‘Attila, Genghis Khan, Trump’ / Chicagoans behaving badly / Quizzes!

Chicago Public Square will take Monday off. See you here Tuesday.

‘Attila, Genghis Khan, Trump.’ Harold Meyerson (no relation) at The American Prospect says Donald Trump “is the 21st-century version of Attila or Genghis Khan, heading a horde that is defined by an exterminationist loathing of cities and all that they stand for and promote.”
 The Prospect’s Ryan Cooper sees an “ethnic cleansing campaign in Minneapolis. Every part of this illegal, violent occupation is based on lies.”
 Wired (behind a paywall): “ICE can kill with impunity. Over the past decade, U.S. immigration agents have shot and killed more than two dozen people. Not a single agent appears to have faced criminal charges.”
 Law Dork Chris Geidner: Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem yesterday asserted that “virtually anyone in the U.S.” could face a Kavanaugh stop—named for Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s endorsement of a law enforcement practice in which federal agents can detain a person based on their perceived ethnicity, spoken language or occupation.
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: “You know what Americans aren’t talking about very much today after Trump’s threat to … invoke the Insurrection Act in Minnesota? They aren’t talking a lot about the fact that the Department of Justice has released less than 1% of the Epstein files.”
 The AP: The Trump administration’s erased centuries of Justice Department experience.

Twin Cities terror. Video caught a U.S. citizen on her way to a medical appointment in Minneapolis being dragged out of her car and detained by immigration officers.
 The New York Times presents a millisecond-by-millisecond analysis of newly available video of an ICE agent’s killing of Renee Good …
 …. who newly released records show was shot three times—twice in the chest and once in the forearm.
 Columnist/cartoonist Jack Ohman: “Trump’s attempts to blame Renee Good for her own killing are a bridge too far.”
 The Minnesota Reformer surveys the ICE arrests you’re not seeing.
 The Atlantic (gift link) shares photos: “Minneapolis neighborhoods vs. ICE.”
 Law prof Joyce Vance says all of this forces the question: “Is there a deliberate effort to provoke protestors into acts of violence?
 Poynter ethics chief Kelly McBride: This moment in history will be defined by what reporters and private citizens choose to record.

Dingus of the week. Lyz Lenz’s pick: Nick Shirley, “the ferret who … made a bunch of videos alleging fraud at Somali-run daycares in Minnesota.”
 Chicago TV news veteran Jennifer Schulze says Shirley’s no journalist: “There is a straight line from Nick Shirley’s viral video about alleged fraud at Somali-run daycare centers in Minneapolis to the shooting death of 37-year Renee Good.”

‘If they missed the fact that I was an anti-ICE journalist who didn’t fill out her paperwork, what else might they be missing?’ A Slate reporter who set out simply to learn what it was like to apply to be an ICE agent was surprised to get offered the job.
 Columnist and ex-Illinois U.S. Rep. Marie Newman: “We want congressional phone lines ringing off the hook with constituents demanding … restrictions on ICE and Border Patrol.”
 Author and former U.S. Labor Secretary Robert Reich: “Tell your members of Congress not to vote for the DHS spending bill unless it stipulates that ICE be disarmed.”
 Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Will Bunch (gift link): Economic boycotts are melting ICE—“but we can do more.”

‘Well-known steps toward autocracy.’ The Conversation: The FBI search of Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson’s home this week pushes the U.S. closer to the edge.
 The paper’s owner, Amazon founder and Trump enabler Jeff Bezos, has been silent on the raid.
 Democracy Docket: “Trump told us how he really feels about the midterms. … ‘We shouldn’t even have an election.’”

Trump takes the prize. Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado has given the president her Nobel Peace Prize medal.
 She told Fox Newshe deserves it.”
 Columnist Charlie Madigan: “It is gold and garish. Perfect for the president.”
 Jimmy Kimmel’s offering Trump any award that Kimmel’s won—if he gets his goons out of Minnesota.
 Meanwhile, PBS—or at least its social media team—has embraced Kimmel’s proposed new slogan: “We’re still here, bitch.”

Chicagoans behaving badly. Among hundreds of inspector general investigations of city workers: At least two cops who got fraudulent pandemic loans.
 Former DePaul University players and an ex-Bull have been charged in a scheme to rig NCAA and Chinese Basketball Association games.

Calling all quiz whizzes. The Conversation’s quizmaster, past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner Fritz Holznagel, has crafted a challenge that again puts your Chicago Public Square columnist back in the ol’ 75% hole. Can you do better?
 A 5/5 here on City Cast’s Chicago-centric news quiz.
 But … ahem.

‘We all remember a world before Wikipedia.’ A Tribune editorial somewhat grudgingly wishes it a happy 25th birthday.
 Sun-Times columnist Neil Steinberg observes the passage of Google parent Alphabet’s market capitalization past $4 trillion by trying to relate that number to something on a human scale.
 Were you hit by Verizon’s service outage this week? Expect a $20 refund.
 Would you like to have a celebrity—dead or alive—to read you the news, or a book … or, well, anything? You can do that now.

Thanks … for supporting Square.

‘Complete terror’ / A ‘difficult meeting’ / Dangerous line crossed

‘Complete terror.’ Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar tells HuffPost ICE agents are on “almost every single block,” operating as “an occupying force” in her Minneapolis community.
 The Chicago law firm that represented the family of George Floyd, who was killed by a Minneapolis cop in 2020, is now representing the family of Renee Nicole Macklin Good, who was killed by an ICE officer last week.
 About 4 1/2 miles from where she died, another federal officer yesterday shot a man in the leg.
 Democrats across the country are proposing state laws to restrain federal immigration agents.
 Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz appeals to citizens: “If you see ICE in your neighborhood, take out that phone and hit record.”
 LateNighter reviews the fun late-night hosts have been having with “ICE Ice Capades” video …
 … and yet, ICE is reportedly headed to another cold-weather state, Maine.

Trump’s threat. Whining that “professional agitators and insurrectionists” are “attacking the Patriots of I.C.E., who are only trying to do their job,” the president today (again) raised the possibiliy he’ll invoke the Insurrection Act …
 … which the Brennan Center for Justice has ranked among the most “outdated and dangerous” antiquated laws from the 1700s and 1800s.
 Investigative reporter Ken Klippenstein: Leaked documents reveal 21 secret programs and detail the dizzying scope of ICE operations.
 Columnist/lawyer Robert Hubbell: “Mass protests are the last line of defense against ICE's assault on our peace, safety and security.”
 After fizzling out before the Supreme Court, Justice Department lawyers tell a federal judge in Chicago they hope to settle a suit over Trump’s National Guard deployment efforts here.

‘No regrets whatsoever.’ A Michigan auto worker suspended after calling Trump a “pedophile protector” during the president’s tour Tuesday—prompting Trump to mouth “f--- you” and raise his middle finger—has the United Auto Workers’ support.
 Stephen Colbert addressed the president directly: “You signed a law mandating that you would have to release the Epstein files by the middle of last month, but you still haven’t. It kind of makes you seem like a, what’s the phrase? Pedophile protector!
 Coming back to the suburbs after an eviction threat last year: The MAGA-themed “Trump Truth Store.”

A ‘difficult meeting.’ That’s how the AP characterizes U.S., Danish and Greenlandic officials’ face-to-face to discuss Trump’s coveting of Greenland.
 The New York Times (gift link): “The fate of the world’s largest island has outsize importance for billions of people on the planet, because as the climate warms, Greenland is losing ice.”
 A Senate bill that would have clamped down on Trump’s power to attack Venezuela further flopped yesterday after two Republican senators caved. (Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)
 Columnist Jeff Tiedrich: “Once again, smack dab in the middle of a meeting—with cameras rolling, surrounded by people—Sundowning Grandpa Befuddlepants closed his weary eyes and drifted off to slumberland.”

Quick retreat. Hours after telling thousands of public service organizations nationwide that federal cash for treatment of substance abuse and mental health issues was about to disappear, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s Health and Human Services Department reversed that decision.
 Chicago-area leaders were among the cancellation’s loudest critics.

 Chicagoans who don’t shovel their walks could face fines of at least $50/day.

Apparently untroubled. Popular Information calls out at least 37 major brands—including Amazon, Google, Chipotle, Apple, Gatorade and the NFL—that’ve been advertising on Twitter X even as its chatbot ground out sexualized images of kids.
 The Current offers guides for keeping your TV from spying on you and your internet router from sharing your Wi-Fi with strangers—on your dime.

Passages.
 Chicago gay-rights champion Rick Garcia—who championed groundbreaking laws at the city, county and state levels—has died at 69.
 The daughter of the founder of Chicago’s Harold’s Chicken chain—its CEO, Kristen Pierce-Sherrod—is dead at 55.
 After seven years, Fulton Market’s Time Out Market food hall will close next week.

The Score on FM. As of Feb. 2, Chicago’s premier AM sports-talk radio station will begin simulcasting on WBMX-FM, which has been known as 104.3 Jams …

Dangerous line crossed. Poynter media writer Tom Jones says the FBI’s raid on a Washington Post reporter’s home stands to “intimidate sources and chill journalists’ ability to … hold the government accountable.”
 A Post editorial vows that the raid “won’t stop reporters from continuing their important work.”

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