watch Portland, there has been a noticeable rise in videos of people clashing with ICE in the past two days. Wouldn't be surprised to see a LA-type situation unfold.
Nah, that was just the usual hotheads and as far as I know (not far), the Portland police handled the situation quite well and definitively, though I'm sure the antique anarchists up there would love to see their glory days return.
Edit: Re: Portland, I got curious (generally I ignore it and haven't been up there since 2015 but of course I checked it on the 14th, where I read about the peaceful No Kings gatherings and the hotheads who later went for ICE and got arrested and also some publicity).. Per
this story, the immigration protests are daily but small, and the police have got it in hand. The DHS quotes in that story sound like someone's trying to turn this molehill into Mount Everest. In contrast, 2020 was
bad. The police did not always control it, but somehow no one thought of calling in the military and everything eventually cooled down. Of course, those anarchists, despite the excuse they were using, were white; ethnic cleansing was still called by its true name and considered a foreign thing, not labeled "
remigration" and seriously discussed at top federal levels. What a big difference five years can make.
The "LA-type situation" in the titular city, brought on by that provocatory inflow of lots of ICE enforcers on the 6th, quieted right down with the MASSIVE and mostly peaceful No Kings protests downtown --
-- so much so that Crown Prince JD showed to try to ignite trouble again, as it seemed to me with some of his inflammatory comments -- for instance,
mocking Senator Alex Padilla, with whom Vance served in Congress, and this:
...“The president has a very simple proposal to everybody in every city, every community, every town whether big or small, if you enforce your own laws and if you protect federal law enforcement, we’re not going to send in the National Guard because it’s unnecessary,” Vance told journalists after touring a federal complex in Los Angeles.
Back in the America I grew up in, local and state law enforcement
cooperated with federal law enforcement (or not, depending on the situation, the attitude of the feds (who could be quite bossy, as the documentary
Die Hard shows) and/or the degree of local corruption and/or the politics involved -- it was not perfect, it was American).
Back in those days, the feds did not go like gangbusters into a tense neighborhood situation that they themselves had fostered country-wide and then whine because it caused trouble.
They were grownups back then, though undoubtedly of similar ages to today's ICE enforcers. And so were their bosses grownups, too -- up to and including the one in the Oval Office.
Here's where that LA call-in-the-military situation
stands currently. According to
Wired (paywalled), the Marines are operating under Title 10 at the moment.
Not that there's any need for either one right now in terms of public safety in LA, even if one argues that local authorities had lost control, which overall they didn't; most of the immigration protesters were peaceful in the first place, and the curfew was lifted days ago. I think the Trumpeteers are just trying to add muscle to ICE -- yes, it's an unconstitutional use of the military. Fortunately, there are still safeguards and the thing is working its way through the courts.
H. Bush handled a legitimate public disorder crisis in LA during the Rodney King riots so much more skillfully.
But what the hey -- now we've got this:
Actually, given the unspeakable but confirmed horrors of the October 2023 terrorist attacks, I'm sympathetic to
Israel's moves, though it's not going to work, bombing somebody to stop them from building a bomb.
As for us, cutting through the emotional and consitutional-question public uproar for a moment, I can't help wondering what Trump's pal Putin has gotten to stay out of it, especially after reading that Indonesia is joining BRICS (as is Colombia, in this hemisphere).
A lot of the world's shipping goes through one Indonesian strait (not Sunda, the other big one). If closure of that ever was threatened...we'd all be in trouble. Again.
I just wonder sometimes if this country can survive another three years of Trump.