Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis police arrest multiple people after firework misuse
The Minneapolis Police Department said multiple people were arrested on July 4 for misusing fireworks.
The details aren’t completely known at this time, as the department said they were still gathering information Friday morning but had made numerous arrests overnight.
However, police said more information would be available Friday.
The video above provides more information on last night’s arrests and previous incidents with fireworks.
This article will be updated when new information is provided by Minneapolis police.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis teachers’ union chief says bosses and officials join anti-ICE Signal chats
Minneapolis Federation of Educators President Marcia Howard said that teachers along with their “bosses” and elected officials are present and active in anti-ICE group chats.
Howard, an outspoken leftist political activist since the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests, shared in an interview with Al Jazeera that she and other teachers-turned activists are undeterred in participating in anti-ICE protests and watches because leadership stands behind them.
“The notion that people that are actively engaged in ICE watch, in being vigilant, in protecting our neighbors in signal chat groups, running plates on their [ICE] cars, doing patrols that somehow we’re ashamed of that activity, that somehow you can call our bosses or show our faces, and then we would be shunned by our community,” Howard said.
“Our bosses are in the signal chats with us. Our elected officials are in the chats with us.”
“Our nana’s, the hockey coaches, the soccer moms. Everybody that’s anybody is doing the work of protecting our neighbors, because that’s how we show up in Minneapolis and St Paul,” Howard continued.
Following the death of George Floyd at the hands of a Minneapolis police officer six summers ago, Howard, an English teacher of 25 years, became a leading voice in the summer protests, which turned into riots. She played a prominent role in the creation of George Floyd Square, which marked where Floyd was killed.
Howard criticized the federal immigration agents which have overtaken Minneapolis over the past month, accusing the agents of being agitators.
“We’re armed with whistles and our phones making sure that students are safe going to class,” Howard said. “And then they escalated the brutality. Every single day they taunted us. From their rental trucks, they would do things like — the agents that they brought to the Twin Cities — these hapless, untrained, overly-militarized agents, were in hotel rooms where they did not detain the workers in those hotel rooms because they wanted to be served by immigrants.”
The growing involvement of members of teacher unions and the unions themselves in political movement has garnered greater scrutiny in the past few months. Last month, it was reported that the National Education Association, one of the largest teacher’s unions, funneled millions of dollars into left-leaning organizations.
Minneapolis, MN
How Is ‘Melania’ Playing in Minneapolis? Let’s Crunch the Numbers
It’s literally the last place on Earth you’d imagine movie-goers racing to see Melania, the new $75 million Brett Ratner-directed documentary about the first lady — but tickets are apparently selling fast in Minneapolis. Or at least fast-ish.
The movie, which opened better than predicted last weekend — pulling in $7.2 million in just under 1800 theaters, the best showing for a non-concert doc in a decade — is being expanded to 2,000 theaters, with many of those additional screens in blue cities like New York, Los Angeles, Boston, Chicago, and, yes, the one in Minnesota where two U.S. citizens were gunned down last month by ICE agents, sparking widespread and on-going protests.
“Look, the movie isn’t for everybody,” says Marc Beckman, Melania Trump’s longtime advisor and the lawyer who put together her $40 million licensing deal to make the film with Amazon, which also spent an additional $35 million on marketing it. “But the people who voted [for Trump], they love it. And it’s very satisfying — after all the negativity — to see that it’s playing well in blue cities as well as red.”
Exactly how well it’s playing is subject to some interpretation. An unscientific look at theater maps in Minneapolis shows that a few theaters, like AMC Southdale 16, are indeed doing some business — 15 of 80 seats for its Feb. 3 screening at 6:45 p.m. have sold so far — not terrible for a normally slow Tuesday night — while the AMC Eden Prairie Mall 18 has sold 26 seats, nearly half the theater, for its 6:15 screening. Curiously, all those 26 sold seats at Eden Prairie are contiguous, which suggest either they were purchased in a block or else movie-goers are much more friendly in Minneapolis than in the rest of the country. Also, nobody seems to be interested in going to the next showing, at 7:30, at the same theater; only two seats have been sold for that screening. Meanwhile, AMC Inver Grove 16 has sold only three tickets for its 6:45 show and Coon Rapids 16 has sold precisely zero for its at 7:30.
Of course, the film will be even more widely available when it starts streaming on Amazon Prime, alongside a two or three-episode Melania Trump doc series — made from bonus footage shot by Ratner — but that may take a while. Beckman predicts the movie won’t drop until sometime this summer.
Minneapolis, MN
Springsteen ICE protest ‘Streets of Minneapolis’ highest-selling song in US last week
Bruce Springsteen’s protest song ripping what he calls the “state terror” tactics by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) is topping the music sales charts in the United States.
“Streets of Minneapolis” was last week’s highest-selling song in the United States, Billboard reported Monday.
The tune took the top spot on Billboard’s digital song sales chart in the last week of January, selling 16,000 downloads, according to data from Luminate.
Billboard noted that Springsteen’s song hit No. 1 despite only being available for two days of the tracking period.
The “Born in the USA” singer — a frequent critic of President Trump who has called his administration “corrupt” and “treasonous” — said in a social media post last week that he penned the song “in response to the state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis.”
The release followed the two separate shooting deaths last month in Minneapolis involving federal immigration authorities. In January, a federal immigration enforcement officer shot and killed a 37-year-old woman, Renee Good, during the Department of Homeland Security’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota. Less than three weeks later, Alex Pretti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse, was killed by a Customs and Border Patrol agent.
In his message about his new music, Springsteen said it was “dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renee Good.”
In his song, the 76-year-old performer slammed Trump and the Department of Homeland Security, singing, “King Trump’s private army from the DHS, guns belted to their coats, came to Minneapolis to enforce the law, or so their story goes.”
“Trump’s federal thugs beat up on his face and his chest, then we heard the gunshots and Alex Pretti lay in the snow, dead,” Springsteen sang in “Streets of Minneapolis.”
“Their claim was self-defense sir, just don’t believe your eyes. It’s our blood and bones, and these whistles and phones against Miller and Noem’s dirty lies,” Springsteen said in the song, in a reference to Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller.
“We eagerly await Mr. Springsteen’s songs dedicated to the thousands of American citizens killed by criminal illegal aliens,” Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin previously told The Hill in response to Springsteen’s music, saying that the “brave men and women of ICE are saving lives by arresting the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens, including murderers, rapists, pedophiles, drug dealers, gang members, and terrorists.”
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