness and other problems facing the city’s non-white residents. The city’s own discriminatory hiring practices came under fire. At the time, Richmond had no nonwhite firefighters and only two black police officers.

As Kaplan argues, the successful defense of the Gary family showed the potential of “an inter-racial, cross-class, cross-gender coalition” capable of mobilizing at a moment’s notice. This was similar to today’s emergency response efforts triggered by the local appearance of any uniformed thugs from Immigration Control and Enforcement (ICE).

A decade after her involvement in Richmond’s most famous fair housing fight, Jessica Mitford became one of the leading “muckrakers” in America. In 1963, she published a best-selling book on widespread consumer rip-offs by the funeral industry. In The American Way of Deathand many related articles, Mitford exposed “corrupt and predatory practices” that exploited millions of poor and working-class people after a death in their families. Her investigative journalism led to major regulatory reforms and positive changes in funeral home behavior.

During her varied late-in-life journalism career, Mitford published multiple memoirs and tackled other topics like prison reform, Nixon Administration prosecution of political dissenters, and the over-medicalization of child birth Mitford’s American Way of Birthwas one of her last works.

Readers will findTroublemaker to be a long read (as in 581 pages worth). But the subject of this autobiography, who died in 1996, was a long-time maker of “good trouble.” Her exemplary activism is worthy of emulation by defenders of civil rights, civil liberties, and immigrants in the East Bay today.

As foes of Trump here and across the country sound the alarm about the menacing arrival of ICE, the Gary family story reminds us about the importance of showing up in time!

About the author

Steve Early

Steve Early is a NewsGuild/CWA member who supports Sara Steffens’ campaign for CWA president. He is a former CWA staff member in New England and also served as Administrative Assistant to the Vice-President of CWA District One, the union’s largest region. He is the author of five books about labor and politics, including Save Our Unions: Dispatches from a Movement in Distress (MRP, 2013) which reports on efforts to revitalize CWA and other unions. He can be reached at Lsupport@aol.com View all posts by Steve Early →

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A Few Resources for Current Events

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Vigil at SF VA hospital to remember VA nurse killed by Border Patrol in Minneapolis. 27 Jan 2026. Photo: Robert Gumpert

Stephanie Luce at the City University of New York (CUNY) has long been a moving force in promoting best practices in labor. She has compiled a battery of resources that are very useful for labor activists and organizers struggling to find a path for mass action in this moment of resistance to Trump authoritarianism. The Forum is proud to publish her compilation.

1) The Dig, in-depth interview on Minnesota organizing 

2) Labor Notes articles:

 – “In The Twin Cities, A Massive Strike Against ICE” (Luis Feliz Leon)

– “How to Spread the General Strike Beyond the Twin Cities” (Stephanie Luce)

3) “How to Build a Real General Strike Against ICE” (Eric Blanc)

Why do you think they call it the “first amendment”?

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They call it the first amendment because without the rights guaranteed in the First Amendment, democracy is impossible:

Free speech is critical to communicate with anyone and everyone in a free society.

Freedom of Religion was demanded by the framers who had been persecuted by state religions in Europe, in particular Baptists.

Freedom of assembly and petition guaranteeing the right of all of us to ask and demand our will to the government.

Freedom of the Press is another right without which democracy is not possible. It is this freedom of our independent media to cover the news, to let our people know what a free people need to know to govern ourselves that is entirely necessary for democracy or self government.  We all must know what is going on to be able to direct democracy.

It is that very Freedom of the Press that President Trump is violating in pursuit of his “Minneapolis Moby Dick” now heaped on the American citizens and their neighbors in that great city. Like Moby Dick, Trump is pursuing an obsession that will turn on him.

Former CNN star journalist Don Lemon was arrested by the FBI for covering a demonstration at a right-wing church pastored by an ICE officer.

What????? Church pastored by an ICE agent? You wonder how he relates to the Lamb of God?

Any city traumatized as Minneapolis has a lot of open sores, and this church that connected the Gospel of Jesus to the murder of peacemakers and healers, was seen as part of the official government oppression of one of America’s great cities, Minneapolis.

There was a demonstration at the church. Don Lemon covered the protest for his podcast and other platforms.

For being at the protest and asking questions that reporters ask, the FBI arrested Don Lemon in an act that undercuts the Constitution.

It still shakes me to watch this failed president undercut, and undermine the Constitution. He ignores court orders and judgements. He has no dignity nor respect for citizens, especially those of color and exercising their rights. He is threatening our cities, and our lives with with squads of troops.

He is committing war crimes and murders, while he ignores the murders of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by his armed thugs.

He is attacking protestors with poisonous chemical agents, and breaking faith with all our global allies. He releases convicted fraudsters, sex offenders and domestic terrorists by dint of the highest bid.

Not only was Don Lemon arrested, but another African-American journalist Georgia Fort was also arrested by the FBI in Minneapolis for doing her job as a journalist.

Trump and pedophile Jeffrey Epstein, a global sex trafficker, were famous friends for years, and were credibly accused of raping and abusing young women and girls.

Before Trump was elected to his current term, he and his campaign demanded the release of the file compiled by federal law enforcement. After his election, the DOJ refused to release the files until legislation was passed and signed, ordering them to do so. They released a relatively small a portion of the files, heavily redacted.

What a crazy coincidence that during the media focus on Minneapolis, the MAGA Department of Justice (DOJ) released a second tranche of documents from the Epstein files. This release is 3 million plus documents. President Trump’s name is scattered thousands of times throughout the documents. 

The DOJ says there are another 3 million documents that they will not release.  That is a violation of the law passed by Congress and signed by Trump. 

Democratic Congressman Robert Garcia said: “This continues to be a major cover up. Pam Bondi needs to held in contempt.”

The upward pressure on prices, Trump’s tariffs, his deportation of immigrant farm workers, the evidence of pedophilia, the assaults on the people of Minneapolis, squads of heavily armed thugs stalking communities of color, and workplaces – healing the country can only happen when Trump and company is held to account.

This all sets up a doozy of midterm elections in November.  Democrats could stop Trump’s march to autocracy and tyranny if they elect a majority in the House of Representatives.

The street side protests, anti-ICE demonstrations and campaigning against the GOP will continue throughout this year.

In fact, the date of our next national No Kings Day has been set for March 28. Please calendar that date.

The Death, Times, and Legacy of Mike Quill – Labor Champion, Anti-racist, Anti-colonialist

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In the moment we are in when a vicious fascist would be dictator occupies the White House and sends his ICE agents to American cities to terrorize the populace, leadership is called for in the crisis. Rarely has a union leader displayed such courage in the face of repression and the “law” as Mike Quill, the founder and leader of the Transport Workers Union. January 28, 2026 is the sixtieth anniversary of Quill’s death, and my friend Pat Kelly, a retired Teamster leader, has penned a tribute that we are happy to publish on The Forum.


Capitol police ejecting Michael Matthew J. Quill, President of the CIO Transport Workers, from the Dies Committee room. Chairman Dies ordered Quill’s removal from the room following his–Quill’s–action in denouncing the committee while being questioned.. WikiCommons

Michael John Quill was an Irish immigrant born in County Kerry in the southwest of Ireland, September 18, 1905, an Irish Catholic farm kid who was IRA all the way.  Quill died of a heart attack in New York on January 28, 1966, sixty years ago, right after leading a historic and important strike by the Transport Workers Union. He was jailed for violating the infamous Taylor Law prohibiting strikes by public employees. He died a few days after being released from jail. At the time, many of us thought that Mike had been murdered. The judge knew he had a weak heart and that jail could kill him. 

In 1966 I was a college student at the University of Wisconsin and a part-time casual in a Teamster warehouse called Central States Warehouse and Storage in Madison. This was a time of great turmoil and struggle. Malcolm X had been assassinated in February, 1965.  James Chaney, Michael Schwerner, and Andrew Goodman were murdered by the Ku Klux Klan in the summer of 1964.  And Viola Liuzzo was also murdered by the Klan in March of 1965.  The war in Vietnam was raging and escalating with 100 or more young Americans dying every day. In the midst of these roiling historical moments I found great inspiration in the actions and leadership of Mike Quill.

Wiki Commons

On December 29, 1965 Quill announced that the TWU would not bargain with the City of New York after midnight on New Year’s Eve. That afternoon Quill was served with papers telling him he had to explain in court why the union should not be stopped from striking. Quill called the press and went on TV that night and tore the summons up. Quill’s union put over 8,000 workers on the street stopping NYC from moving 6,280 subways cars at 481 stations and over 720 miles of track. He acted in defiance of a court order and went to jail. On Day 4 of the strike Quill suffered a heart attack and was transferred to Bellevue hospital. The strike lasted 12 days and resulted in a great victory. Quill was sent to Mt Sinai after settlement and rested there until he was released on January 25. He died three days later at home.

Mike Quill was one of the strongest and most effective labor organizers in the United States. He militantly pushed for industrial unionism and led many strikes. He was a significant leader of the CIO and of public employees as well as of contracted transit workers. A great advocate for racial equality, Quill was an early negotiator of non-discriminatory language in collective bargaining agreements.  His youthful work as a courier for the IRA (Irish Republican Army) showed an early hostility to colonialism, and he remained a lifetime fighter against imperialism.  He was an inspiration to thousands of youth and adults. Studying his life and actions will help us deal with the current Fascist threat and Gestapo tactics we are facing in the United States. Viva industrial unionism! Viva Mike Quill!

Learn about Mike Quill:

Mike Quill Himself: A Memoir by Shirley Quill (his wife and coworker)

In Transit: The Transport Workers Union in New York City, 1933-1966 by Joshua B. Freeman

A Mighty Union: Quill, Connolly, and the TWU by Lorcan Collins

 

 

About the author

Patrick Kelly

Patrick Kelly was born in Northwest Iowa at a time when the private sector was between 30 and 40% unionized. He joined The Teamsters in 1966 (same year Quill died) in New York City. He became a job steward under the National Master Freight Agreement in 1973 and an elected business agent in 1978. Kelly worked for the Teamsters beginning in 1978 and still serves as a Union Trustee on the Western Teamsters Welfare Trust Fund. He was a Iowa Delegate to the 2024 Chicago Democratic Convention. View all posts by Patrick Kelly →

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Can You Imagine?

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Relentlessly the rain fell all day on Saturday, January 10 including during a 200 person protest against ICE in front of the John Brown Courthouse in downtown Charles Town. The crowd stood through the rain totally exposed, smiling  but stoic as hell. The ICE (Immigration Customs and Enforcement) crisis of Renee Good’s shooting death by an ICE agent  had just landed as our community was figuring out next steps after the ICE crisis at the MiDegollado Restaurant in Charles Town. At Mi Degollado ICE agents had sent customers and staff scattering with a day of business ruined.

Other businesses are being closed, ruined, family resources completely emptied.  One small businessman is barely hanging on because of ICE. Even workers with work visas and permits are afraid of coming to work.  One of his work leaders for almost 10 years was picked up by ICE, dropped off at the border, went home and was back at work in a month. But with ICE focused on West  Virginia because of our red hat maga Gov. Morrissey, the workers even with work permits are afraid to be on the streets.  The businessman said most of his immigrant workers have been with him eight to ten years. In his words: “People have settled here. They’ve created home and raised American kids. They pay taxes, go to church and are great workers. Now they’re afraid to go back and forth to work.” 

Can you imagine watching the U.S. government chase and hunt your friends and workers and destroy your company and your family’s living?  

Community leaders are working to create and streamline support for immigrants who may be vulnerable. Faith leaders are amongst those working to support immigrant working families. Folks are finding ways to communicate urgent news across towns and counties, but the protests after Renee Good’s killing have been the largest expressions of support for immigrants families and working class neighbors.

The next day, Sunday, January 11, there were three more protests against ICE (Immigration Customs & Enforcement) in our area.  The sun was in and out, no rain, but cold and windy.

About a hundred protestors gathered in downtown Martinsburg. The crowd spread out along both sides in every direction King and Queen Streets.

As we’ve done this entire last year the crowds were joyful, loud, engaging and spirited. We do our best to remain above the maga juvenile behavior. It is the most raw and on the ground democracy there is.  We are literally on the street engaging our neighbors in the greatest challenge of our lives…saving democracy.

Thirty folks gathered that Sunday in Berkeley Springs in front of the Morgan County Courthouse. They have established themselves in a  largely red area.  Every week some of them meet us in Martinsburg to protest at the offices of Senator Shelley Capito and Congressman Riley Moore. Since Renee Good’s killing they’ve been holding a vigil at 2 pm everyday. 

Dr. Eric Schwartz, one of the leaders from Hagerstown, Maryland reported: “We had roughly 80 folks. It was a quiet and reflective atmosphere. Many people were also coming by with clothing and food donations. “

The national news on ICE and their deportation activities has been beyond fast. While courts have rolled back Trump’s ability to deploy the National Guard, the administration has been deploying more and more ICE agents across the United States, across West Virginia and across the Eastern Panhandle. Ironically, more than 50% of Americans disapprove of ICE deportation behavior (Quinnipiac Poll 1/13/2026).  Deportation had been the last policy of the Trump Administration that enjoyed public support.

On January 13, CNN reported that six federal DOJ attorneys in Minnesota have resigned in protest of Trump’s pressure to protect the killer of Renee Good. 

All of us are tested in this moment that will determine whether we are free or fascist. Nobody can tell you which side you stand on, but you gotta pick a side. Then you gotta live with it the rest of your life…and eternity. 

Florence Reece was married to a coal miner and union organizer in East Kentucky in 1933 when Hitler imprisoned unions folks in Germany and American coal miners were on strike fighting for their union.

Florence Reece wrote “Which Side Are You On?”

That is the primary question–the first and most important. 

My dad was a Southern Baptist preacher. Like all of us he had flaws, but he taught me that has served as a compass:  ” Son, we’re always on the side of the underdog.” 

I believe that goes for most of us.

Immigrant Stories: Five and Six

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San Francisco, CA. Photo: Robert Gumpert

The final assignment for “World History:  from 1500 to the present” is an oral history with an immigrant.  It is a scary assignment for most of the students; after all, the majority take that class in the first semester of their first year.  They were in high school only three months prior.  The most frightening part is having to find an immigrant and ask them about that aspect of their life.  I do not allow students to interview fellow students.  They have to find someone older and with more experience.  That makes the assignment nerve-wracking.  How do you go up to an “adult” and ask her to talk about such intimate and potentially traumatic time in her life?  The oral history is due at the end of the term, after we have reached the twentieth-century in the textbook, with its upheavals, wars, and drastic economic changes.  The students know the context for their subjects’ lives and what led them to leave the land of their birth and their communities behind.  When it is all done, students are truly glad they did the work.  They learn so much from listening to just one person’s story.  Their single story puts a human face to the texts they read and the news they hear or see in the media.  Migration is not a sound bite anymore; it is real people revealing the reasons why they left behind everything they knew and love to venture into the United States.  What you will read here is just a sampling.  The compilers of the stories are: Marelize Meyer, Madeline Haun, Riley Drummond, Collin Kopchik, Colin Jones, and Adam Mills.  All except for Adam are first year students.


I was born October 24 1961. I lived away from my mother in a small village in El Salvador. Not a big city or even what a suburban area would look like in the U.S., but a village, small but home. Most people there made their living by working in small businesses, like selling pupusas and tortillas in food stands or small restaurants. My mother moved to Venezuela early on in my life so I lived with my grandmother and my older sister.  Most of my other relatives, like my cousins and my uncle, also lived in other areas around El Salvador. I lived in the village for most of my childhood leading up to high school. However, when I reached high school there weren’t any nearby high schools to go to, the only schools near my village were elementary and middle schools.

However, I wanted to continue my education so I ended up going to a school in another state. I still lived in my village, but now I had to ride a bus for hours to get to school. My sister eventually moved out to start college while I was in high school deciding to live on her campus grounds. I saw a few conflicts such as a short war, only lasting a few days, around when I was six or seven years old. The war was known as the “football war,” a war between us Salvadorans and the Hondurans. I didn’t know much about it at the time, just that it affected me and my family, I was too young to understand.

Then, while I was in high school, the civil war struck. The Salvadoran government started fighting an organization called the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front (FMLN), a guerrilla rebel group that was founded to push back against the government’s mistreatment of poor people. The government responded to their formation by attacking the FMLN and killing Salvadoran citizens who supported their cause. Because of the killings me and my family were relocated to an area between El Salvador and Honduras. We didn’t have any houses or buildings there, just tents for a lot of people. So many people were relocated to this area that it was hard to keep track of people once they were there. Family and friends were often separated in the growing crowds, as was the case with my uncle who went missing there. Neither me nor my family ever saw him again.

Me and my grandmother lived in the camps while the war raged on. While we were there we learned that the Salvadoran military was killing college students who supported rights for poor people. Among those killed was my sister. I was 17 back then and she was 19. It was after that when my mother arrived to take me to Venezuela.

I left El Salvador while the war was still in progress. However, my other family members like my grandmother stayed behind. I then stayed with my mother in Venezuela for two years. I decided not to go to college during this time, or any time in the future. After spending those two years in Venezuela I decided to move to the U.S., in October 1988. I was allowed to visit as a tourist and was given a permit to stay for six months. After that I applied for citizenship, which was eventually approved. I often worked as a caretaker or babysitter while I was there. Eventually I had two daughters in the U.S. My first daughter decided to live in the U.S. for a while and then travelled back to Venezuela after growing up. My second daughter on the other hand decided to stay and would eventually have my granddaughter.

Even after the civil war was over there were still problems with the country. I learned that after the war the FMLN became a political party in the Salvadoran government and the government was reformed. However, many who served sentences after they immigrated from El Salvador to the U.S. were deported, so this resulted in many gang members being deported back to El Salvador where they caused problems without the intervention of the government. The two primary gangs were MS-13 and the 18th Street gang, mostly teenagers. Often they would recruit kids that thought they were cool, needed protection, or needed money. On top of killing each other they threatened workers to give them a portion of their pay. So for the food vendors who made their living selling food, now had to give up their money. If they didn’t pay up for any reason, then the gangs would make them disappear or just kill them on the street. This caused even more Salvadorans to come to the U.S. including my cousin, who, on top of having to deal with a large earthquake in 2001 which destroyed a lot of property, needed to provide for her children still living in El Salvador. She had lost everything in the earthquake but still needed to provide for her kids so she had to move here without them and send money back.

At this point in time most of my family was now living in the U.S., however, my grandmother still hadn’t come to the U.S. So after getting U.S. citizenship I wanted to return to El Salvador to see how things were. But as it turned out, my grandmother wasn’t in El Salvador anymore.  She had moved to Honduras. And, in between the civil war and the gang violence, all transport to my village was cut off. There just weren’t any buses that could take you there anymore.

I’ve been in the U.S. for 33 years now. At this point I have lived in the U.S. for longer than any other place I’ve lived in, including El Salvador and Venezuela. Most of my family members in El Salvador have immigrated to other parts of the world, mostly to the U.S. My cousin lives close by, still sending the money she earns to her children. She had left them when they were 5 years and 3 years old respectively, now they are full grown adults. And although she knows they are still alive and well, she hasn’t seen them since she left. My second daughter also lives close by with my granddaughter who I sometimes take care of while she is at work. 

My mother and first daughter still live in Venezuela, which now has its own problems. Venezuela is under a dictatorship at the current time which makes me worry for my mother and daughter’s safety. But at the present moment they are fine. El Salvador has gotten a new president who is cleaning up the country and taking care of the gang problem by jailing them.

However, there are still gangs in the country and the situation would be unlivable for people like me who would be considered too old for many jobs there. I’ve worked long-term as a caretaker for a family, taking care of their children and their house. I’ve worked for them for almost 20 years, so I’ve gotten to know the family very well. But the youngest is almost old enough to not need my help anymore, so I’ve been working with the family to try and find other potential jobs. Despite that bump, I have been living a steady life with financial or social problems.

However, that doesn’t mean there aren’t any problems with this country. The most recent problem for immigrants like me is ICE deporting people like me who can only make a living here. I thankfully have citizenship, but people like my cousin who only have temporary protection status are at risk of being deported if ICE ever comes here. So although I’m not personally at risk of deportation, I am scared that my cousin or other family and friends could be sent to a place where they can’t sustain themselves or their families. Everyone who comes to the U.S. has their reasons and even if they aren’t citizens, it’s upsetting that my cousin who has spent more than twenty years in the U.S. paying her taxes, working, and paying to live here could be at risk. I understand that some people like MS-13 and the 18th Street Gang come to the U.S. and cause more problems than benefits, but people like me and my cousin have sacrificed a lot just to be here to keep our families and ourselves safe. And yet the people here try and force us out back to the wars and the gangs. So although this country lets me and others work and make our living, it’s also the cause of our fear just as the wars and gangs once were. But even after all that was lost and after all who died I still believe that the steps I take and the price me and my cousin pay is worth it.

.


Hello, I am 54 years old. I was born on January 16,1971 and I grew up all throughout my childhood and until I reached the age of 21 in Mexico. But, then in February of 1993 at age 22, I immigrated to Texas. I was not able to migrate until I was of an adult primarily due to my parents residing in Mexico and my mother only having a work visa to come to the United States on provisional status.

I remember my mother saying how wonderful the United States was as a child, and I always wished I could live there but it was not possible as my father was working in Mexico. I finished all the required schooling in Mexico at age 17 and then worked at a local factory where the temperature was extremely hot. I made little money and lived in a small home with my father and other family members. I worked at the factory as I was waiting on a temporary work visa so I could go to the United States. I wanted more opportunities of advancement and freedom and felt that I could have made a better life in the United States.

I had a few family members that already lived in the United States in Texas, so I moved in with them and began looking for employment. The largest problem with coming to the United States is that I did not speak English at all. I had to learn English and if I had known how hard it was, I would have learned that before I came. Unfortunately, I only had a temporary work visa, so not many companies would hire me when I came to Texas, so I worked as a waitress making most of my money from tips at local Mexican restaurants. They want you to work many hours and only for low pay, they tell me that I should be happy to be here since I am only here on a temporary visa. I worked as many hours as I could. Not knowing our income taxes, I made little money after paying social security tax. Mexico does not have social security tax, so this is something to which I was not used to.

American people were not very friendly when they realized I could not speak English. I always felt they treated me meanly and worthless. I know that I could not speak up for myself or even report anything to anyone as I really did not have a voice. It was extremely hard adjusting to how Americans would treat me. My family would tell me it is because I am from Mexico and with not being able to speak English, they assumed I was illegal. I began taking classes at community college where I could afford to go to. Since it is so expensive in the United States I was only able to afford a couple classes that helped me communicate better, but still to present day I cannot speak English fluently. My English is combined with Spanish, and I just apologize when I cannot explain something clearly. My family only spoke Spanish in Mexico so I was just trying to learn what I could in a brief time and it helped a little, but at least I knew how to communicate a little bit. I did know that in order to get a good paying job and really make something of my life I would have to learn and get help anywhere that I could.

I met my husband after eight years of living here in the United States. After marrying my husband and having two children I returned to Mexico to visit my parents after living a total of nine years in the United States. In returning to Texas, I realized that my work visa had expired. Not being able to return to the United States legally, I decided to use my mother’s visa identification to gain entry. I was successful and when I returned to Texas, I began the process for my own documentation for renewal. The documentation process took

almost two years, and I had to save money for the citizenship renewal which cost hundreds of dollars. Upon my appointment with the immigration office, they asked me how I came back to the United States with an expired work visa? I was honest with them and told them what I had done with using my mother’s identification and they said that I will be deported back to Mexico. With my children, I was given four months to leave voluntarily, or I would risk a much larger penalty for falsifying my legal status and possibly never gain entry again to the United States. If I did not deport voluntarily, I would be at risk not being able to come back to the United States for ten years. My penalty was three years, and I could not go back to Texas at all. I voluntarily left the United States with my two daughters (ages 7 and 8), while my husband remained in San Antonio.

Having little money and with the two children, we decided to sell our home in San Antonio that my husband owned, and he moved to Mexico to be with us. We could not be a family for three years, and it is too expensive for him to travel to Mexico and see the children and me. Because of the money that he made from selling the home we were able to eventually build a small home in Mexico, but having to go back was extremely hard on the children and was a big adjustment for us. Again, I spoke truly little English, but my daughters spoke English and now had to learn Spanish. It was hard on them, but they had to learn. The other children made fun of them as they knew they were not from Mexico because from the way they looked, dressed, and talked. My husband who worked in manufacturing was able to work closer to the border to Texas and Mexico so he would visit us regularly and help when he could.

As part of the penalty, I had to stay where I was originally from, so I took my children and moved back with my parents. To watch our daughters struggle the way that they did bothered me the most. They could have stayed with family in Texas that already lived there, but they did not want to, and I did not want that either. I could not imagine not being able to see my children for three years. They now understand as adults why they were treated the way that they were, but as children they never understood. Even though they were Mexican by their heritage, they were not born there and that is very different. The schooling in Mexico is not as good as in the United States so I was worried that they would not learn as much as they did when they were in Texas. I studied with the girls on learning to speak Spanish for school and helped them adjust the best way I could.

As time passed the kids and I adjusted and my husband was making good money in manufacturing, so we were able to build a home in Mexico. It was a smaller sized home, but at least at least my family and I were able to have our own home. We remained in Mexico until I could begin my citizenship renewal and until the penalty was complete. We returned to Texas almost four and half years after I voluntarily deported, now legally back to the United States. I received my permanent resident card which I had to have for five years and then would be able to get my Certificate of Naturalization which took two more years. Our daughters returned to Texas, finished high school as well as graduated from college at the University of Texas. The home in Mexico we still own today to which we visit family and spend holidays there. Both of my daughters now speak fluent Spanish and English which now I am glad for both, but I remember how hard it was for them to learn. With becoming a legal citizen and returning to Texas, I was able to find good employment with larger pay and finding more opportunities than before when I was in the United States. I have all the things I dreamed of: a good paying job, a home, and family support that is always here. I miss my family in Mexico, but we can go see them now freely as we wish to. I tell all my family in Mexico how hard it was to get here and how difficult it is to succeed.

My biggest lesson I learned was learn English  before you come to the United States, come here legally, and do not let your documentation expire. I know it would not have been as hard if I had done that myself, but until I went through everything I really did not understand. Getting out of Mexico for the American dream is what I wanted and never had anyone tell me how difficult it would be. My biggest regret is letting my renewal documentation expire but thankful for the opportunity to be back in the United States and living in Texas but my greatest satisfaction is how successful my daughters have turned to be.