Tag: Chicago

  • Life in Chicago with ICE and the National Guard

    Life in Chicago with ICE and the National Guard

    Every day, Chicagoans outside the immediate areas where federal forces are deploying pick up fragments of what feels like an unfolding drama.

    Here’s a representative example: on the app NextDoor, the Chicago subreddit and in neighborhood Facebook groups, we watch cell-phone footage from Logan Square of smoke spreading through an intersection as a federal vehicle pulls away. Eventually, local outlets verify that a masked federal agent dropped canisters outside the Rico Fresh supermarket near Funston Elementary. It appears the air was filled with a chemical irritant, causing people to panic, and the vehicle departed. NBC Chicago asked Immigrations and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security for explanations and, as of publication, had not received a detailed public rationale. Another cluster of videos captures tense scenes outside the ICE processing center in Broadview, a suburb just west of Chicago. In September, a federal agent positioned above the facility fired a projectile that struck Pastor David Black in the head.

    I witnessed an arrest last Saturday afternoon – a man purchasing a hot dog was picked up by CBP. A Greek-American friend, with olive skin and a mess of dark, curly hair, claims in a groupchat that he was asked to show his passport while walking downtown – sparse on details, high on alarm. Another friend, an undocumented immigrant from Ukraine, shares with me that she’s scared of being seized. Each day, a new story and mixed context for residents who may not understand what’s actually happening. 

    The Trump administration has deployed about 500 National Guard troops in the Chicago area for an initial period of 60 days – around 300 from Illinois and 200 from Texas. Federal officials say the mission is to protect personnel and property at federal sites, especially those used by ICE. On social media, there are reports that Chicagoans are preventing federal officials from doing their job through civil disobedience, which, some conservatives say, is justification for the Trump administration to step up operations.

    Illinois and the City of Chicago have sued, arguing the orders are unlawful and implicate the Posse Comitatus Act, which limits the use oIf the military in civilian law enforcement. Filed October 6, the complaint challenges both the federalization of the Illinois Guard and the importation of Texas Guard forces. A judge in Chicago is set to rule on whether to block the deployment while the case proceeds.

    Northern Command has publicly declared the troops are there to protect federal workers and property, not to perform general urban policing – though the chatter online tells a different story. There’s a general sense that Chicago is a “war zone” and that the presence of the National Guard is “overdue.” The White House itself has described the deployment as a “protection mission,” while DHS refers to the broader ICE enforcement escalation as Operation Midway Blitz.

    Reporters have yet to work out a complete, detailed after-action account explaining why gas was deployed in Logan Square at that moment. Federal officials have not produced a cohesive public explanation tying together the scattered incidents across the city. And so residents and observers have basic questions that remain unanswered: who ordered the canisters in Logan Square? What does it mean, practically, that one of our alderwomen was briefly handcuffed? Was she arrested or just threatened? Eventually there are fractions of answers, but not all emerge in time to affect public understanding.

    What many Chicagoans are experiencing is uncertainty, amplified by a lack of clear news sources. Local journalists are doing the work: verifying incidents, seeking official responses, documenting what happens on the ground. But that reporting doesn’t reach most people in its original form. Instead, it gets broken apart and redistributed through social platforms, stripped of context, arriving as fragments rather than as coherent stories. 

    From social media, people assemble different stories. Some accept the administration’s framing – that the Guard is there to keep federal workers safe in a city that allegedly refuses to do so. Others see the footage as evidence that federal power is expanding into everyday life  –  understood as authoritarian overreach. Both sides point to authentic images and cite official statements, but few can point to a single, verified timeline that links them all.

    The Guard deployment is real, active and officially limited to protecting federal personnel and property. ICE enforcement in the region has intensified under a named operation, producing repeated confrontations with residents and protesters. And the public does not yet have a stable, integrated account that links these episodes into a common operational plan. This is, in large part, a distribution problem. The pieces are authentic. The whole picture remains incomplete.

  • Crunch(y) time in the Rose City

    Crunch(y) time in the Rose City

    Congresswoman Maxine Dexter of Oregon, who once briefly went viral for saying we have to “fuck Trump,” has posted a cringey video of a gray-haired Portland ukelele orchestra playing and singing the most off-key version of “This Land Is Your Land” imaginable. “Portland is not a military target,” the caption reads.

    Ah, but it is, and for good reason. Armed leftist radicals have firebombed a courthouse and are regularly attacking an ICE facility. Residents at the Multnomah County Plaid Shirt Senior Center may not see that on MSNBC (soon to be MS NOW!) or in their daily Heather Cox Richardson newsletter, but it’s happening.

    Boomer denialism is in full swing, as evidenced by an ungodly cringe video from New York Times columnist and one-time Oregon gubernatorial candidate Nicholas Kristoff yesterday, in which he appears from behind a small tree, whisper-finger raised to his lips and sarcastically says “Be careful. Portland is on fire,” and then says “NAH” and walks off to a boring Oregon Historical Society dinner. How much did OHS pay him? It was too much.

    The libs have it all wrong. Trump has not “declared war” on American cities. People still brunch in Portland. There will be at least one more game in Wrigley Field this year. The secret police are not watching the comings and goings of DC barflies. But antifa chapters are definitely throwing Molotov cocktails in select locations and rogue SUVs are boxing in ICE convoys. The refusal to admit this is a problem is “mostly peaceful protest”-style deflection, with slightly different language. The next time Cockburn hears it, he’s calling for the National Guard.

    On our radar

    HEY BUDDY Canadian PM Mark Carney is currently joining President Trump at the White House for a bilateral meeting and lunch.

    MARKING 10/7 Trump will then meet with Edan Alexander, the last American hostage to be freed by Hamas after 584 days in captivity.

    SAVIOR COMPLEX The President has also returned to TikTok, posting his first video since the election to tell young people to thank him for “saving” the app. Oh, and J.D. Vance is back too.

    Kash on the kase

    After DC withstood weeks of “militarized federal overreach” (read: National Guardsmen loitering under trees, picking litter and mooching around Dupont Circle), America’s Second City is next on the list – and the federal government is sending the best man for the job. “Chicago will be saved, and this FBI will continue to crush violent crime there, and all around the country. Heading to the Windy City now,” Director Kash Patel of the Federal Bureau of Investigation posted this morning.

    If his track record with the Epstein Files and wrongly claiming to have Charlie Kirk’s assassin in custody – twice! – during a manhunt are anything to go by, Chicago won’t know what hit it.

    Vivek shows his softer side

    One-time presidential candidate and now Ohio gubernatorial hopeful Vivek Ramaswamy has offered an olive branch to his opponents. Later today he is set to declare that the American right is at a “fork in the road” and that “we can still stand for truth, while viewing those who believe in falsehoods not as our enemies who must be vanquished, but instead as our fellow citizens who have lost their way and must be shown the light.”

    Long-time Ramaswamy-watchers will look at this askance. The tech investor had previously made his name as one of the right’s most abrasive voices. His 2024 campaign for the presidency was a callow affair; he sought – as many have done – to “out-Trump Trump” from the right, and had an unconvincing go at ridiculing his opponents on the debate stage à la Trump 2016. He could not quite recapture the magic and instead came across as a sort of annoying poltergeist, something that was not helped by his extreme youth (for a presidential candidate) and slightly impish mien.

    Nor did this showily combative manner serve him well after his campaign wrapped up. Tipped to be Elon Musk’s co-chair at DoGE, Ramaswamy spent the Christmas holidays giving stern lectures to American workers, warning that they were ill-suited for the “hyper-competitive global market.” The answer in the meantime would be an extension of the H-1B visa program. The medicine for Americans would be “more movies like Whiplash, fewer reruns of Friends. More math tutoring, fewer sleepovers. More weekend science competitions, fewer Saturday morning cartoons. More books, less TV. More creating, less ‘chillin.’ More extracurriculars, less ‘hanging out at the mall.’”

    Ramaswamy was eased out of DoGE shortly afterward. As he urges civility, he might first reflect on how unwilling he has been to extend it to others.

    Subscribe to Cockburn’s Diary on Substack to get it in your inbox on Tuesdays and Fridays.

  • Do cities need the National Guard?

    Do cities need the National Guard?

    “They are the ones who are making it a war zone,” Governor J.B. Pritzker of Illinois bloviated on CNN recently, as Jake Tapper listened, displaying his best Resting Serious Journalist Face. “They need to get out of Chicago. If they’re not going to focus on the worst of the worst, which is what the President said they were going to do, they need to get the heck out.”  

    ICE has overreached its authority, according to Pritzker, arresting innocent children and zip-tying grandparents in the middle of the night, asking people for their citizenship papers on the street. And yet here comes the National Guard, as ordered by Donald Trump, an “invasion” of trained soldiers from Texas. “Every American needs to stand up and stop this madness,” Governor McCheese tweeted.  

    Yet what are the feds supposed to do? Last month ICE launched “Operation Midway Blitz,” last seen deployed by the Chicago Bears in the 1980s. Unsurprisingly in Chicago, which has a contemporary left wing that makes Red Emma Goldman look like a Bircher, the operation soon led to daily protests outside the ICE processing center in the Chicago suburb of Broadview. This Saturday brought a scarily violent scene during an ICE patrol on Chicago’s South Side, when, according to the Department of Homeland Security, ICE agents “were attacked and rammed by vehicles and boxed in by 10 cars.” Agents shot (non-fatally) a woman who was allegedly brandishing a semi-automatic weapon. There’s some dispute about what role the Chicago Police Department played in all this, but a dispatch call does go, “per the chief of patrol, all units clear out from there, we’re not sending anybody out to that location.” The CPD doesn’t seem to want to get involved. Hence, the National Guard.  

    Meanwhile, in the People’s Republic of Oregon, federal judge Karin Immergut, who Trump appointed, said that Trump’s ordering of the California National Guard to deal with ICE protesters in Portland is illegal, and local officials “are likely to succeed on their claim that the President exceeded his constitutional authority and violated the Tenth Amendment.” California Governor called Trump’s order “a breathtaking abuse of the law and power.” Well, it’s no Covid-era lunch at the French Laundry, but Cockburn can understand Newsom’s concern.  

    Trump, who seeks peace abroad daily but war at home hourly, seems unfazed. In front of a thropping Marine One yesterday, he said, “Portland is burning to the ground! You have agitators, insurrectionists, all you  have to do is look at the television, turn on your television, read the newspaper. It’s burning to the ground. The Governor, the Mayor, the politicians are petrified for their lives. That judge oughta be ashamed of herself.”  

    Trump advisor Stephen Miller has emerged from his crypt to make the case in non-goombah language. The President, Miller says, isn’t trying to deploy the National Guard to rampage through the streets of Chicago and Portland, terrifying ordinary citizens and shaking down neighborhood bars (in Chicago) and feminist yarn stores (in Portland). They’re going to protect federal agents who are trying to enforce immigration laws.  

    “This large-scale political violence is domestic terrorism,” Miller tweeted. “And it is the absolute moral and constitutional duty of the federal government to stop this terrorism, defend the lives and safety of federal officers, and protect the American citizen and nation by ensuring the full and unrestricted enforcement of federal immigration law in all fifty states.” 

    Cockburn, who lives in Washington, DC, has personally enjoyed the side benefit of having the National Guard around. He feels quite secure watching them walk past while he’s at his favorite Asian foot spa, or enjoying oysters at the Occidental. If only Portland and Chicago would willingly open their city gates to the Guard, and let ICE do its job relatively unimpeded. Things would calm down very quickly. Let the Guard cook, and then they, too, can enjoy the true feeling of liberty.  

  • Why Chicago Teachers Union lionized a terrorist

    Why Chicago Teachers Union lionized a terrorist

    When I first saw the Chicago Teachers Union’s post honoring Assata Shakur, I thought it was a headline from the Babylon Bee. But no, this one was real, and beyond parody.

    The union, entrusted with educating Chicago’s children, used its official social media account to mourn the death of a convicted cop killer, calling her a “revolutionary fighter” and “leader of freedom.”

    Shakur was found guilty of murdering New Jersey State Trooper Werner Foerster in 1973 and later escaped prison, landing on the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists List with a $2 million bounty. To make matters worse, CTU Vice President Jackson Potter doubled down, declaring on X that “Assata was a freedom fighter!”

    The tone-deaf post is a glaring sign that the CTU can’t be trusted to educate children. While the union wastes time lionizing a terrorist, Chicago Public Schools are failing spectacularly. In 55 schools, not a single child is proficient in math. Taxpayers shell out about $30,000 per student annually, yet the system squanders that money on everything but effective teaching. It’s almost as if the CTU is competing for the title of most unhinged organization on Earth, alienating reasonable members in the process.

    This post should serve as a wake-up call for Chicago teachers who don’t share these extreme views. If your values aren’t reflected in honoring a murderer, why keep funding the radicals at the top?

    Thanks to the Supreme Court’s Janus decision, unions can no longer force public school teachers to pay dues, as it violates their First Amendment rights. Rational educators who simply want to teach can opt out and stop handing over their hard-earned paychecks to bosses like CTU President Stacy Davis Gates.

    Teachers can now get free personal liability insurance through the Teacher Freedom Alliance. That way, they keep more of their own money, stay protected, and cut off support for this insanity.

    Their post isn’t a one-off mistake. Stacy Davis Gates declared earlier this year at the City Club of Chicago that children in public schools belong to her union. Her X bio even proclaims, “The children are always ours, every single one of them, all over the globe.” But if kids truly belonged to the union, their leadership would be in jail for child abuse, given the horrifying academic outcomes.

    Remember 2022, when the CTU voted to strike and keep schools closed long after it was clear reopenings were safe? Those closures harmed children academically and emotionally. The union deleted a post claiming the push to reopen was “rooted in sexism, racism and misogyny.” Meanwhile, CTU board member Sarah Chambers was caught vacationing in Puerto Rico, thousands of miles away, while railing against returning to work.

    Stacy Davis Gates labeled school choice “racist,” yet she sends her own son to a private school. The CTU also reposted a video of a mock guillotine outside Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos’s house, stating they were “completely frightened by, completely impressed by and completely in support of wherever this is headed.”

    As an affiliate of Randi Weingarten’s American Federation of Teachers, the CTU mirrors national union extremism. Chicago Public Schools have morphed into a jobs program for adults rather than an education system for kids. Staffing has ballooned 20 percent since 2019, even as enrollment dropped 10 percent.

    The CTU operates more like a political machine than an educational advocate. It poured $2.4 million into electing former organizer Brandon Johnson as mayor. Now, Johnson holds the highest unfavorable rating in Chicago mayoral history, with nearly 80 percent viewing him negatively.

    Teachers deserve better representation. Parents deserve schools that prioritize learning over ideology. And children deserve a chance to succeed, not a union that honors killers while failing them in the classroom. It’s time for teachers to hold the union cartel accountable by opting out and starving the beast from the inside.

  • For Trump and Ilhan, Washington pays

    For Trump and Ilhan, Washington pays

    How does Ilhan Omar make her money? How does the Trump family make its money? Is money real? What is reality? These are the questions Cockburn is asking himself after this weekend’s financial news.

    First, let’s fly over Minnesota. Founding “Squad” member Omar, the Washington Free Beacon reported yesterday, is currently worth more than $30 million, despite telling the press earlier this year that it’s “categorically false” that she’s a millionaire. If by false, you mean “true,” then yes.

    The Free Beacon obtained Omar’s latest financial disclosure, which indicated that she and her husband, shifty “former political consultant” Tim Mynett, are worth somewhere between $6 million and $30 million – a wide range. Their holding companies are a winery with the annoying avant-garde name of eStCru and a venture firm Rose Lake Capital, which, as late as 2023, “were saddled with lawsuits from investors claiming they defrauded them out of millions of dollars.”

    Omar’s relationship with Mynett began in 2020, when they were both married to other people. Her campaign paid his political consulting firm nearly $3 million to position her as the people’s champion. Once the press and public caught on to that grift, it ended, and Mynett instead began operating an e-winery. It also appears that Omar’s empire is based on investors in African development and the cannabis industry, all of whom are suing or have sued her husband. Nothing to see here.

    Meanwhile, in Trumpland, America’s First Family has somehow “notched as much as $5 billion in paper wealth,” according to the Wall Street Journal, after World Liberty Financial (WLFI), the family’s flagship crypto venture, launched yesterday. Trump’s three sons are the founders of World Liberty, and Trump is a “Co-Founder Emeritus.” I mean it’s no eStCru winery, but Cockburn, who himself possesses substantial but hard-to-access crypto holdings, suspects that WLFI could collapse as quickly as the Trump Taj Mahal. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt said, about the launch of WLFI, “neither the President nor his family have ever engaged, or will ever engage, in conflicts of interest.” Sure, Jan.

    On our radar

    RUDY DON’T FAIL Former New York mayor Rudy Giuliani has been discharged from hospital after he was injured in a car accident over the weekend.

    CHI-RAQ President Trump posted “CHICAGO IS THE MURDER CAPITAL OF THE WORLD!” on his Truth Social this morning. “Pritzker needs help badly, he just doesn’t know it yet,” he wrote earlier.

    JERRY, JERRY, JERRY… Congressman Jerry Nadler, who led two Trump impeachment efforts, will retire next year.

    Pax standards

    Senator John Cornyn may give off mild RINO vibes, but he is, as Cockburn’s sources deep in the heart of Texas tell him, the Senate version of a stablecoin: providing mild, unexciting returns on investment for his loyal Republican investors and voters. Trading that in for scandal magnet Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, who’s posing a difficult challenge to Cornyn in the primary, would be crazy.

    Fortunately Cornyn, whose campaigns are usually as exciting as meatless chili, is fighting back. A Cornyn-affiliated PAC has launched “Ken Stoppers,” a tipline for citizens to report Paxton’s abuses of power. These include owning rental properties that he may have used for mortgage fraud, using an alias to cover up a years-long affair, and filching a $1,000 Montblanc pen during one of his many court appearances. The Ken Stoppers website doesn’t even mention that Paxton’s wife is divorcing him for “Biblical reasons.” Paxton may be pushing the Ten Commandments in Texas schools, but that could be because he’s broken at least nine of them. “Texas Deserves Better,” the Ken Stoppers website says, which is always true, but in the case of Ken Paxton as US senator, it’s desperately, urgently true.

    Subscribe to Cockburn’s Diary on Substack to get it in your inbox on Tuesdays and Fridays.

  • Chicago Public Schools have failed. But there’s another option

    Chicago Public Schools have failed. But there’s another option

    Illinois recently released its 2024 Educational Report Card. The grades are, not surprisingly, bleak. Eighty schools reported not a single student who reached grade proficiency in math. Of the state’s low-income students, only 24.6 percent are proficient in reading, and 13.7 percent in math.

    The Chicago Teachers Union – with impeccable grammar and punctuation – blames insufficient funding: “[Governor JB] Pritzker cries poor, he is leaving $10 billion in billionaire and big tech tax breaks on the table. Reversing just a fraction of that windfall would provide [Chicago Public Schools] and all Illinois schools the funds they need to thrive.”

    Not that the CPS or the CTU have proven themselves emblems of fiscal responsibility. CPS is running a $734 million deficit and devotes 7 percent of its funding to debt service. It suffers immense administrative bloat: fewer than half of its 45,965 full-time employees are teachers. Despite falling enrollment rates, its budget balloons every year. Chicago schools face an incredibly difficult task. But to spend $9.9 billion this year alone, while 18,000 students attend zero-proficiency schools? That seems slightly excessive.

    The CTU, meanwhile, charges its teachers $1,410.98 a year and devotes 80 cents on the dollar to campaign donations. Following a 2021 discrimination lawsuit against CPS (not to be confused with the more recent labor negotiation that increased CPS operating costs by $1.5 billion), the union paid its law firm $4 million in fees. It just so happens that the firm is owned by the mother of the union’s vice president, Jackson Potter. The union’s president, Stacy Davis Gates, declared on X that ”*School choice* was actually the choice of racists” while her son was enrolled in a prestigious Catholic school. Not surprisingly, the union maintains a shining 21 percent favorability rating within the state.

    Perhaps it is time to try something new.

    Investing in charter schools is a good first step. According to a 15-year Stanford University study, charter schools across the nation consistently yield higher reading and math outcomes than their public-school counterparts. Few charter-school studies have followed Chicago specifically in recent years, but as of 2017, the city’s charter schools sent 19 percent more of their graduates to four-year colleges than did its district high schools. Yet these charter schools operated on 36 percent less spending per student than mainstream public schools. This disparity could be interpreted in three ways: that charter schools operate efficiently because they must compete for students to enroll; that they are underfunded; or that typical public schools are not so starved for cash as they claim (one Douglass Academy High School spent $93,787 per student in 2024, and 100 percent of its students still failed in math). Regardless of which interpretation you choose, the upshot is that charter schools are succeeding (comparatively, at least) where typical public schools are failing. The very fact that the parents of one in four Chicago high-schoolers choose to enroll in a charter school indicates a higher level of trust than in district schools. Taxpayers ought to be questioning why CPS agreed, in the March labor negotiation, to place a moratorium on the founding of new charter schools.

    Better yet, Illinois could give students the opportunity to escape the dismal public-school system altogether. The state currently offers a 25 percent tax credit for educational expenses such as private-school tuition, but it caps the credit at $750 per family. While this modest break may be nice for middle- to high-income families with students enrolled in private schools, it does not bridge the gap for severely disadvantaged families. Illinois once enabled these low-income students to receive tuition scholarships via its “Invest in Kids” program, which gave a 75 percent tax credit to families and businesses that donated to Scholarship Granting Organizations (SGOs). But in 2023, at the behest of you-guessed-who, the CTU, Illinois axed the program.

    Fortunately, Congress has offered Illinois the opportunity to grant school choice to those families whom the public-school system has failed. The Big Beautiful Bill created a 100 percent tax credit – should a state governor or legislature opt-in – to match an individual’s donation to an educational SGO. These organizations then grant scholarships to low-income or disabled students to attend private schools. The new program would cost neither the state of Illinois nor the local public-school district a cent.

    Both CPS and the CTU have failed the students of Illinois. With the federal scholarship program, a 12-year-old in West Garfield Park could attend a private school that invests in children, not political campaigns. Governor Pritzker must decide: will only the wealthy be taught to read?