Take a moment to look at the inhumanity captured in this extraordinary photo running on the front page of tonight's Minneapolis @StarTribune. It shows federal immigration agents immobilizing a protester on the ground and spraying chemical irritant directly into his face. The scene reminds me of the brutality used against civil rights protesters in the 1960s. We look back at those old photos and wonder how the authorities could have behaved so savagely; many years from now, young Americans will look at these photos from 2026 and wonder how anyone could have justified shooting a woman in the head as she tried to drive away, arresting 5-year-old schoolchildren on the street, or holding a man down and spaying chemicals into his face. Thanks to the Star Tribune reporters and photographers for documenting this work; they create accountability, they make democracy work, and they make all of us in journalism proud.
@kugirl86 can you please share?
In need of 💃🏾 🎊SNACKS! SNACKS! SNACKS! SNACKS! SNACKS! SNACKS! ANYBODY? 🎊💃🏾
We're are almost 100 days in and trying my best to refill my snack cabinet. #BetterTogether https://t.co/nLr551cXHC
Several Indigenous short films will be streamed online for free by the National Museum of the American Indian from November 21 (5 PM ET) to November 28, 2025 (5 PM ET).
https://t.co/caSOqSjmIg
Trump’s cuts to public radio include 70% cuts to the radio station that serves the Alaska Native communities impacted by Typhoon Halong. The station has announced major cuts to programming and staffing coming in January. https://t.co/MPG1L2lC9Q