From an "Other 98%" post on fb:

"Minneapolis isn’t “responding” to ICE anymore. Minneapolis is organizing to OUTLAST ICE. After weeks of escalated federal immigration enforcement in Minnesota, the Twin Cities are doing something the rest of the country keeps saying it wants but rarely builds: an everyday, neighborhood-level infrastructure that makes state violence harder to pull off in silence.

Here’s what that infrastructure looks like on the ground: Signal chats that spread sightings in minutes, people walking around with whistles, neighbors showing up fast when someone’s being cornered, and ordinary folks choosing “I’m watching” as a civic identity.

In a Jacobin interview, Minneapolis organizer Aru Shiney-Ajay describes a staggering density of participation, including neighborhood chats reaching “over 4 percent” of residents and rapid-response patrol chats that hit 1,000 people in a single neighborhood by late morning.
That matters because ICE thrives on logistics and isolation. You cannot “community statement” your way out of a federal dragnet. You have to interrupt the machine where it eats and sleeps and hides.

That’s why Minneapolis didn’t just stay defensive. It went on offense.
Activists have targeted the “pillars” that let ICE operate like an occupying force: hotels, rental cars, corporate partners, the quiet, normal places where repression refuels.

A local campaign that pushed a Hilton-branded hotel to refuse service to ICE, triggering national blowback and a corporate scramble. What makes this smart isn’t the spectacle. It’s the leverage. A regime can ignore outrage. It can’t ignore friction inside the supply chain that keeps its agents moving.

Then came the proof-of-concept flex: the January 23 “ICE Out” general strike day in Minneapolis and beyond, called by unions and community groups as a refusal of business as usual under terror.

This was a muscle-building exercise: can we coordinate, can we hold lines, can we protect each other, can we make the city ungovernable for people who think they can hunt humans here?
This is what resistance looks like when it grows up. Not just rage. Routines. Not just protest. Infrastructure.

And that’s the real exportable lesson: if you want ICE out of your city, don’t wait for permission from pundits or politicians. Build networks that make disappearance difficult, complicity expensive, and solidarity automatic."
#abolishice #Minneapolis #maga #fascism #antifascism

@lycophidion
Great read! 🙏🏻 for sharing! What a concept: organising to OUTLAST ICE! 😁
Just one rationale & strategy:
“A regime can ignore outrage. It can’t ignore friction inside the supply chain that keeps its agents moving.”
😁

# ICE #regime #OutlastICE #infrastructure #minneapolis #directAction #community

@lycophidion "Spontaneous organizing." People are fully capable of governing themselves.
@lycophidion keep at it long enough and they'll send in IDF to get rid of the tunnels.
@lycophidion freedom is distributed, freedom is fought for by everyday acts, freedom is communal.
@lycophidion thank you for this testimony. Good to know that even the biggest machine can be stopped. This is good that it is not the rage only that succeed, every act combined count 🙏🏼
Bruce Springsteen - Streets Of Minneapolis (Official Audio)

YouTube

@lycophidion

I heard a rumor (haven’t seen reported in media) that some of the Federales were going undercover, dressing in plain clothes to blend in and infiltrate the protesters. Wouldn’t surprise me.

Be careful out there, folks.

@MarkBrigham @lycophidion This picture might be helpful for spotting possible infiltrators (ICE, MAGA) into your local neighborhood group. It’s up to you to decide who should and should not be there. This is from #BLM protests in DC in 2020 so no doubt it will be harder today.

#NoKings #Protest #Safety #surveillance

@lycophidion

It's extremely inspiring to see. I watched a video of a former Black Panther, and he talked about how chaos is a tool of the oppressors, they want riots, they want violent backlash and destruction they can show on the news. By contrast it's self-control, patience and community organization that's the key to making people-power into a real, sustainable bulwark against fascism.

You resist without giving the fascists anything they can use to escalate or create favorable narratives.

@lycophidion "Become ungovernable"

@lycophidion The weirdest thing about this for me (living outside the usa):
I always understood the republican base to be grounded on- and united in - the fight against an overbearing and too powerfull federal government.

How quickly they have become the polar opposite.

@matv1
The Republican Party (like the Democrats) were always a shifting and evolving mixed bag: neocons, neoliberals, libertarians, fascists, etc. Only a razor-thin libertarian section championed full-blown elimination of "big government." It's important to understand, and understand from a class perspective, that the general Republican Party ire is not, and has never been, directed primarily at the state apparatus as a whole, but at the liberal state emerging out of the New Deal, and expanded through struggles from below. Both parties championed the expansion of the military-police apparatus of the state.

In fact, following WWII up until the end of the post-war boom, leading sectors of the Republican Party were generally fine with major elements of the New Deal state (social security, GI Bill, etc.). As with the Democrats, they saw these as necessary for the smooth functioning of U.S. capitalism.

@lycophidion Who helps us?
WE help us.