Has ICE’s Brutality Finally Gone Too Far?
Will ICE’s grotesque killing of Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, coming less than a month after Rene Good’s equally horrific death at the hands of ICE, stop Trump’s lawless reign of terror?
Unlike after Good’s death, bipartisan outrage exploded after Pretti was killed, fueled by multiple videos that definitively showed agents shoot Pretti multiple times after he was restrained on the ground. But will it finally be enough?
In 1970, I was a 22-year-old senior at the University of Washington. I had seen a lot over the previous seven years. The assassinations of President Kennedy, Martin Luthur King, and Robert Kennedy. Protesters savagely beaten by Mayor Richard Daley’s police force at the 1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago. Black Panthers targeted and murdered by J. Edgar Hoover’s FBI. And of course, the Vietnam war, which by 1968 was killing over 500 American soldiers every week.
Then came Kent State.
On May 4, 1970, Ohio National Guard troops opened fire without warning on Vietnam war protesters at Kent State University, killing four and wounding nine. Student photographer John Filo captured what has been called one of the most important photographs of the 20th century. Now known as the Kent State Pieta, the image shows 14-year-old Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the body student Jeffrey Miller, her arms outstretched, screaming for help.
Surely this will be enough to move us to stop the war that was tearing our country apart, we thought. But it wasn’t. The war ground on for five more years, as brutal as ever.
Back then, war protesters were despised by “the establishment.” The Greatest Generation had returned from World War II and built the American middle class during a golden time of shared prosperity and a feeling of common purpose. The Vietnam War shattered this moment in history. War protests increased in lock step with the escalations in Vietnam. And the Greatest Generation turned on its children.
Polling after the Kent State massacre found that 58 percent of Americans blamed the students for their own deaths. President Nixon privately called them “bums” and publicly said they had invited the tragedy. No national guard personnel were held accountable. Federal charges were dismissed, and the state of Ohio refused to prosecute.
I’m cautiously hopeful that this time might be different. But I’ve seen enough in my long life to understand it may not.
Tina Kotek Can Win if Democrats Would Just Vote for Her
Tina Kotek and Christine Drazan are now virtually tied in the Oregon governor’s race, all due to the mere existence of spoiler candidate Betsy Johnson.
I recently wrote about Johnson’s motivation […]
What the Heck is Betsy Johnson Trying to Accomplish?
Betsy Johnson’s candidacy for Oregon governor is one of the more puzzling events in an election year already filled with weirdness. Johnson is a long-time Democrat. Without her on the ballot, Tina Kotek […]
How Special Interests Derailed Campaign Finance Reform Despite a 78% Voter Mandate
The Oregon governor’s race is off to a fast start with all three candidates launching a flurry of television spots well ahead of the election. Spending on the race will almost certainly break […]
Firmly Controlled by Interests of Public Employee Unions, PERS Board Keeps Employer Contributions Flat Beginning in 2023
We learned at the January 31 meeting of the PERS Board that public employers will not be asked for a nickel more in contributions to PERS (as a percent of payroll) beginning in 2023. This […]
This video explains the PERS mess in less than 5 minutes.
I’ve received quite a range of Facebook reactions to my December 2 post on the role of Oregon’s public employee unions in creating the PERS mess.
I’ll have another follow-up post soon, but I want […]
Public Employee Unions and Their Self-Serving Agenda Once Again Rule PERS Board
Below is my testimony submitted for the December 3 meeting of the PERS Board. Due to good investment returns this past year, the increase in contributions going into PERS from public employers will likely be […]


