What we owe to ourselves and each other

Photo by Victor G on Unsplash

In the 1st two weeks of 2026, we have seen the US government kidnap and kill people on US soil and abroad. Even in the US's sorted and dark history of imperialism and colonialism, this is a new low. The villains in this story are us. And complicity is shared, whether we voted for the US administration that is responsible for this wave of violence or voted another way. We own this horror and its up to us to stop it and spend the rest of our lives making amends to the rest of the world.

Kelly Hayes, a veteran organizer for justice, published her remarks from a vigil held for Renee Nicole Good, who was murdered by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on January 7th. We strongly encourage you to read the entirely of Kelly’s remarks but wanted to share a quote here:

We are not here to ask for a gentler boot on our neighbors’ necks. Nor are we in search of a detour back to the road that brought us here. We are here to say no — no to the kidnapping of our neighbors, no to the normalization of fascist violence. We are here because our love and decency are stronger than our fears, and because we know we will find courage in each other.”

This is what we owe to ourselves and each other. To keep our humanity, to feel grief and horror and not become numb to this ever expanding violence, and to continue to show up and fight. 

There is no alternative.


Take action

  • Support communities in Minnesota. This list is in no way comprehensive but a great place to start (and another round-up on Reddit).

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weekly wins

  • A US judge issued an order protecting pro-Palestine activists on university campuses.  

  • The US Senate approved billions in funding for science, rejecting cuts from the Trump administration. 

  • A federal judge ruled against Trump’s cancellation of millions in energy grants to Democratic states.

weekly wonder

Check it out

around the world

  • Protests across Iran have been brutally suppressed by the government, with thousands dead.

  • An energy emergency has been declared in Ukraine, as energy infrastructure has been heavily damaged by Russian attacks, which also target and kill many civilians.

  • More than 450 Palestinians have been killed since the cease-fire, many of them children.

  • Fighting in Sudan is again escalating, even as peace talks resumed in Cairo, Egypt

more of this please

perennial reads

  • We continue to recommend Rebecca Solnit’s Meditations in an Emergency blog

  • If you’re not already reading or listening to Dr. Health Cox Richardson’s daily newsletter, we cannot recommend it enough for historical context and a longer view than what is happening day to day in the US.

book nook

  • The All We Can Save Project has a page of book recommendations, all linked to the work people are doing to advance climate action. Check it out and find the right book for this moment. 

  • Tree by David Suzuki and Wayne Grady is the story of a single tree, from the moment the seed is released from its cone until, more than five hundred years later, it lies on the forest floor as a nurse log, giving life to ferns, mosses, and hemlocks, even as its own life is ending.

all ears

  • Can we solve the misinformation crisis with more information? Check out this episode of the Volts podcast to learn what might work. 

  • Check out the Project Censored Show, an increasingly rare independent journalism project covering topics that do not get fair shake from the mainstream media.

  • We cannot recommend the Upstream podcast enough. Critical assessment of capitalism and inspiration for the world we want to build.

… by the way

  • ICE is using facial recognition systems to identify people. Oh, and ICE murders people. We are in that phase of our democracy backslide when we have goons in the streets across the US, searching for people that fit a particular racial profile, asking for papers, and then disappearing people. It needed to be said.

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