Never Fucking Surrender

Rebecca Solnit in a crackjack essay in her Meditations in an Emergency newsletter:

False certainty is dangerous; it rules out all possibilities but one and in essence surrenders to that imagined future. I remember people dismissively telling me that the 2016 joke candidate Donald Trump could never be elected, while they took Hillary Clinton’s 85% chance of winning as pretty much the same as 100%, as if the likely was the inevitable, the unlikely the impossible. We’ve been living in the unlikely ever since (that a sundowning clown who is also the most powerful man in the world threatened the people of Iran with war crimes while standing next to a fretful life-size Easter Bunny would once have been unbelievable, but here we are). There is a lot of space between inevitable and impossible, and that is the space of the possible, good and bad.

This case for defiance has it all: Terminator 2, ICE, the Pentagon Papers, hope, and the amazing parenthetical quoted above.

I appreciate the reframing of “hope” from “optimism” to “never fucking surrender.”

Minimum Wage

Every year since 2015, the Johnson County Board of Supervisors sets a minimum wage. Since 2017, that act is a symbolic recommendation after the State of Iowa prohibited local authorities from having a wage higher than the states.

In 2026, the Board of Supervisors set the minimum to $13.37, or $27,809.60 before taxes for someone working full time.

According to Common Good Iowa, a single person without children in Johnson County would need to gross $32,658, or $15.70 an hour, to make ends meet.

If we’re going to take this symbolic action, shouldn’t it at least meet this threshold of livability? It seems it isn’t perhaps the symbol we would hope it to be.

Radical Cartography

Cartographer William Rankin, author of Radical Cartography, in an interview with Mike Higgins of Chatham House:

We do not live in a jigsaw-puzzle world, even in the straightforward sense of what sovereignty currently means. In the US context, consider American Indian reservations: tribal sovereignty is taken seriously by both Indigenous peoples and the federal government, yet the Supreme Court has long held that Congress retains ultimate authority over those sovereign nations. State boundaries sometimes run straight through reservations. These are places not subject to state jurisdiction, yet they sit inside states. Showing the contradictions of actual sovereignty as it exists is important. 

There’s another level too. Even within territories where a state makes a uniform claim to sovereignty – within the US or anywhere else – the territory is not homogeneous. There are vast differences in population, resources, climate and the practical reach of state power. Cartography ought to be helping us think about those realities, rather than simply presenting the international system as an abstract arrangement of autonomous jigsaw pieces. 

Maps are political and borders are made up.

BuzzFeed Nearing Bankruptcy After Disastrous Turn Toward AI

Victor Tangermann in Futurism:

Now, three years after its AI pivot, the writing is on the wall. The company reported a net loss of $57.3 million in 2025 in an earnings report released on Thursday. In an official statement, the company glumly hinted at the possibility of going under sooner rather than later, writing that “there is substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern.”

A cautionary tale.

BuzzFeed News won a Pulitzer for reporting about China’s mass detention of Muslims in 2021.

Muscatine County Now Says ‘Federal Law’ Bars Disclosure Of Contract with ICE

Clark Kauffman, Iowa Capitol Dispatch:

In January, the Iowa Capital Dispatch filed a formal, written Open Records Law request with both Muscatine County Sheriff Quinn Riess and Jail Administrator Matt McCleary, requesting a copy of the county jail’s contract to house ICE detainees. Neither Riess or McCleary responded to the request or to subsequent letters and phone calls on the matter.

On Feb. 4, the Capital Dispatch made a similar request of Muscatine County Attorney Korie Talkington. On Feb. 19, Talkington responded by stating that she had turned over the request to ICE for that agency to handle through the federal Freedom of Information Act. Any future communication on the issue, she said, would come from ICE and not from the county.

After the Capital Dispatch objected, noting that it was not seeking access to federal records held by ICE but to county records subject to Iowa’s Open Records Law, Talkington replied with a letter in which she stated, “I am not able to provide a copy of the contract with ICE/DHS. Release is a violation of federal law.”

Meanwhile:

The ICE employee Talkington identified, Shayla Wray, said Monday she writes the jail contracts for ICE, and said she was not aware Muscatine County had already asserted that federal law bars public disclosure of its contract with ICE. “I don’t know,” Wray said, “I don’t think that’s the case.”

This is fuckery from top to bottom.

Building the Camps, Part 2

From the City of Social Circle, Georgia:

DHS stated that they “will fully implement a new detention model by the end of Fiscal Year 2026”. The plan is to transition the ICE detention system from private operations to government-owned facilities. DHS plans to implement a “Hub and Spoke Model,” in which four smaller processing facilities will feed into the larger detention facilities. The proposed facility in Social Circle is identified as one of eight “mega centers” that will be located across the nation. Overall, ICE intends to reduce its number of facilities from approximately 300 to 34 nationwide. The facility in Social Circle is expected to house anywhere from 7,500 to 10,000 detainees and will be constructed using a modular design so that capacity can be scaled up or down as needed. 

When building a concentration camp system in 2026, you still have to deal with water supply and sewer discharge for your “mega centers” even if the folks near the proposed “mega centers” otherwise love the idea.

“Untrained”

I keep seeing the adjective “untrained” casually used to modify “agents” when discussing the problem of the Trump administration’s use of thousands of them to terrorize communities across the country.

They’re all awful, but the most publicly awful on-the-ground federal agents are those who murdered Rene Good (Jonathan Ross) and Alex Pretti (Jesus Ochoa and Raymundo Gutierrez).

ICE agent Jonathan Ross, 43, has been serving since 2015.

Boarder Patrol agent Jesus Ochoa, 43, has been serving since 2018.

Customs and Border Protection officer Raymundo Gutierrez, 35, has been serving since 2014.

Body cameras won’t fix it, because we have plenty of video.

Mask bans won’t fix it, because we are identifying abusers even when they wear them.

More training won’t fix it, because they’re doing what they’re trained to do.

This is what this goon squad is.

The only place to start is to abolish them all.

Why Conservatives Hate the Government But Love the Cops

Nathan J. Robinson in Current Affairs:

It is tempting to label Gadsden a hypocrite for designing a flag endorsing freedom from violent coercion while personally depriving others of their freedom through violent coercion. But Gadsden was not a hypocrite. He was just evil. His principle was that he and his fellow white property owners ought not be made to do anything they didn’t want to do. The flag says nothing about whether Black people ought or ought not be trodden on. Similarly, there is nothing peculiar about a “Blue Lives Matter” flag next to a “Don’t Tread on Me” flag. The combined message of the two is: please tread on someone else. 

“Small government for me but not for thee” is the right’s implicit motto. Frank Wilhoit put this pithily when he said that conservatism consists of the single proposition that: “There must be in-groups whom the law protects but does not bind, alongside out-groups whom the law binds but does not protect.” […]

Thus, conservatives are not really sincere when they say they believe in “small government.” What they mean is that they believe in small government when it comes to anything that could restrict them (conservatives generally but also members of the privileged in-group) from doing as they please. The lovers of liberty, however, want the government to be omnipresent and carry heavy weaponry in order to regulate all kinds of behaviors of other people.