
ABOVE: I walked past an orange whistle, hung for the taking in Powderhorn Park, a few blocks between my workplace and the vigil on Portland Ave for Renee Good, murdered by an agent of ICE on 1/7.
Civilians blow whistles to signal the presence of ICE agents.
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ABOVE: A candle in the snow, along the way
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BELOW: "That’s Star Wars", I thought when I saw the hand-painted sign, The Empire Does Not Care About You.
Yep. It's a variant of a meme from way back (the car sticker on the right):
And it’s spot on, too:
Six years ago, a Redditor on the subreddit "The Empire Did Nothing Wrong", defending the Galactic Empire that Darth Vader serves, wrote:
"We don’t hurt innocents.
We hurt rebels to keep peace."
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ABOVE: I'd found a frog hat at the thrift store as I was leaving work.
But in the mid-afternoon when I was there, the vigil was not a creative scene. No funny animals, no crocheters.
Rather, it felt like a military camp, waiting for battle.
I often sense this at group protests:
An anxious boredom, an eagerness for something to happen,
and, on some people's part, to engage "the enemy".
But not only.
This Hispanic mother & daughter, below, right, have just laid flowers on the site where Renee Good was shot.
(A Hispanic coworker told me that her community feels gratitude toward Good, a white woman, for standing up for them and others.)
But the air was bad, literally, with toxic fumes from the many wood fires burning in old oil barrels. I also got a creepy feeling from the many circling journalists—I heard one say, "I'm from the Times of London"––surely hoping for something newsworthy.
Not my vibe. I paid my respects and left.
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Oh! bink just texted me this invitation below
--I am not alone in wanting a different vibe:
"If anyone would like a somewhat different kind of resistance experience, see below from Singing Actions.
“What: A singing vigil moving through South Minneapolis neighborhoods.... We will gather to practice the songs we’ll sing while walking, and to do a brief ICE watch training to be prepared for the possibility of encountering ICE while out.
Then from 2-3pm we will walk and sing.
We’ll walk slowly, for 1-1.5 miles.
“Our songs will be easy to learn and on with themes of solidarity, justice, grief, and care.
“Let’s be a loving and powerful presence out on the streets of South Minneapolis. ❤️💛✊🏾✊🏿✊🏻 "




It's one thing to see this scene on the news — very much another to see it from someone I know who is there. My hands are shaking a little as I'm typing.
ReplyDeleteIt's three short blasts on the whistle if ICE is in the area, a long blast if someone is being detained. (Same as in Chicago.)
Hi, Michael, thanks for commenting.
DeleteI thought I felt fine,
but it’s all caught up with me this morning,
and I feel rather sick…
Staying home and catching up with myself.
Yes, that’s the whistle code here too,
, but someone wisely said—
Just blow it!