Wednesday last, I captured a couple of quick shots of new murals in town.
With threats growing each day from this administration, the public response is increasingly pointing toward a path of basic compassion. By this, I mean that people—total strangers, but also fellow residents and neighbors—are taking a stand, including against the injustice, aggression, and cruelty of I.C.E.
Witness what happened in San Diego outside the popular Buona Forchetta restaurant in South Park. When I.C.E. showed up in its vans to detain workers—not criminals, but workers—the community did not stand idly by. They began to fill the streets, block vehicles, and were eventually dispersed with flash bangs.
These acts of peaceful civil disobedience may not stop detentions in the moment, but they accomplish three other very important things.
First, they show the nation—and our fellow residents under threat from I.C.E.—that others still have their backs, understand that what is happening is deeply wrong, and will put themselves on the line to help stop it.
Second, a public stand like this demonstrates what courage in the face of armed force looks like. That can spread quickly from town to town, city to city. If San Diego can resist, so can other communities. Courage is contagious.
Third, officials will understand that they will meet resistance and cannot assume a compliant citizenry. With enough pushback, they may choose to alter their practices—or, of course, escalate, which will only be met with greater resistance.
When people ask me what they can do today as ordinary citizens—beyond making phone calls and donating—I point to San Diego and say: “Get organized. Talk to your neighbors. Call a local community meeting and make a plan for peaceful resistance, including how to mobilize quickly. Know your rights, and come to the site of any I.C.E. raid prepared.”
I believe deeply in the goodness of people. I.C.E. raids are turning whole communities against this administration. There will be an electoral reckoning if we keep up the pressure and keep amplifying these stories..."
"... I know that America is still here, because I have seen and felt the power of its promise.
Have a great [Monday] (written on Sunday) and remember—each of us can play a part in making someone else feel safer and more secure.
Jay Kuo
Newsletter subscriptions to The Status Kuo are available on-line.
...the iris and mural lifted my spirits and ICE didn't.
ReplyDeleteAgree completely. Several of my newsletters attribute the people's demonstrations as being the force which has pushed Musk out.
DeleteHello Barb,
ReplyDeleteThe Iris is lovely. The mural is gorgeous, I love the scene with the waterfall and trees.
Happy June, have a great day and happy week ahead.
Hope your week ahead is also a good one, and thanks for your positive comment.
DeleteICE is not nICE.
ReplyDeleteRemember when the Jan. 6 thugs were "forgiven" by the President? Immediately gangs of MAGATS were out with increasing show of guns and flags. ICE is just another bunch of thugs, made legal by tRump.
DeleteThanks for sharing about the San Diego intervention. I hadn't read about it. Trying to come up with a good sign for No Kings Day. How's this one "No amount of gold in your Oval Office will make you our King." or "No to King, No to Dictator, Yes to Impeach tRump"
ReplyDeleteThose are great signs to show on June 14!
DeleteGreat signs! Good luck with the demonstrations. I do hope #47 is somehow pushed out well before the 4 years are up!
DeleteJay and his littles - the most endearing photo of the day!
ReplyDeleteThe story he wrote about was also heart warming, how he was assisted with them while riding on the subway.
DeleteMay the San Diego intervention be the beginning of a movement.
ReplyDeleteIt was written as if the whole staff was targeted, but later I saw they looked at 2 staff members and then their computer and nothing more happened, hopefully due to the public's resistance!
DeleteThank you for sharing this much needed and hopeful inspiration dear Barbara! Aloha!
ReplyDeleteAloha to you as well. You're quite welcome.
DeleteThanks for sharing and keeping people updated on what's going on. I read about San Diego, my sister and her family live there. People need to keep resisting the jerk who thinks he's a strongman.
ReplyDeleteThe ICE people are not people to easily be dissuaded, so it's good to have some videos of them retreating.
DeleteBeautiful photo and lovely mural.
ReplyDeleteThanks for stopping by and leaving a comment.
DeleteSan Diego is so inspiring! We can make a difference!!!
ReplyDeleteThat's the spirit that all of the resistance offers.
DeleteI follow Jay Kuo on FB. Love the murals!
ReplyDeleteLovely mural, cute squirrel. That purple Iris is fabulous! Glad to hear there are a lot of peaceful resistance movements against ICE and the #47 dictator! Best of luck. Thanks for participating in Monday Murals Barbara.
ReplyDeleteSad, enraging times in our country! ICE has a quota of 3000 arrests per day. Per day! Where are they putting all these people? What kind of conditions do people face at the holding facilities? How in the world are people getting fair treatment in such a attempt?
ReplyDeleteThank you for the iris. A reminder that beauty is still out there, even in these ugly times.