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11/28/25 07:39 PM #18668    

 

Jack Mallory

​Turkey molé? Cuban beans? Tiramisu? What kinda 'Murican are you, Joan? You'll be in the women’s DEI prison, after the standard chromosomal exam to confirm you're not, well, you know . . . 

I'll be in the men's DEI prison, after the same exam, but maybe we'll both be in the prison workshop together, tearing pages out of textbooks that mention slavery, or female historical figures, or Black Civil Rights leaders, or off-White heroes like Cesar Chavez . . 

Maybe we'll get lucky and both be on the inmate crew sent out to museums and schools to paint over any mention of women in the military like Linda Van Devanter, or astronauts with two X chromosomes like Christa MacAuliffe

It's a brave new world!

*********

This from last night also. Completely unexpected result from shooting directly into a setting sun. Photography, like life, is often luck dependent. 


 


11/29/25 07:23 AM #18669    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Wow, Jack that shot is amazing. I think you could win a big award for it. Joan, I think whatever foods are enjoyed is what counts. We are turkey lovers with the traditional sides but I too would be picked for the DEI prison I'm sure. I know many times I have mentioned what the law is versus what Trump does and that gets you in big trouble. He told us he was about retribution. At least people are starting to feel the effects of Trumps diasastrous polices and he has low ratings. You know he cares about ratings but he still continues to wreak damage on the country. I have hope that we have enough folks pushing back. I hope so. Love to all, Joanie


11/29/25 07:41 AM #18670    

 

Jack Mallory

"CONGRATULATIONS TO JUAN ORLANDO HERNANDEZ ON YOUR UPCOMING PARDON!" Says DJT on his Truth Social account.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/28/world/americas/trump-pardon-honduras-hernandez.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share

 

The First Felon pardons a fellow felon, convicted of involvement in "one of the largest and most violent drug trafficking conspiracies in the world." While Trump spends our tax dollars to murder scores of nameless, faceless people in small boats, never charged with, tried for, or convicted of a crime.

"As word spread on Friday about Mr. Hernández’s pardon, Todd Robinson, who served as the U.S. assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs at the State Department, said online: ’We blow up ‘alleged’ drug boats in the Caribbean but pardon actually convicted drug traffickers in the U.S. Someone help me make sense of this."

Yeah, help me too. Where is the "bomb the sh*t out of the f*ckers !!" (from now on, the BSOOF) crowd? What privileges their President, what encourages them to condemn unknown people at sea while looking away while the truly guilty go free? 

The blank space below represents my expectations of the answers we'll see from that crowd of hypocrites. 

 

 


 

 

 


11/29/25 03:48 PM #18671    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Remember Ty Cobb? Former Trump lawyer and silly-mustache-guy? He's got a few words to say about his former boss.

Ex-Trump Lawyer: "The Constitution Is Not Adequate to Contain a President as Evil as Trump"

Ty Cobb, the former White House lawyer who once represented President Donald J. Trump, issued a public warning this week, saying the president’s conduct and his approach to the judiciary pose what Cobb described as a serious risk to the country’s constitutional structure.

“The Constitution really is not adequate to deal with a president as evil as Trump,” Cobb said in an interview broadcast on MSNow, adding that the president’s recent actions reflected “a desire to accumulate and abuse power.”

Cobb said his assessment was shaped by his time inside the Trump administration. “Never before in American history … have most Americans been as concerned about their president,” he said. He added that aides around Mr. Trump historically grew concerned “when President Trump gets like this,” referring to periods when the president responded sharply to criticism.

Cobb pointed to a series of recent legal setbacks for the administration as part of the context for his comments. “An appeals court rejected Trump’s efforts to revive his defamation lawsuit against CNN,” he said. He also noted that “a federal judge ruled Trump’s deployment of National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., was illegal,” and that another judge found the president “likely violated the law when he tried to cut millions of dollars in funding” to local governments over immigration and diversity policies. Cobb said the number of such rulings highlighted the extent to which courts have been called upon to review executive actions.

Addressing the president’s decision-making style, Cobb said Mr. Trump reacted intensely to perceived personal slights. “Any insult tweaks his narcissism in a way that brings out a fight or flight instinct,” Cobb said, “and with Trump, the flight instinct really doesn’t kick in. It’s really just fight, and it’s fight by any means possible — legal or otherwise.” He said he viewed actions such as “sending in the National Guard” and “zip tying mothers and separating [them] from their children” as examples of this pattern.

Cobb also described what he believed were constitutional vulnerabilities exposed during the administration. “Congress … ceded basically all control to the president,” he said. “They’ve neutered themselves through their cowardice and greed.” He said the framers intended Congress — and not the courts — to be “the first wave of resistance to an evil president.” While federal judges interpret law, he said, “the courts don’t have the ability to say what’s best for America… They have to say what does the Constitution require.”

Cobb cited reporting that Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanch described a “war against the federal judiciary,” and said he believed that rhetoric reflected a broader pattern of institutional confrontation. “By denigrating the judiciary… Trump is basically trying to weaken one of the only remaining pillars that is standing up to him,” Cobb said. He added that these developments were occurring “at a time where the constitutional stresses are extreme.”

Cobb leveled additional allegations about U.S. activities abroad. “He’s committing war crimes in Venezuela and Colombia,” Cobb said, asserting that military legal officers who raised concerns “were fired or sidelined.” He added: “There’s no question under international law and domestic law that what’s going on… is murder.” Cobb said he believed U.S. personnel involved were likely relying on a classified Office of Legal Counsel opinion, which he described as “a phony opinion… written precisely to provide cover to Trump.” He added that “if you’re a soldier and there’s an OLC opinion and you’ve been told that it’s legal, that makes it unlikely that you would ever be prosecuted.”

Cobb said he viewed some domestic legal disputes through the same lens. “There is a war,” he said, referring to conflict with judges in matters involving former FBI Director James Comey and former deputy director Andrew McCabe. “We should be very concerned about it,” he added. Cobb said service members witnessing such disputes “should understand that they don’t have to follow illegal orders.”

Cobb added that he doubted accountability would follow these events.

“It’d be nice to have a Nuremberg trial of all these people, but I don’t think that’s going to happen,” he said. “We need somehow to get the resistance to bring this to a close.”Cobb concluded by saying that the judiciary remains the key institutional safeguard. “We need a very strong judiciary,” he said. “Particularly at this time.”

https://theintellectualistofficial.substack.com/p/ex-trump-lawyer-the-constitution?r=2y2ojf&utm_medium=ios&triedRedirect=true

 

 


11/29/25 11:21 PM #18672    

 

Robert Hall

Ty Cobb clearly laid out the serious, unprecedented trouble our country is facing Joan. While the increasing defections in the Trump party are a little reassuring they are still much too small to give Mike Johnson a backbone to stand up to Trump's madness.
Like Tim Waltz, I too would like to see Trump's MRI. The 25th Amendment should be required reading for the few remaining Republicans if they want to save their party--and our country.

11/30/25 07:13 AM #18673    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Thank you Joan..That was a great post showing one of the few Republicans, Ty Cobb, willing to stand up and call out Trump. He really goes into

how dangerous Trump is and all the illegal things he is doing. I agree too that the judiciary and the resistence in general need to push back and that the military should never do any illegal order. Love, Joanie


11/30/25 07:18 AM #18674    

 

Jack Mallory

The NYT detailed account of the life and crimes of the narcoterrorist Trump just pardoned, while we Americans murder poor people in small boats in international waters. Trump's fears of his own legal culpabilities are evident in his "justification" of the pardon at the very end. 

Where is the slavering BSOOF crowd response to this?
 

The Ex-President Whom Trump Plans to Pardon Flooded America With Cocaine

Juan Orlando Hernández, whom Mr. Trump called a victim of persecution, helped orchestrate a decades-long trafficking conspiracy. It ravaged his Central American country.

"He once boasted that he would “stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses.” He accepted a $1 million bribe from El Chapo to allow cocaine shipments to pass through Honduras. A man was killed in prison to protect him.

"At the federal trial of Juan Orlando Hernández in New York, testimony and evidence showed how the former president maintained Honduras as a bastion of the global drug trade. He orchestrated a vast trafficking conspiracy that prosecutors said raked in millions for cartels while keeping Honduras one of Central America’s poorest, most violent and most corrupt countries.

"Last year, Mr. Hernández was convicted on drug trafficking and weapons charges and sentenced to 45 years in prison. It was one of the most sweeping drug-trafficking cases to come before a U.S. court since the trial of the Panamanian strongman Gen. Manuel Noriega three decades before.

 

"But on Friday, President Trump announced that he would pardon Mr. Hernandez, 57, who he said was a victim of political persecution, though Mr. Trump offered no evidence to support that claim. It would be a head-spinning resolution to a case that for prosecutors was a pinnacle, striking at the heart of a narcostate.

 

"The president’s two-week trial in Manhattan, and those of his associates before it, offered a glimpse into a world of corruption and drug running spanning several countries. Bags of cash, a machine gun with Mr. Hernández’s name emblazoned on it, and bribes from the drug lord Joaquín Guzmán, the Mexican kingpin known as El Chapo, featured heavily.

"Prosecutors said Mr. Hernández was key to a scheme that lasted more than 20 years and brought more than 500 tons of cocaine into the United States.

“The people of Honduras and the United States bore the consequences,” Merrick Garland, then the attorney general, said in 2024, after Mr. Hernández was sentenced.

"Honduras, a country of around 10 million people, has long been linked to the United States — first as the home of sprawling banana plantations owned by the United Fruit Company, then as the location of a key base used for U.S.-backed counterinsurgency efforts and later as a military post for counternarcotics.


"When drug-trafficking routes began shifting toward Central America in the 2000s, Honduras came to play a role in transshipment, moving cocaine from South America toward Mexico and the U.S. border. Over that decade, trafficking rose, along with the murder rate, and drug planes arrived with regularity. The June 2009 coup that ousted Manuel Zelaya, the country’s left-wing president, ushered in a golden age of drug corruption.

"Mr. Hernández, unlike many Latin American politicians, rose from humble roots. One of more than a dozen siblings raised in a rural, coffee-growing region, he became a lawyer and entered congress. As president, Mr. Hernández told U.S. officials that he was doing his utmost to stamp out drug trafficking.

"But prosecutors said his political career had been fueled by drug money as early as 2009, when he was still a lawmaker and vying to lead the Honduran legislature. At the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, Mr. Hernández was photographed smiling and giving a thumbs up alongside a known Honduran cartel chief.

"Mr. Hernández ran for president on the ticket of the conservative National Party and was elected in 2013. Prosecutors said Mr. Hernández relied on his connections to the world’s most powerful cartels to fund his campaign, including a $1 million bribe from El Chapo.

"He used the weapons and power of the state for his own ends, according to prosecutors, jurors and the Hondurans who came to despise him. The threat of being extradited to the United States made drug traffickers eager to bribe anyone who could protect them, prosecutors said, and they came to know they could rely on Mr. Hernández.
 

"Mr. Hernández directed the police and military to protect smugglers who paid him off, and he promised to shield them from extradition to the United States. Mr. Hernández once reassured a Honduran cocaine trafficker that “by the time the gringos find out, we will have eliminated extradition,” according to prosecutors.

"Mr. Hernández even boasted, “We are going to stuff the drugs up the gringos’ noses, and they’re never even going to know it,” according to a witness who testified at the 2021 trial of a drug trafficker.

"Investigators said that Mr. Hernández went to pitiless lengths to cover his tracks. One accused co-conspirator was killed in a Honduran prison to protect the president, according to court documents. He used drug money to manipulate the vote in two elections, the documents said.

"In 2017, Mr. Hernández again became president after an election so laced with allegations of fraud that days of violence ensued and about two dozen people were killed as the military cracked down.

Hondurans, long divided on political lines, united in disgust. The chant “Fuera J.O.H.” — “Out with J.O.H.” — could be heard not just at protests, but among huge migrant caravans marching north, filled with people fed up with poverty and rampant corruption.

"Publicly, Mr. Hernández denied any involvement in drug trafficking. And his connections to the U.S. remained strong.

"President Barack Obama called him one of the “excellent partners” helping to discourage children from coming to the United States. Mr. Trump recognized him as the winner of the disputed 2017 vote, counting on him to help curb the flow of people and drugs. The Biden administration regarded him as a key ally in Central America as it sought to control migration.

"But the rot became evident when Mr. Hernández’s brother, Tony, was arrested in Miami in 2018 after being linked to a trafficking organization.

"During the younger brother’s trial in 2019, a former Honduran mayor and major drug trafficker described how an associate of El Chapo had delivered the $1 million bribe — cash wrapped in plastic bundles of $50,000 and $100,000.
 

"Prosecutors displayed the machine gun with Mr. Hernández’s name engraved on it.

"In February 2022, weeks after he left office, Mr. Hernández was detained at the request of the United States; he was escorted onto a plane in handcuffs and extradited two months later.

"Fireworks erupted in celebration in the country he once ruled.

"His own trial showed in grisly detail how Mr. Hernández had promised to crack down on drug gangs, all the while partnering with them instead, according to statements by prosecutors and witnesses.

"Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga, a former leader of a gang called Los Cachiros, who admitted to being involved in the deaths of 78 people, testified that he had bribed Mr. Hernández with $250,000 delivered to the president’s sister, Hilda, in exchange for protection.

"Another trafficker testified that he had personally delivered a payoff, saying: “I paid $250,000 as a bribe to Juan Orlando Hernández.”

"Mr. Hernández was convicted of drug trafficking and weapons conspiracy in a room packed with Hondurans eager to see his downfall.

 

"When he was sentenced in 2024, Mr. Hernández spoke for almost an hour in court, airing conspiracy theories and grievances as he portrayed himself as the victim of “political persecution.” In a lengthy letter, Mr. Hernández quoted Edmund Burke, Martin Luther King Jr. and the Bible.

 

“The investigation and trial against me is full of mistakes, of injustices that have become a lynching through the U.S. judicial system,” Mr. Hernández wrote. “The prosecutors and agents did not do the due diligence in the investigation to know the whole TRUTH.”

"For many Hondurans, his conviction was a rare taste of justice. A woman in a crowd outside the courthouse celebrating his punishment had held a sign that read “No clemency for narcopolitics.”

"But on Saturday, Mr. Trump said in a statement to The New York Times that “many friends” had asked him to pardon Mr. Hernández: “They gave him 45 years because he was the President of the Country — you could do this to any President.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/29/nyregion/honduras-hernandez-drug-trafficking.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share


11/30/25 01:52 PM #18675    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

In light of our recent discussions about drug trafficking in the Caribbean, I wonder how you all feel about the pardoning of a convicted drug trafficker? He brought cocaine directly into the US, but the felon let him go free. 

“Todd Robinson, who served as the U.S. assistant secretary of state for international narcotics and law enforcement affairs at the State Department, said online: 'We blow up ‘alleged’ drug boats in the Caribbean but pardon actually convicted drug traffickers in the U.S. Someone help me make sense of this.”

I too, would love someone to make sense of that. Anybody got an answer?

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/28/world/americas/trump-pardon-honduras-hernandez.html?campaign_id=2&emc=edit_th_20251129&instance_id=167232&nl=today%27s-headlines&regi_id=49876899&segment_id=211539&user_id=f0a0b829bbab2b17dcedba0455cf6ee9


11/30/25 05:39 PM #18676    

 

Jack Mallory

Joan, see the last paragraph of the NYT article I posted earlier--18674. Trump seems to feel sympathy for a fellow First Felon, thinks the stiff sentence for Hernandez sets a bad example, or at least creates a threatening precedent. 

How Trump and his supporters could fail to see the grossly obvious hypocrisy and injustice in killing the innocent, or even those doing relatively small time drug dealing, while handing out a pardon to a narcoterrorist king-pin? WTF knows! Some of them started seeing, hearing, and speaking no evil regarding US presidents with Nixon, I suspect, so they've had decades of practice. 
 

But even some Republican Congressionals are beginning to question  Hegseth‘s alleged orders for a second strike to kill survivors.

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/11/30/us/politics/trump-boat-strikes-war-crime.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share


12/01/25 07:52 AM #18677    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

thanks for your posts Jack...As the article points out, if Hegseth ordered a second strike on survivors, that is a war crime...I hope the truth comes out.

I feel like this Administration is committing lots of crimes. Trump is by far the most corrupt President in our history as he is constantly setting up situations to gain personal wealth that are not ok...It hurts my heart regarding all the cruelty to the many non criminal immigrants he is having rounded up for deportation.Even people with green cards are at risk and people who are trying to complete their asylum papers too...They are grabbed up before they can finish the process. . We are losing so many hard working good people. Love, Joanie


12/02/25 08:24 AM #18678    

 

Thomas Stecher

Our classmate Linda Van Grack Snyder died.  I was barely acquainted with her, but others reading this might have been close friends.  (I do not know how to get this to the In Memoriam section.)


12/02/25 09:55 AM #18679    

 

Jack Mallory

Very considerate of you to post that, Tom. 
 

*******

"Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said: 'As President of Honduras, Juan Orlando Hernandez abused his power to support one of the largest and most violent drug trafficking conspiracies in the world, and the people of Honduras and the United States bore the consequences. Thanks to the diligent work of the Justice Department’s agents and prosecutors, Hernandez will now spend more than four decades in prison.  The Justice Department will hold accountable all those who engage in violent drug trafficking, regardless of how powerful they are or what position they hold.'

"DEA Administrator Anne Milgram said: 'DEA is relentlessly focused on dismantling drug trafficking organizations that threaten the safety and health of the American people. Former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez financed his political career with drug trafficking profits and abused his authority as President of Honduras to traffic hundreds of tons of cocaine to the United States.  Let me be clear, political actors who use their power to traffic in drugs and corruption will be brought to justice in the United States.'” 
https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/juan-orlando-hernandez-former-president-honduras-sentenced-45-years-prison-conspiring


But that was then, and this is now, as we say.


https://www.nytimes.com/2025/12/02/us/politics/hernandez-honduras- trump.html?smid=url-share

I know--Let's go kill a bunch of nameless, faceless people in little boats! Hegseth can get his rocks off, and Trump will win even more support from the Bomb the Shit Out Of the Fuckers mob! Who will, of course, also get their own rocks off!

 


12/02/25 12:25 PM #18680    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

I LOVE this! At his cabinet meeting the felon claims he's "brought down drug prices by 500, 600 700, 800, 900%". Did he ever have a math class? So now the drug companies are going to pay us 9 times what the drugs are worth for using them? Sounds good!  Oh and no more income tax!! Sounds good!

These cabinet meetings/press conferences are SO funny! Watch it, you'll get a good laugh as he rambles and lies and rambles on and on and on and on. 

"China has no gasoline"

"We had the worst border crisis in the history of the world"

"Zero illegal aliens have come in the last 6 months"

5 minutes talking about his cognitive test which he "aced"

"At NATO they're calling me the president of Europe"

"I should get the Nobel Prize for each of the wars I've ended"

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2025/12/02/trump-cabinet-meeting-dec-2-watch-livestream/87563772007/

 


12/02/25 01:41 PM #18681    

 

Jack Mallory

He would have had a math class, Joan, but those damned bone spurs get in the way of a lot of useful learning experiences. 


12/03/25 02:14 PM #18682    

 

Nora Skinker (Morton)

Reading the venomous forum attacks seems like a revisit of Russia-gate and also an intense competition on who-hates-Trump-the-most...both at the same time. Not sure which J is winning the title, but pop the corn and settle-in for, God willing, there's bound to be (yet) another impeachment vote soon! 

Though greatly tempted to enter the fray, particularly since Jack is not talking to me anymore, I'll merely thank Tom for sharing with us the news of Linda VanGrack's passing. I remember her smile, warmth and upbeat persona.   It also does not surprise me at all that she was a writer, having shared many classes with her and in so doing, remember well her talented use of the English language. Like playing tennis with a pro, I was always reaching for more within myself, just to keep up!

 

 


12/03/25 03:05 PM #18683    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Tom, thank you for posting about the death of Linda Van Grack...I knew her well. We were not friends as she had a different group that she gravitated to. I was very unpopular I have to admit. I would walk looking down at my feet in high school...Having said that. I am very sad to hear of her death. She was very lively and I was shocked that she died...

Nori, You never check out the links we send that explain why your guy Trump is so dangerous to our Democracy...Which of these things to you like about him. The persecution of non criminal immmigrants some here for 20 years working hard to help our country prosper...or the rounding up as well of US citizens by ICE...or is it the pardoning of drug criminals and just recently the pardoning of a democrat who was going to trial for huge bribery counts...Trump liked him because he criticized Biden. Or is it that you like the clamp down on free speech ( women reporters called piggy and stupid) and the targeting of Universities threatening to take away their grant money unless they say nothing against him. Maybe you like his policy to blow up ships in the international waters with a country we are not at war with. or maybe you are ok with the order to kill the only two survivors which is a war crime..Or maybe you like all the corruption of Trump where he is setting up everything for his own personal wealth..Or maybe his  being much more sympathetic to Putin, a brutal war criminal who invaded Ukraine and is dropping bombs on civilians...and on and on...so don't act like our repulsion against Trump is just picking on Trump. He is a grave danger to our country. Love, Joanie

https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2025/04/president-trumps-first-100-days-attacks-on-human-rights/


12/03/25 04:21 PM #18684    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Thank you, Thomas for letting us know about the death of Linda Vangrack Snyder. I didn't know her, but am always sad to hear of one of us passing on. 

I'm especially disturbed when I've recently been getting ads on the forum for cremation plans. I guess that's Al at work.

Anyway, if you go to the "In Memory - Classmates" link at the top of the page and scroll down to the bottom, it tells you how to post a notice of her death. I hope that helps.


12/03/25 04:31 PM #18685    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

Does anybody else find it hilarious that the more we simply post what the felon has done or said, the more Nori calls us venomous. Just the facts. Here's what the man did today. Here's what the man said today. Ooooo venemous!


12/03/25 05:01 PM #18686    

 

Jack Mallory

Every once in a while I'm tempted to drop all of my false pretense to being a decent human being and emulate Trump, with what his people call being "frank." Sometimes the temptation is overwhelming. I deleted these from my photo library awhile back, as I thought they were over the top. 

Fortunately Amazon photos gives you a month to reconsider before permanently sending them into the digital void, so when Trump and his supporters went even farther over the top I was able to recover them. 

And his saying to his critics what I would never say to mine,

Hey, he said it, not me!

*********

Never, ever take pictures while driving. It's just not safe. 
 


 

 


 


12/03/25 07:03 PM #18687    

 

Joan Ruggles (Young)

I don't know about you, but nothing puts me in the Christmas spirit more than a painting of a bloody president next to some Christmas trees. 

Welcome to the White House! The little kids are going to love this. 🎄


12/03/25 10:36 PM #18688    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Some good Trump cartoons. Love, Joanie   Scroll down to the one that says Pete Hegseth supports General Bradley. Its a really good one!!!

https://cagle.com/topic/trump-the-dictator


12/04/25 12:23 PM #18689    

 

Glen Hirose

             International Cheetah Day

             Leopard Print Cookies Recipe - The Cooking Foodie
       

     


12/04/25 02:17 PM #18690    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Glen, thanks for pictures of the cheetahs and yes they need to be saved.  The cookies look like cheetah cookies🤣🤣🤣❤️❤️❤️love, Joanie


12/04/25 06:06 PM #18691    

 

Jack Mallory

We can honor her by reading this and spreading it. We can't dishonor him, but he does that himself simply by opening his mouth. 


 

On Tuesday, President Trump called my friends and me “garbage.”

This comment was only the latest in a series of remarks and Truth Social posts in which the president has demonized and spread conspiracy theories about the Somali community and about me personally. For years, the president has spewed hate speech in an effort to gin up contempt against me. He reaches for the same playbook of racism, xenophobia, Islamophobia and division again and again. At one 2019 rally, he egged on his crowd until it chanted “send her back” when he said my name.

Mr. Trump denigrates not only Somalis but so many other immigrants, too, particularly those who are Black and Muslim. While he has consistently tried to vilify newcomers, we will not let him silence us. He fails to realize how deeply Somali Americans love this country. We are doctors, teachers, police officers and elected leaders working to make our country better. Over 90 percent of Somalis living in my home state, Minnesota, are American citizens by birth or naturalization. Some even supported Mr. Trump at the ballot box.

“I don’t want them in our country,” the president said this week. “Let them go back to where they came from.”

Somali Americans remain resilient against the onslaught of attacks from the White House. But I am deeply worried about the ramifications of these tirades. When Mr. Trump maligns me, it increases the number of death threats that my family, staff members and I receive. As a member of Congress, I am privileged to have access to security when these threats arise. What keeps me up at night is that people who share the identities I hold — Black, Somali, hijabi, immigrant — will suffer the consequences of his words, which so often go unchecked by members of the Republican Party and other elected officials. All Americans have a duty to call out this hateful rhetoric when we hear it.

The president’s dehumanizing and dangerous attacks on minority immigrant communities are nothing new. When he first ran for president a decade ago, he launched his campaign with claims that he was going to pause Muslim immigration to this country. He has since falsely accused Haitian migrants of eating pets and referred to Haiti and African nations as “shithole” countries. He has accused Mexico of sending rapists and drug peddlers across our border. It is unconscionable that he fails to acknowledge how this country was built on the backs of immigrants and mocks their ongoing contributions.

While the president wastes his time attacking my community, my state, my governor and me, the promises of economic prosperity he made in his run for president last year have not come to fruition. Prices have not come down; in many cases, they have risen. His implementation of tariffs has hurt farmers and small business owners. His policies have only worsened the affordability crisis for Americans. And now, with Affordable Care Act tax credits set to expire, health care costs for American households are primed to skyrocket, and millions of people risk losing their coverage under his signature domestic policy bill.

The president knows he is failing, and so he is reverting to what he knows best: trying to divert attention by stoking bigotry.

When I was sworn into Congress in 2019, my father turned to me and expressed bewilderment that the leader of the free world was picking on a freshman member of Congress, one out of 535 members of the legislative body. The president’s goal may have been to try to tear me down, but my community and my constituents rallied behind me then, just as they are now.

I often say that although Minnesota may be cold, the people here have warm hearts. Minnesota is special. That is why when so many Somalis arrived in this country, they chose the state as home. I am deeply grateful to the people of Minnesota for the generosity, hospitality and support they have shown to every immigrant community in our state.

We will not let Mr. Trump intimidate or debilitate us. We are not afraid. After all, Minnesotans not only welcome refugees, they also sent one to Congress.

********


12/04/25 06:21 PM #18692    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Trumps hatred and bigotry towards Somalies is horrendous.There should be no place in our country for this type of bigatry. Its sad that for so long he has reigned like a King among many of the Republicans...now at least there are some cracks with the Epstein case and with the murdering of survivors in Venezuala...Love, Joanie


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