SIRI HUSTVEDT

January 27, 2026

PLEEEZE READ:

The Emergency is Now
By Siri Hustvedt
Jan 27

Early in the Nazi occupation of Norway, my mother joined a protest. She and a group of students from the gymnasium they attended sang protest songs outside the houses of known Nazi sympathizers. Later, after she was arrested, she was given a choice to pay a fine or go to jail for nine days. She chose jail. Her jailer was a Norwegian Nazi. My mother was eighteen years old when she served her sentence. She always said that only a few months later, no one dreamed of organizing an open protest. All opposition went underground.

In Minneapolis, forty-five minutes by car from my hometown, Northfield, Minnesota, ICE is terrorizing the city. While some people are more vulnerable than others—anyone who is Black or Brown or speaks with an accent—no one is safe. Children have been taken. ICE is threatening schools. Every person who leaves their house is afraid of being stopped. ICE has been given license to kill people, as the Vice President said, with “absolute immunity.”

Brutality is the language of authoritarianism. Paramilitary groups enforced state power in fascist countries in the 20th century. The RSS in India is a paramilitary force that cultivated close relations with European fascism and is now allied with Modi. ICE is the paramilitary enforcer of Trump 2. Comparisons to the Brown and Black Shirts are not exaggerated or extreme. The parallels between what happened in Europe in the 20th century and what is happening in the United States now are real and frightening.

While the tech industry, banks, law firms, universities, corporations and far too many Democrats in Congress have rolled over to the new regime, ordinary people are pushing back. Continued pressure on government representatives and senators is vital, but it is not enough. Mass, noisy but peaceful protest, walkouts, strikes, and aid to people in danger of being deported, fired, silenced, or murdered is the way forward. The Trump regime wants violence from protesters. The ICE mission in cities is intended to foment violence that can then be used for media propaganda to scream insurrection and invoke the Insurrection Act. A single viral video of a single violent encounter is enough. Non-violence is crucial to the resistance because it has genuine power. It will increase our numbers.

My father, who was born in a log house in Minnesota in 1922, liked the word “neighborly.” Neighbors in the small, rural Norwegian American community where he grew up helped one another with farm work, barn raising, canning, and quilting. They fed the grieving and tended to the ill among them. Neighborliness runs deep in Minnesota. I see it now in the Minneapolis resistance. People are dropping off groceries to those who can’t leave their houses. They are monitoring ICE movements. They are filming and bearing witness to cruelty. They are protecting their neighbors.

No one can predict with any precision what will happen next or how many more people will die, but it is time for those who care about human rights to mobilize now because this is an emergency. If the republic isn’t lost already, it is clearly in its death throes.

It is time to end delusional talk of “Is this a constitutional crisis?” and hand wringing about “polarization.” We are way beyond that. When the Supreme Court gave broad immunity to a president for “official acts,” it effectively undermined the U.S. constitution and created a crisis that many in media treated as just another ruling to be analyzed. We are living in a country that fought a civil war over slavery. The current administration wants to institutes a white, Christian nationalist, autocratic state. We are polarized for ETHICAL reasons.

Hate speech and racist, misogynistic, xenophobic propaganda does not wait for a considered answer from the people it has targeted as “low IQ,” “criminals” from “shithole countries,” and “radical left lunatics.” ICE is not occupying the streets of U.S. cities, threatening, deporting, and killing people with whom they hope to have a friendly chat to reduce “polarization.”

Memory is important, historical memory of the genocide of tribal peoples, of slavery, Jim Crow, women’s suffrage and women’s liberation, the Civil Rights, anti-war, LBGTQ and disability rights movements. Personal memory also counts. I am remembering my parents. My left-wing father’s evocation of neighborliness and my mother’s decision to go to jail. It is painful to say, but I am glad neither of them lived to see Trump in his second incarnation.

The Nazi party in Norway, led by the notorious Quisling (whose name has come to mean traitor in English), welcomed the invasion of the country. I am not arguing that Norway under occupation is the same as ICE occupying U.S. cities now, but the moral choice between accepting fascism and opposing it is the same. The choice for my young mother then and for many Norwegians was stark: collaboration or resistance. That is the choice we are facing now.

Siri Hustvedt is the author of a book of poetry, three collections of essays, a work of non-fiction, and six novels, including the international bestsellers What I Loved and The Summer Without Men. Her most recent novel The Blazing World was long-listed for the Man Booker Prize and won The Los Angeles Book Prize for fiction. In 2012 she was awarded the International Gabarron Prize for Thought and Humanities. She has a PhD in English from Columbia University and is a lecturer in psychiatry at Weil Cornell Medical College in New York. Her work has been translated into over thirty languages.


CLOSING GITMO IN THE AMERICAN HEART By Robert C. Koehler

February 12, 2025
CLOSING GITMO IN THE AMERICAN HEART By Robert C. Koehler
Gitmo, of course!! It’s the freest place “we” have – by which I mean the American government, a.k.a. Donald Trump. No rules apply there, be they international humanitarian law or the U.S. Constitution. It’s a dumping ground, a black hole.It’s the most secure place for America to hold, as Trump put it a few weeks ago, “the worst criminal illegal aliens threatening the American people. Some of them are so bad we don’t even trust their countries to hold them because we don’t want them coming back.”His plan is to expand the infamous Guantanamo Bay Detention Center, part of the U.S. naval base in Cuba, which George W, Bush began using as he waged his horrific “war on terror” in the Middle East. He began imprisoning alleged terrorists, often arbitrarily arrested, in a hellhole where they had zero rights. Some are still there, several decades later. Trump’s plan is to expand the detention center to hold 30,000 people, which would be, oh, more than double the size of two unforgettable Nazi concentration camps combined: Dachau and Treblinka.And these migrants would be stuck there entirely under the control of an American government that has declared them to be the country’s biggest enemy of the moment: the biggest threat to our national safety. No rights for them!If you want to be a great national leader, this is step one: Create an enemy. Stir fear and hatred, then demonstrate that only you can protect us, by doing what’s necessary: dehumanize, dehumanize, dehumanize. That is to say, keep things simple:  us vs. them. This is what the masses understand, apparently.Oh God, I don’t believe this at all, but the reality of it seems unshakable – with Trump in the White House, more so than ever. There was a time when I believed we were moving beyond the militaristic simplism of Superpower America, with political hope bubbling all the way up to Barack Obama’s election in 2008. Yeah, the Bush era’s dead! But then . . . wars continued, not much changed. Obama had promised to close the Gitmo prison in his first year. That didn’t happen – and that’s when I started to realize that the progressive movement in this country had no real political traction.What we have instead is ongoing outrage, fueled by truth and introspection. Trump wants to “make America great again” and keeps ironically raging about the migrant invasion. The days of American greatness for which he’s reaching go well past the civil rights (the “political correctness”) era, past the women’s rights era, past the Great Depression. America’s greatness began with the European invasion of what came to be called the Americas – several hundred years of obliterating native cultures and dehumanizing them as “savages.” Our “greatness” preceded the American revolution and continued well after it.Trump’s intention to expand the Gitmo prison is symbolic as well as practical: It revitalizes the Bush era war on terror; it brings the war home. Today’s terrorist equivalents are the migrant invaders. If you’re interested in reclaiming the actual history of that period, I recommend the book Witnesses of the Unseen: Seven Years in Guantanamo, written by two Algerian men randomly arrested in Bosnia in 2001: Lakhdar Boumediene and Mustafa Ait Idir. They were falsely accused of being terrorists and spent seven years imprisoned for no reason at Gitmo – pulled away from their wives, their children . . . witnessing, and enduring, horrendous treatment, trapped in the American black hole with zero rights. The book contains fragments of our national history: what we can do in the wake of creating and dehumanizing an enemy.Some years ago, I wrote about the book, about the hell they endured: “stuffed into cages, interrogated endlessly and pointlessly, humiliated, force-fed (in Lakhdar’s case) . . . and finally, finally, ordered by a U.S. judge to be freed, when their case was at long last heard in a real court and the lack of evidence against them became appallingly clear.” This happened thanks to the unending aid they received from a U.S. law firm that spent more than 35,000 pro bono hours litigating the case.“The book is the story of the courage it takes to survive.”As well as alleged terrorists, Gitmo has also long been used to detain immigrants intercepted at sea. At Gitmo, they lacked “access to basic human necessities, appropriate medical care, education, and potable water,” according to the International Refugee Assistance Project. And they had no option to seek asylum in the U.S.What’s different about the Trump plan, according to PolifiFact, quoted at Al Jazeera, is that the U.S. has never sent people who were detained in the United States to Guantanamo. Those arrested here actually had certain rights and protections – which could essentially disappear at Gitmo. Somehow that seems like the point of it all: Americans first. Americans only!Progressive sanity will re-emerge politically, or so I believe, but how this will happen is anything but clear. The Republican right has certain serious political advantages, even if their basic agenda has only minority support. The prime advantage is billionaire dollars backing their cause. And, of course, creating an “us vs. them” governing mentality has a lot more immediate impact than addressing the world – even one’s enemies – with empathy, understanding and a sense of connection.Another difficulty the progressive movement faces is the Democrats, who have drifted ever more centrist-right since the Reagan era, refusing to challenge the Republican agenda head-on and gently cradling the nation’s expanding militarism.It almost seems like we need to start over: Rosa Parks must refuse to give up her seat on the bus again. What might this mean? If nothing else, the truth about American history must continue to flow and efforts to ban it from libraries and classrooms, to burn it in book fires, must be endlessly challenged. And truth still speaks to us from the mountaintop:“So even though we face the difficulties of today and tomorrow, I still have a dream. It is a dream deeply rooted in the American dream. I have a dream that one day this nation will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed: We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.”Robert Koehler is an award-winning, Chicago-based journalist and nationally syndicated writer. His newly released album of recorded poetry and art work, Soul Fragments, is available here: https://linktr.ee/bobkoehler

On Fascism, from Rick Ayers

November 2, 2024

There’s a lot of talk about fascism now, the fascist core of the far right which is currently led by Trump but which has a long, deep history. We wonder: is fascism here? is it likely to come here? is this like Germany in the 30’s?

I’d like to offer a different thought on it, a different definition of fascism. That is this: fascism is colonial methods brought home to the “mother country.” Italy and Germany had been happily slaughtering colonial peoples in Africa for decades before they began the mass bloodletting inside of Europe.

To worry about fascism, that we “might” be getting fascism, is to ignore the fascist (authoritarian, genocidal) experience of people in the colonies since. . . . since forever. Why not call what Indigenous people have experienced fascism? Why not the enslavement and ongoing murder and oppression of Africans? We worry that there “might be” some fascism in the coming years but what are Black and Brown people experiencing in prison today, in a prison population that has increased ten-fold since the 60’s? Do they join us in wondering, “is fascism coming?” They are living it (and came to it under mass incarceration initiatives by Democrats like President Clinton and Biden during his Senate years, as well as mayors like Eric Adams).

Do the people of Palestine worry about fascism coming? They are living under it, the fire and steel of mass slaughter, today.

If you think of the US not as the immediate borders of the continental US but rather as the extended American empire, then the people of Chile under Pinochet experienced fascism, and that was US-sponsored fascism, even as some trappings of democracy were presented inside the US. Not only Chile, but all over Latin America as well as Africa and Asia, what we call fascism is well practiced.

So will “we” get fascism? I dearly hope not. But let’s not pretend it is some distant thing. And let’s be as determined to end the fascist oppression of colonized peoples as we are for ourselves.