Minneapolis, MN
Race, Capital, and Minneapolis
Photograph by Nathaniel St. Clair
As George Floyd calls out for his mother, we see a crisis of overproduction. This brutal murder by the state can tell us something, not about Floyd himself, who every political actor co-opts for their own agenda, and thus murders an innocent man all over again, but rather about capitalism.
For the right, Floyd is a criminal and deserves to be killed. Candace Owens, herself a victim of a hate crime, led the charge. And yet, where was the principled response? Did Floyd have to follow bourgeois moral law to live? For the liberals, Floyd became a symbol of anti-racism, to be manifested in boardrooms, and ignored in the millions of homeless, prisoners, cancer allies, ghettoes, where populations are deemed surplus places for experiments of capital, flooded with guns, drugs, toxins, and agents of the state. For the left, Floyd becomes a radical, and we read into him potential victory rather than do the honorable thing and admit his murder was another reminder of our defeat and an invitation not to gain hope, but rather discipline ourselves to productive despair and clarify our purpose.
On the streets of Minneapolis, the same Mayor reigns. Elected by a coalition of the rich in the Southwest and the poor in the Northwest, while the base for socialism, the discontented hippies in the Northeast, and the optimistic students in the Southeast, oppose Mayor Jacob Frey. Frey represents a break, from the left, and the right, a defender of the police, a dissident against ICE.
The call for defunding the police has never seemed more obvious in the face of the surge. In a real crisis, any effort by the police to intervene against the federal government produces a crisis, a potential for civil war. Meanwhile, the alternatives to policing, called for by activists, become all the more urgent. These services are done, remarkably, for free, by strangers, many of whom, without a pot to piss in themselves. Communities of care, offering services of all kinds, keep afloat terrified ordinary people, while the city runs bankrupt on overtime for the police, who can either collaborate with Mr. Trump, or wisely sit on their hands, hoping for better days ahead.
Furthermore, to our horror, we find hope: the situation is not wholly tragic. We have the duty to the families torn apart, to bury this hope, and even to condemn it. Human beings meeting each other’s needs is not a happy story and should not be viewed in even a dialectical way. In fact, this is exactly how we allowed Mr. Trump to wield absolute power in the first place.
The entire theory, which should be acknowledged as a catastrophic misreading that has killed millions across the globe, that through the crisis of Trump, people would bond together to form a socialized means of production. Rather, the opposite has happened. Predictably, the fulfillment of human needs has, if not gone underground, organized itself away from the reproduction of capital, and the profit motive has become more concentrated in the hands of financial speculation and polluting technologies.
Much of the sentiment has been racist in nature. For the most part the question of food and medicine to the third world, slashed by Project 2025, has been ignored, for these lives cannot be co-opted for Marxist ends, but rather for liberal American capitalism. Thus we are more likely to have a celebration of famine in Africa than a condemnation. We say that actually existing communism in China, or the superior spirit of the African, will do our work for us and these millions of dead Africans are a path to liberation.
The racial nature of capital expresses itself too in Minneapolis. We must keep the receipts of the argument that all seemed to accept, namely that woke had gone too far. The key to this argument was the paranoia that the state’s intervention into capitalist markets did not only choose elimination of the racial Other, but also, at times, kept her afloat.
Of course the state is always intervening and the battle must be into not if, but how. Much is said about the class nature of the MAGA movement, but one only has to follow the long standing voter suppression to know that America’s politics are not about class, in which the poor are more likely to favor the Democrats in self-defense. But class is not how people vote, more determining is race, gender, geography, education.
For capital moves in these areas, and the poor recognize the negotiation is not over the means of production at this point in time, but rather where the sledgehammer will land next. Thus, the underestimation of Mr. Trump was, of course, racial in nature as well. Underneath all of this was a belief that the Constitution of the United States would save us. We should have listened to the people of color telling us differently.
For the constitution is being expressed more honestly now, in its original form. Of course, revisions were welcome, and must be welcomed again. But at its core we are dealing with a document that is anti-Marxist in nature. One that cements private property rights, away from the state and into the hands of those that can use it for their own ends. Over time these private interests gain more power than the state and ultimately direct the state even if the state outlasts all individual actors.
Rights expanded to others for the purpose of war economy, and capital’s use of the already captured state for its own accumulation. And then taken away again once their labor was no longer needed. Thus, we should understand rights not as a product of superior civilization but rather as something granted to people to order production.
That is to say, none of us owed any rights. Any means of subsistence we have are thanks to the exploitation of labor and nature. Any means to purchase is based on the exploitation of ourselves, or our exploitation of others, both of whom valorize nature. But any rights we have are a different question entirely. For those who own slaves earn rights not in and for themselves but rather so they can valorize the slave. Therefore, the slaveholder must be protected not because capital wants him to suppress his fellow man, but rather because, in order to gain value from this suppression, there must be organization of the slave’s labor.
The question of ICE, the chaos, is likewise a question of organization and of predictability. On the one han,d liberals and conservatives alike get the word out that racial profiling is being done. In a sense getting the word out does reduce the need to actually commit atrocities for the racial Other voluntarily retreats from labor out of fear. Likewise, the humanitarian seeks to fill the needs of those in retreat through activity outside of the market.
And yet this only cements the original crisis of slave labor, migrant labor, prison labor, globalization, deindustrialization, the supposed discontents. For the monopoly on good jobs can be restored to snowflake whitey, but he will find himself without a consumer base. Furthermore, his gain makes him less desirable as a producer for capital, who will look more desirably upon the slave for work than it will the free man.
We should not be afraid to look at the real point of the Minneapolis surge. Much like the investor class, the White House can play with house money. Specifically, the post-financial crisis of 2008 has been one where the very rich can engage in wildly speculative bets, knowing that if they fail, they will be deemed too big to fail and will be bailed out. Therefore, why not be as aggressive as possible in pursuing high-risk, high-reward?
This explains the oddity of the AI bubble, the U.S. bubble, the bubble of Mr. Trump, who has proven again and again to understand the system better than any of us chasing him. How long have commentators claimed that A.I. will crash, the United States will crash, Trump will crash? Romantic thinking in the age of serious crisis.
A.I., of course, has provided very little, if any, benefit to ordinary people while sucking up an unimaginable amount of rapidly dwindling water supply. Even to the capitalist class the use for this technology seems very small. However the investment remains massive. Why? Because there is no competitive advantage in labor. People are more or less the same. While new technology, however useless, can provide a marginal advantage.
The fear of massive job loss from A.I. is utopian. The real crisis is that labor, compared with capital, has been so devalued that there is little incentive to eliminate it. If anything, we have a displacement of first-world labor to third-world labor, prison labor, migrant labor, unprotected and dangerous labor, as the means of production can travel digitally.
Similarly, the United States is propped up by this investment in A.I., the Trump economy, and its strength in the stock market, tied up as well. Meanwhile, China’s state directs investment into the real economy and benefits the rest of the world. And yet there is no crash, only steady decay of the dollar. The gains by China are far more gradual and they remain disciplined.
Back to playing with house money. What has made Mr. Trump successful throughout his life in business and in politics is his willingness to fail upwards. Push to the brink, take the biggest risk, and land the biggest gain, or end up in the same place. The rolling threats of tariffs and invasions to friends and foes alike have resulted in compliance at best, or the status quo at worst.
The goal of the Minneapolis surge was not only to provoke protestors into violence but also to provoke the state of Minnesota into pushing back with the National Guard, sparking a constitutional crisis and the Insurrection Act. In this way, Mr. Trump “failed”, at least so far. And yet in failure, no price was paid, much like his bankruptcies in business, the retreat from Mr. Trump leaves him in a secure position to strike again when the time is right.
Now, one could argue that if Mr. Trump thought the Democratic Party would go to civil war for its base, then he really has lost his mind. However the crisis was/is, and really we should say is, so severe it remains unclear how anyone should rationally respond.
What does the surge entail exactly? More or less a complete shutdown of a local economy. The unpredictable and unaccountable nature of the surge essentially makes for a situation where any person of color, seemingly, could disappear, where no one knows where they went, how to get them back, or if their health is deteriorating without their regular medication.
Now this is applied unevenly but with a sense of fear for everyone in a way. White people, likely spared unless they actively engage, then people of color, are they saved by papers, legal residents a level down and those deemed illegal a level down. Maybe forever prison, maybe the country of origin, but maybe somewhere you’ve never been, a war zone. The sheer amount of agents, and the ability of the administration to communicate that any rule may or may not be followed create a situation in which even without totalizing ability to disappear everyone, everyone wonders, and thus everything is shut down.
And yet at the same time we have to acknowledge that the opposition distributes this information, and even exaggerates it, for humanitarian reasons, but also to legitimize their own political existence, which has not figured out how to provide for people much better than the current administration, and while in power may provide more ways for economic stimulus through green technology and investments in underserved communities. However they too largely must answer to capital, and while out of power, concede to the real goal of the Trump administration, which is not actually to be a fascist state, but rather to stimulate the economy through exploitation. Thus the goal of both sides is in fact to get people of color in hiding, and whites taking care of them for free, while directing capital to its more productive places of greater technology and weaker labor.
The thing about distraction is that when the crisis is more severe, the distraction works even better.
Now one has to remember the absurd arguments being made before the election of Mr. Trump. While no one will dare discuss Greg Palast’s reporting, and this remains an utter mystery, in this present world where we ignore the elections, for all appearances, there was a real dismissal of the racial nature of capitalism. There was an obsession, across the political spectrum, with downplaying race.
One can recall the bad faith argument by Hillary Clinton, against Bernie Sanders, that taking on Wall Street will not solve racism. In 2020, Mr. Sanders did make a valiant effort to address this critique. However broadly speaking the elephant in the room has not been addressed and the denial of race remains a consensus.
Amidst the surge the racial nature is obvious. People of color, confined to their homes, which are searched without warrants, while white people can roam about, providing value to the economy. The state has always disciplined this free movement of colored bodies, restricting and criminalizing basic economic activity.
Then we get to the assumption of the paid protestor, the genuine belief that those protesting have no self-interest in doing so, and must be getting paid.
The surge was ultimately weakened by some white people, among others, naively acting in the interest of the community. First, a white woman, murdered. This was met with equal horror and hatred. On the one hand, white women are supposed to be killed and controlled by their husbands, not the state. On the other hand, she was stupid to be there. There was a sense this is wrong, the state should be protecting her role in reproducing strong white men, a mother of three, on the other hand she was a lesbian, she failed. Then the white man is killed. Here the outrage was more clear. Even worse, he was carrying a gun. There was nothing to defend. These ICE agents must be unprofessional police. Professional police know to kill Black men.
Now here we should defend a local Black commentator who said Black people know not to carry arms to a protest. All he was saying was Black people don’t have constitutional rights. Everyone knows this. Amendments were added later, and if we are losing the Fourth, Second, and First Amendments, we have already lost the higher-numbered ones. In fact this line of thought makes the white man who showed up to protest all the more heroic. There was a way out for him and the establishment is genuinely confused why he didn’t take it. Furthermore his act of selflessness upends the system, and forces the powers into retreat.
The reason we should say the surge was a provocation rather than simply the normal targeting of racial enclaves is that they aimed precisely for the communist parts of Minneapolis. Mayor Jacob Frey carried the rich and the ghetto parts of Minneapolis. Mr. Trump largely went for where he thought Marxism would respond, where Minneapolis burned after George Floyd.
However no burning was done and the 2020 crisis has been mischaracterized as well. There was an organized movement for Black lives long before George Floyd and their tactics were never about property damage. Rather the property damage was spontaneous and all “crime” is necessarily labeled as colored when in reality, precisely for this reason, people of color remain more disciplined. This is not to endorse or condemn the riots but merely to say genuine chaos rising from below is just different from organized activism and the Trump administration seems to have conflated the two as has the liberal class who seemingly embraced defund the police, only to retreat to a lament for the ordinary state of affairs of precise racial targeting in the face of Mr. Trump.
Dominating the headlines is a conspiratorial theory of capital from above, which once again serves as a scapegoat of the Jewish people, while the targeting of capital’s destruction from below, upon the racial Other, remains unexamined. Can one not take Gaza, the place where experiments with weapons and surveillance systems overwhelm people and the environment with destruction as the most obvious misreading across the political spectrum? Is it not the case that from right to left we mask a consensus of capital, an integrated global trading system, where all our illusions, liberal democracy, actually existing communism, third world nationalism, are willing collaborators in support of this testing ground? And anyone who brings up the obvious is accused of naive liberalism, of identity politics, or sympathy for a people who will always, somehow end up pulling the strings?
Do these reactionaries, always on the back foot, lagging behind capital’s speed, have an answer in their precious Epstein files, happily released by the cunning political genius we continue to underestimate for the explicit racial nature of the ICE surge in the Twin Cities metro area? We should have no doubt they will make up the devil pulling the strings, but by the time they find him it will be long after capital creates him to distract from the crisis and indeed to become collaborators in chaos, disorder and mind control.
Of course, Mr. Trump’s genius is perhaps striking enough where one could become conspiratorial about his role, although that may even be wishful thinking. What has characterized the Trump era has been excuse after excuse. Every time something awful happens it is dismissed as simply capitalism, neoliberalism, etc. as commentators cower behind intellectual posturing. Paradoxically, every time Mr. Trump misdirects the supposed free thinker to a grand theory of history that exonerates Mr. Trump, the President is given no credit for outsmarting his intellectual colleagues.
Many speculate that Mr. Trump reads Hitler, and many claim that they, the opposition, read Marx. It appears the opposite may be the case, that Mr. Trump understands capital, and we only think we are ahead in the race because Mr. Trump has nearly lapped us. The way out, a socialized means of production, was supposedly going to simply appear from the crisis that Mr. Trump created. Laughing to the bank, Mr. Trump has observed a socialized means of care and community, naively fetishized by outside observers as a step towards socialism rather than a means of survival for a community under attack.
While sentiment celebrates defeat and heartbreak, Mr. Trump wins victory every day as he cunningly consolidates power in global capital relations. Back to caring for our loved ones, we go. There is dignity in that, but no victory. All those interested in a socialized means of production should be learning from Mr. Trump. A civil war was avoided in Minneapolis, and of course, this was his goal. We can stand for moral victories when none exist. The only victory is socialism. For every other mode of production will grind down people and planet to a pulp.
Those of us with our eyes on the prize tip our cap to the undefeated Donald John Trump, who perhaps even understates himself. We find ourselves thanking him for not kidnapping our family members. And then we wonder, after these ridiculous words come out of our mouths, how did we get so bad at negotiating? The answer may lie in misunderstanding our own rights, not won through struggle, but given to us only because of our usefulness to the accumulation of capital.
For we are at the mercy of the morality of Mr. Trump now. Complex systems have bowed before him, kissing the ring for crumbs. Many a day some of us have banged the table, demanding our elimination, and yet we are so small our king does not notice or care. Thus we return to the drawing board, with humble and heavy hearts, acknowledging the costs of believing in the system we claimed to condemn.
Minneapolis, MN
Barack Obama publicly states support for anti-ICE demonstrators in Minneapolis
Barack Obama publicly gave his support to demonstrators in Minneapolis for standing up to the “unprecedented nature” of the Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation in Minnesota.
Speaking in an interview with progressive YouTuber Brian Tyler Cohen on Saturday, the former president discussed the power that US citizens hold when standing up for the values they believe in and his hopes for the next generation of American leaders.
“The reason I point out that I don’t think the majority of the American people approve of this is because ultimately, the answer is going to come from the American people,” he said. “We just saw this in Minnesota, in Minneapolis.”
“It is important for us to recognize the unprecedented nature of what ICE was doing in Minneapolis, St Paul, the way that federal agents, ICE agents were being deployed, without any clear guidelines, training, pulling people out of their homes, using five-year-olds to try to bait their parents, all the stuff that we saw, teargassing crowds simply who were standing there, not breaking any laws,” he added.
The Twin Cities area of Minnesota has been the site of ongoing anti-immigration enforcement protests. These demonstrations have grown in scope following the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti at the hands of federal agents.
But this week, Tom Homan, the US border czar, said that the Trump administration would be drawing down its immigration crackdown in Minnesota following the killings after initial escalations by immigration agencies. Many have credited the decision to draw back as proof that the protests were successful in sending a message.
“Right now, we’re being tested, and the good news is, what we saw in Minneapolis and St Paul, and what we’re seeing in places across the country, including here in Los Angeles, has been the American people saying no,” Obama said. “At least a good number of the American people saying, we’re going to live up to those values that we say we believe in.”
“As long as we have folks doing that, I feel like we’re going to get through this,” he added.
Obama, along with the former first lady, Michelle Obama, called the killing of Alex Pretti “a heartbreaking tragedy” and “a wake-up call to every American, regardless of party, that many of our core values as a nation are increasingly under assault”.
In a statement released last month, the Obamas said federal law enforcement and immigration agents were not operating in a lawful or accountable way in Minnesota. They said the tactics employed by ICE and other federal agents seemed “designed to intimidate, harass, provoke and endanger the residents of a major American city”.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis left to decide future of streetside memorials to 2 people killed by federal officers
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — As the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown in Minnesota winds down, Minneapolis will need to decide how to manage makeshift memorial sites for two U.S. citizens killed by federal agents last month.
Piles of flowers, signs and artwork swiftly formed to commemorate the lives of Renee Good and Alex Pretti at the locations where they were fatally shot. The memorials are the site of candlelight vigils and musical performances and draw a regular stream of visitors.
The public grieving spots echo the community-driven memorial to George Floyd, who was murdered in 2020 by a police officer less than one mile (1.61 kilometers) from Good’s killing. It took the city more than five years to figure out how to officially memorialize the site of George Floyd Square, and construction is set to begin this year.
Now, the city has two more high-profile memorials to manage.
A memorial for Good sprung up within hours of her Jan. 7 killing on a Minneapolis street.
And before the smell of tear gas used by federal agents had dissipated on the day of Pretti’s killing on Jan. 24, Minneapolis protesters were already using branches, police tape and candles to mark the space. Later, people placed crosses, stuffed animals, American flags and images of Pretti.
Minnesota resident Karel Hoffmann said that while she remained outraged with Good and Pretti’s killings, the memorials represented community solidarity.
“This is so unfair, the trauma, for everyone, is too much,” Hoffmann said as she visited Pretti’s memorial recently. “We’re all in this together. And I’m really glad they have this here so everybody can come and be together.”
Lynn Elrod, a nurse, visited Pretti’s memorial last month and added her own offering: a plastic evergreen tree with red hearts and portraits of him and Good.
“I printed both of their pictures and put those on there again, just to signify the love that we have for both of them, really, and their contributions to the community and supporting their neighbors,” Elrod said.
The residential street where Good died remains open, but orange traffic cones offer a narrow walkway for those paying their respects, and a small band of volunteers watches over the mound of flowers, artwork and handwritten signs that has amassed between the sidewalk and the street.
Around the Pretti memorial along a commercial district known as “ Eat Street,” traffic lanes have been temporarily shifted and parking is closed off, said Jess Olstad, a spokesperson for the city of Minneapolis.
“The City’s top priority is to give our community space to grieve and heal,” Olstad said. “This both ensures emergency vehicles can get through the area and protects those who gather or visit the memorial.”
Olstad added that the city is “actively working on next steps, including continued community engagement regarding both memorials.”
Ally Peters, a spokesperson for Mayor Jacob Frey, said last week that it was “too early” to comment on whether the memorials would be made permanent.
___
Brook is a corps member for The Associated Press/Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalists in local newsrooms to report on undercovered issues.
Minneapolis, MN
ICE drawdown in Minneapolis: No deals made with federal government, sheriff says
MINNEAPOLIS (FOX 9) – The Hennepin County sheriff says her office has not entered into any new deals with the federal government, “despite what some influential leaders have conveyed.”
This comes after White House Border Czar Tom Homan announced a major drawdown of federal immigration agents.
Hennepin Co. Sheriff on ICE surge ending
What they’re saying:
Hennepin County Sheriff Dawanna Witt said in a news conference Friday that even though Operation Metro Surge is winding down, trust in law enforcement has been “eroded.”
Witt defended how her deputies handled Operation Metro Surge, calling the immigration operation “unprecedented” and said her deputies didn’t have a “template.”
She continued to thank her deputies for doing their job, but said her office will be addressing “all issues” and seeing what can be improved.
The sheriff did reiterate her office has not “entered into any new agreements with the federal government, despite what some influential leaders conveyed.”
“Communication and relationships will be critical as we move forward. I’ve always said that leaders at the local, state and federal level must come to the table together,” Witt said. “A real leader, a real leader prioritizes understanding, communication, reflection, and conveying truthful information responsibly, not just based off of your limited views.”
Witt went on to say that if anyone is “confused” about policies her office has adopted, they should “ask.”
Hennepin Co. board told sheriff to not alter ICE policy
The backstory:
The Hennepin County Board of Commissioners passed a resolution urging the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office not to change its policy on Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operations.
READ MORE: Hennepin Co. board tells sheriff not to alter ICE policy
The board passed the resolution Thursday afternoon, stating they support the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office’s current policy regarding cooperating with ICE, which is not honoring detainer requests from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
According to the resolution, the board is telling the sheriff to not make “substantive changes to the policy to voluntarily increase cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.”
The board goes on to ask the sheriff to notify the public and the board if there are any changes to the policy that would increase cooperation with federal immigration enforcement.
Operation Metro Surge ending: Minnesotans react
After more than two months of an increased immigration enforcement presence in Minnesota, Border Czar Tom Homan announced on Thursday that Operation Metro Surge would be drawing to a close, with most federal agents leaving by next week. FOX 9’s Soyoung Kim is live at the Alex Pretti shooting memorial site with reactions from Minnesotans.
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