Sunday, January 04, 2026

Progressive Perspectives on the Trump Regime’s Illegal Attack on Venezuela


The kidnapping of Venezuelan president Nicolás Maduro and his wife [Cilia Flores] solidifies America’s role as a gangster state. Violence does not generate peace. It generates violence. The immolation of international and humanitarian law, as the U.S. and Israel have done in Gaza, and as took place in Caracas, generates a world without laws, a world of failed states, warlords, rougue imperial powers and perpeptual violence and chaos.

If there is one lesson we should have learned in Afghanistan, Iraq, Syria and Libya, it is that regime change spawns Frankensteinian monsters of our own creation. The Venezuelan military and security forces will no more accept the kidnapping of their president and U.S. domination – done as in Iraq to seize vast oil reserves – than the Iraqi security forces and military or the Taliban. This will not go well for anyone, including the U.S.

Chris Hedges
via social media
January 3, 2026


After illegally invading Venezuela, bombing its Capitol, and kidnapping its President and First Lady, Trump now says he will assume control of Venezuela and manage its oil. That’s what this has always been about. Modern day colonization and oil. Congress did not authorize this war. Impeach and remove NOW.

Qasim Rashid
via social media
January 3, 2026



Whether Americans realize it or not, the United States has just declared war on Venezuela. And, in part because the declaration was less than clear, that could be even more dangerous than it sounds.

Today it’s Venezuela, tomorrow it’s Mexico, or any country that refuses to kneel, because Trump doesn’t see nations, he sees properties, and he thinks the world is zoned for his ego.

This is how democracies rot, not all at once, but in the public shrug, in the normalization, in the exhausted acceptance that “this is just how it is now.”

And don’t miss the accomplices, the congressional sycophants, the career cowards, the TV patriots, the propagandists, all of them clapping like trained seals, while the Constitution is used as a napkin.

The real danger is not only the war he starts, it’s the precedent he normalizes, if you can kidnap a president, you can invade a neighbor, if you can bomb Caracas, you can bomb anywhere.

Trump calls himself a “peace” president, yet every move he makes, every breath he takes, every headline he generates, is the exact opposite, coercion, violence, spectacle, and appetite. They will tell you this is about “security,” about “cartels,” about “stability,” about “freedom,” and they will expect you to forget the oldest motive on Earth, money, resources, oil.

Trump remains the most dangerous threat to the future of our planet, not because he is powerful, but because he is reckless, unbound, and surrounded by people who will not say no.

Michael Jochum
via social media
January 3, 2026



Elsewhere online, someone declared that what the U.S. is doing in Venezuela wouldn’t be happening if Kamala Harris was president. Why? Because “Democrats don't do illegal things.” I appreciate how another person responded:

Kamala sat in the VP chair and watched Biden violate multiple federal laws to facilitate a genocide without so much as speaking out against it, much less resigning. She ALSO watched Biden attempt to coup Venezuela by recognizing a CIA asset who declared himself president in the middle of the street as the rightful ruler. I don't want to hear a peep about “Democrats don't do illegal things.”



As with many things in American politics, what goes on in front of the curtain bears little resemblance to what goes on behind it.

Trump says, “We're going to run [Venezuela] until such time as we can do a safe, proper and judicious transition . . . because that’s what we’re all about.”

Translation: It’s ours now, and we’ll decide what to do when we figure out who will play ball. Anyone willing to be our puppet, who will play along with the oil companies, who will help us extend our hegemony over the Western hemisphere, we’ll keep. Anyone else, we’ll figure out how to sideline or get rid of.

. . . In his press conference, Trump repeatedly referred to Venezuela’s “money in the ground” and said “We’re going to have our very large United States oil companies, the biggest anywhere in the world, go in, spend billions of dollars to fix the badly broken infrastructure, the oil infrastructure, and start making money for the country.” He also said the oil companies will be "reimbursed” for all the money they lost when they were kicked out of Venezuela in 2007. Translation: We did it all for the oil. (It’s always worked out so well before)

Ah yes, we’ve seen this playbook before. It’s much like the coup orchestrated by the U.S. and U.K. in the 1950s’, putting the democratically elected Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh under house arrest and installing the Shah of Iran as the West’s puppet. Mosaddegh’s sin had been the nationalization of Iran’s oil industry, purporting the extraordinary, audacious and totally unacceptable proposition that Iranian oil should belong to the Iranian people. That coup, like most all of America’s imperialistic misadventures, had unintended consequences from which the world still suffers. It’s widely considered the main contributing factor to the 1979 Islamic Revolution and the coming to power of the Ayatollah’s religious fascism in Iran.

. . . Regardless of the insanity displayed at times by American foreign policy, We the People should refuse to be insane. American imperialism isn’t just morally wrong or even illegal; it’s stupid. It’s one of America’s most dangerous missteps. At its worst, it’s a threat to the world.

That the Venezuelan people have suffered greatly under Maduro is indisputable, and I understand the joy so many of them feel at his overthrow. Clearly he was an evil dictator and an illegitimate leader. But so was Saddam Hussein. America’s invasion of Iraq, however, led to the deaths of a million of its citizens.

At the time of the Iraq War, I was hosting a Sirius XM radio show. Speaking by phone to a woman in Iraq, she said something I will never forget. “We knew we had a devil on our hands. We were waiting for the day when we could get rid of him and his sons. And we were plotting. But what you Americans have done is delivered so many devils, we’ll never be able to be rid of them.” We can feel horrible for the plight of the Venezuelan people and still not assume that America invading their country is the ultimate solution to their problem or even an end to their misery.

Marianne Williamson
Excerpted from “Bang! Bang! Shoot ’Em Up! in Venezuela
Transform
January 3, 2026



Let’s start with a question many prefer not to answer: Did Barack Obama authorize bombing campaigns in Libya, Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia, Iraq, and Syria – yes or no? The record is public. Most won’t look it up, not because it’s unclear, but because it’s inconvenient.

That avoidance exposes the fraud. Like the Republicans, the Democratic Party has no moral authority to lecture the world on democracy or legitimacy. It has consistently supported war, regime change, and imperial violence – often with enthusiastic backing from members of the Congressional Black Caucus, who align themselves with U.S. empire while speaking progressive language.

The hypocrisy is glaring. Figures like Hakeem Jeffries and Joyce Beatty denounce Nicolás Maduro as “illegitimate,” while ignoring America’s own compromised elections – defined by voter suppression, gerrymandering, and corporate control. Legitimacy is questioned only when Washington dislikes the result.

Now imagine the reverse. If a foreign country declared a U.S. president illegitimate, invaded the U.S., kidnapped the president and their spouse, and put them on trial abroad – Congress would call it insanity and an act of war. Yet this behavior is normalized when the U.S. does it to Haiti or Venezuela.

So the final question is unavoidable: Would today’s Black Caucus defend the sovereignty of Burkina Faso, Mali, or Niger? Or would they follow the usual script – branding leaders like Ibrahim Traoré as illegitimate, dangerous, or dictatorial?

Overall, the point is simple: Democrats and Republicans are on the same team. Both are pro-war, imperialist, and committed to maintaining a white supremacist global order. And both operate from the same assumption – that other nations do not have the right to control their own resources or determine their own futures.

Black Knowledge
via Facebook
January 3, 2026



But Obama bombed foreign nations!

This isn’t a gotcha. Those of us committed to justice condemned Bush’s Iraq and Afghan wars, we condemned Obama’s drone strikes, we condemned Biden’s funding of Netanyahu to commit genocide, AND we condemn Trump’s bombing of seven different nations and regime change in Venezuela.

That’s what JUSTICE requires. Stop excusing atrocity because of the color hat they wear [blue or red], and start demanding justice on the tenets of actual justice.

Qasim Rashid
via social media
January 3, 2026



The Green Party condemns the kidnapping of the Venezuelan President and his wife and demands their immediate release. We strongly oppose this illegal act of war which violates both the U.S. Constitution and international law. Congress needs to immediately commence impeachment proceedings against Trump.

The Party also harshly reacted to the assertion by Trump that the United States will now be running Venezuela for the near term and if he faces any local opposition, he will send in a second wave of American military forces to subdue the population.

The Party urges the Senate to vote on the resolution scheduled for next week to halt military intervention. The bipartisan resolution only needs a majority to pass.

According to the Charter of the United Nations, force is only permissible in response to an armed attack, or possibly to rescue a population facing an imminent threat of extermination.

“Trump is primarily interested in seizing control of Venezuela's oil and other natural resources. His pretext of seeking to protect Americans from drugs is ludicrous, especially in light of his pardon just a month ago of ex-Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernández, who was serving a 45-year sentence for drug trafficking. Congress must immediately convene to finally reign in this President who is ripping to shreds the Constitution and American democracy,” said Craig Cayetano, Co-Chair for the Green Party of the U.S.

“The White House National Security Strategy document released in November 2025, outlined what Trump considers a priority – focus on the Western Hemisphere – which clearly looks like taking control of Venezuelan oil while at the same time attempting to thwart a socialist government,” said Cassandra Lems, Co-chair for the Green Party of the U.S.

The Green Party is committed to join with other groups committed to peace, justice and the rule of law to organize nationwide protests to free Maduro and his family and to stop this illegal war.




Opposing war and a coup in Venezuela, workers and union members need to organize mass strike action. We need broad unity among labor, socialist, and antiwar organizations to build mass protests and civil disobedience actions.

The policy of aggression and regime change toward Venezuela is bipartisan, as with the genocide and occupation of Gaza.

Prominent Democrats like Florida Congressmember Debbie Wasserman Schultz are cheering on the coup, calling it “welcome news.” Grotesquely, Wasserman Schultz is also effectively calling for full-blown war, saying that “cutting off the head of a snake is fruitless if it just regrows.”

Even “progressive” Democrats have limited their critique to merely asking for Congressional approval, while actively helping Trump and the Republicans manufacture false narratives about “narcoterrorism” to justify the assault. Senator Bernie Sanders, in his statement about the U.S.–led coup in Venezuela, calls Maduro a “corrupt and brutal dictator.” Sanders does NOT talk about the many corrupt and brutal dictators that the Democratic and Republican Parties have propped up around the world when it suits the interests of U.S. imperialism. In the context of bombing and a coup by U.S. imperialism, Sanders is parroting pro-war rhetoric like that which has been used by Trump and Republicans to justify this attack.

Both billionaire-backed parties have ratcheted up towards war on Venezuela. It was Democratic President Barack Obama who first declared Venezuela an “extraordinary threat” to national security in 2015. In 2020, Trump issued a bounty of $15 million for Maduro. Democratic President Joe Biden increased that bounty to $25 million, and Trump increased it again to $50 million.

The only way to stop the war on Venezuela is for the American working class, led by unionized workers and the labor movement, to urgently organize mass strike actions to build toward a one-day general strike against imperialist war and the billionaire class. Workers internationally must stand with working people in Venezuela against the privatization and plundering of their oil resources by U.S. and Western European oil companies. We must also fight to end the sanctions against Venezuela, which have had catastrophic consequences. Working people need to take the major oil and gas companies into democratic public ownership to put an end to their warmongering and destruction of the planet.

American working people and the antiwar movement cannot afford to have illusions in the Democratic Party. We need to build independently to fight both parties of Wall Street and war.

Kshama Sawant
via social media
January 4, 2026



The spectacle of [Trump’s] press conference is amazing. It looked like something out of a Hollywood movie set, a B movie set. This is the Pirates of the Caribbean. This is Marco Rubio now the viceroy of Venezuela. This is an effort to run Venezuela with 15,000 troops. That’s utterly impossible. There is a government in Venezuela. There’s a people in Venezuela. . . . The reality is that we’ve seen this before. We’ve seen this in Panama. We’ve seen this throughout the history of Latin America, whether Nicaragua, whether Haiti, whether Mexico. The reality here is, very clearly, Trump made this about oil. He says that what they do want to run is not the country; what they do want to run is the oil fields. And that’s the central part of this discussion. I think we need to keep an eye on that ball.

And I think the other part of this is it’s clearly a message internally for U.S. politics with a view towards midterm elections. The U.S. can impose its will. We saw that clearly in the national security strategy documents that were revealed a couple of weeks ago, where the U.S. will control the Western Hemisphere. The U.S. will impose its will. The message is clear for Mexico. The message is clear for Brazil. The message is clear for everywhere in Latin America. What we’ve seen here is an effort at regime change.

And we heard this before. We heard this in Iraq, when Bush said that the oil production in Iraq will pay for the intervention. Well, that didn’t happen in Iraq, and it won’t happen in Venezuela. This is about regime change. This is about establishing U.S. dominance. This is about the U.S. regaining control and excluding China and Russia. And imagine what Putin must be thinking, or Xi Jinping, about zones of influence. Well, if the U.S. can exert its role in the Caribbean, well, why shouldn’t Russia exert its role in Ukraine? Why shouldn’t China exert its role in Taiwan? The dimensions of this are incredible.

Miguel Tinker Salas
Excerpted from “Special Report on Venezuela:
U.S. Kidnaps Maduro, Trump Says “We Are
Going to Run” Oil-Rich Nation

Democracy Now!
January 3, 2026



The only truly astonishing thing about Donald Trump’s latest descent into authoritarian madness is that anyone still claims to be surprised. This is not a deviation from the plan. This is the plan. It is exactly what he promised from the beginning, and his MAGA base continues to swallow the con, the lie, the spectacle, without question, without memory, without shame.

So I sincerely hope that every single person who voted for this rat-fucking traitor, this false-promise prophet who bloviated endlessly about being the “peace president” and then promptly picked a fight with the Venezuelan regime, is pleased with what you bought. You elected a man in visible physical and cognitive decline, a man bereft of conscience, hollowed out by grievance and vanity, and obsessed with one thing only, remaining in the White House for as long as his body can be propped upright.

What we are witnessing is not just insane, it is entirely predictable. Trump laid out the blueprint years ago. During his 2024 campaign, he openly stated that he would not be a dictator “except for day one.” That wasn’t a joke. It was a confession. He has spent years praising strongmen like Viktor Orbán, Vladimir Putin, and Kim Jong Un, and now he governs in their image, weakening democratic institutions, attacking the rule of law, eroding basic human rights, and dismantling the safeguards that once restrained presidential power. The danger is now magnified by a U.S. Supreme Court decision that effectively grants presidents sweeping immunity for “official acts,” transforming the executive branch into a throne with legal armor.

And now, with war drums beating in Venezuela and new threats against Iran, the trajectory is unmistakable. Trump’s version of “peace” has always been submission, intimidation, and spectacle, chaos in service of control. He thrives on crisis because crisis justifies consolidation of power, and consolidation of power is the only legacy he seeks.

If you have never joined a protest before, this is the moment.

If you have never spoken up politically, this is the time.

If you believed it could never happen here, it already is.

The threat is not coming.

The threat is here.

And silence is exactly what Trump is counting on.

Since so many of your friends refuse to say this to you, I will: you are morons. I do not care how many degrees hang on your wall, the most dangerous form of stupidity is political illiteracy, and you used your vote to elevate a corrupt, authoritarian grifter who only ran for president to avoid prison, and now he is dragging the country with him.

History will not be gentle with any of you.

Michael Jochum
via social media
January 3, 2026



Related Off-site Links:
“Get the Oil Flowing”: Trump’s Own Words Make His War Aims in Venezuela Clear – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, January 4, 2026).
The Horror of Trump’s Press Conference From a Venezuelan Perspective – Michelle Ellner (Common Dreams, January 4, 2026).
Defying Trump, Venezuela VP Says “We Will Never Again Be a Colony of Any Empire” – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, January 4, 2026).
Run Venezuela? They Can’t Even Run the United States – Richard Eskow (Common Dreams, January 4, 2026).
Global Protests Tell Trump and His Cronies: “Hands Off Venezuela” – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, January 4, 2026).


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Max Blumenthal: Quote of the Day – October 11, 2025
CAIR Responds to María Corina Machado Being Awarded the 2025 Nobel Peace Prize
A Call to Halt an Illegal Invasion of Venezuela (2019)
Jeffrey Sachs: Quote of the Day – May 1, 2019
Quote of the Day – November 11, 2018
Saying “No” to Endless U.S. Wars
Remembering Manuela Saenz: “Liberator of the Liberator”


Opening image: A fire at Fuerte Tiuna, Venezuela’s largest military complex, after a series of explosions in Caracas on January 3, 2026. (Photo: AFP via Getty Images)
All other images: Michael Bayly – Minneapolis, Saturday, January 3, 2026.


Thursday, January 01, 2026

Into a New Year


As the clock strikes twelve
We are beckoned through the door
into a new year.
Go forward slowly . . . no need to rush.
Everything is waiting for you.
What will you be taking with you?
And what will you be leaving behind?

Here awaits a blank canvas
for you to fill with new experiences.
Paint it brightly, live it joyously.
Welcome each trial and accept
every tribulation as they unfold.
Carry yourself with grace
and in difficult times, look to
the wisdom you have gained thus far
to accompany you through.

In a short while new buds will be
appearing and fresh growth will resume
in all its glory.
Bask in the beauty that each season
will inevitably bring.
Celebrate each gift and mourn each loss.
All is part of the wheel of life,
so generously given to each of us.
And remember to give thanks for each
and every new blessing coming your way.

So go now, the door is open;
the future awaits.
A new year has been gifted.

~ C.E. Coombes
via social media
December 31, 2025


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
A New Year’s Eve Reminder
In This Time of Liminal Space
Threshold Musings
Saying Farewell to 2019 in a Spirit of Gratitude
Garden Gate
The Light of This New Year’s Day

Image: Nakata.


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

December Vignettes


See also the previous Wild Reed December 2025 posts:
Happy Birthday, Mum!
Photo of the Day – December 5, 2025
The Essence of Both Palliative and Spiritual Care
Ed Felien on Why NYC Elected Zohran Mamdani, But Minneapolis Didn’t Elect Omar Fateh
Susie Hayward on What’s Happening in Minneapolis
Doing What We Can to Stop Unjust Arrests of Immigrants
Clint Combs on the “Mud” Thrown at Omar Fateh
Great Event, Great Sign, Great Nails
The Winter Solstice: A Time of Descent and Rest
When Hope Seems Gone
And So Here We Are
A Socialist Agenda for 2026
Christmas Eve Musings
A Christmas Prayer
Zack Polanski’s Christmas Message
Meet Some of the “People-Powered” Green Party Candidates for 2026
Winter Snowstorm
Something to Think About – December 28, 2025
Qasim Rashid: Quote of the Day – December 29, 2025
Derek Penwell’s Message to Those Waking Up to Consequences They Didn’t Think Had Their Name on Them
Joyce Rupp: Seeking and Trusting the “Why” of Your Life
A Time to Listen Deeply

See also:
December Vignettes (2024)
December Vignettes (2023)
Winter Vignettes
Out and About – Winter 2022-2023
Out and About – Winter 2020-2021
Dark Light
In This Time of Liminal Space
Honoring the Darkness While Remembering the Light

Images: Michael J. Bayly.


Joyce Rupp: Seeking and Trusting the “Why” of Your Life

I've long respected and appreciated the spiritual writings of Joyce Rupp. Indeed, I use a number of her prayers (or adaptations of them) in my work as a palliative care chaplain.

Earlier today Joyce shared via her e-newsletter both a powerful reflection and a beautiful prayer centered in an awareness of the new year we’re about to cross over into. I share both this reflection and prayer below, along with my strong recommendation to all reading this to subscribe to Joyce’s free monthly e-newsletter.

_________________

As we leave the old year behind and make our way into the uncertainty and the promise of the new, there’s much to ponder. A book I recently read has given a direction to my musings. The Kingdom of the Poor, a memoir by Charles Strobel, a Nashville priest, tells of his being born into poverty and choosing to focus his life and ministry on assisting unhoused persons. This simply written book wouldn’t win a Pulitzer prize but it won my heart with his stories of people who touched his life, financially poor ones who knew little of the everyday privileges I take for granted. Most of all, it was a quote by Mark Twain that Strobel used to tell his story that caught my attention: “The two most important days of your life are the day you were born and the day you find out why.”

It’s the “why” that is leading me through my own story to consider what I’ll focus on in 2026. As I do so, I wonder if any of us fully know the “why” of our life. It seems that this “why” involves a continual revelation, like a ball of yarn starting small with more and more strings winding around it. In my early forties, working in rural parishes with adult education, I said to a friend, “I like what I’m doing, but I know it’s not what I’m meant to do.” Ten years later as a published writer leading retreats around the world, I thought I finally I knew the “why.” But in my sixties, I discovered a fuller “why” – a graced revelation moved me to focus on being a compassionate presence. Now in my early eighties I believe this is “it.” But is it? Is there more string to be added to that ball of yarn?

What about you – the story of your journey into the central reason for your life? This is not the time to make comparisons with others, to judge your “why” by what they’ve been and done. I recall a friend never fully satisfied with his “why,” always wanting (in his words) “to have done a noble deed.” What he did not realize is how much his non-judgmental presence allowed people with whom he traveled on the subway, taught in classes, and met regularly for coffee and conversation, to benefit from his kindness and to appreciate themselves.

Our “why” has value. It strengthens our refusal to allow discouragement to reign over our thoughts and emotions. In our current political and social disruption with its chaotic atmosphere we can quickly judge our “why” to be of small value. But, as Rebecca Solnit points out in No Straight Road Takes You There, “. . . despair is all around us, telling us the problems are insoluble, we are not strong enough, our efforts are in vain, no one really cares, and human nature is fundamentally corrupt.” Let’s not give in to that despair.

“Stories do more than reveal; they stir something deeper,” writes Jill Tiefenthaler of National Geographic. I encourage you to spend some time perusing the story of YOUR life, to allow this to “stir something deeper” in you, to marvel at who you are, the value of your “why,” how it has evolved and moved you toward your reason for being. May you see yourself as a person expressing your goodness by loving and being loved with your unique personality and your ever-evolving strings on the ball of life.

As the door of the new year opens, let us view our “why” and trust it to anchor us like a north star guiding travelers to a valued destination.

Abundant peace for you in 2026.

~ Joyce Rupp
December 31, 2025


_________________


Crossing Into the New Year

By Joyce Rupp

Your word is a lamp to my feet
and a light to my path.
(Psalm 119:105)

Companioning Spirit, a new year beckons.
As I cross the threshold from the past
into the unknown territory that lies ahead,
be a lamp under my feet so every step I take
is accompanied by grace-filled clarity.

Lead me into situations that draw forth
my abilities to be a person of good will
whose actions bear the mark of peace.

Move me to kindhearted decisions based
on the primary call to be compassionate
toward others, and also toward myself.

Guide me when I encounter uncertainty,
entangled with worries or self-doubt,
and fraught with choosing what I am to do.

Summon me to the altar of unselfishness
when I want to cling to what prevents me
from generously sharing my time and care.

Remind me every day that I am still more
than who I now am, that I am continuing
to become the person I’m meant to be.

Surround me with your durable strength
when I feel vulnerable or incapable of
adequately meeting what is being required.

Enrich me with the gifts of wonder and awe
through encounters with people and events,
and the endless marvels found in nature.

Draw me fuller into union with your love
and closer to the persons whose kinship
infuses my spirit with joy and confidence.

Companion of my Soul, you accompany me
into this new year. I renew my trust in you
as I traverse my inner and outer pathways.



See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Recognizing the Truth
In This Time of Liminal Space
A Prayer of Anchoring
Trusting the Flow
Surrendering in Sacred Trust
Seeking Higher Perceptions
The Guidance of Higher Forces
Surrender and Trust
Trusting God’s Generous Invitation
Giving Thanks: A Spiritual Act of Trust
Jeff Foster on the Healing Power of “Holding Space”
A Season of Listening
The Onward Call
In the Footsteps of Spring


Tuesday, December 30, 2025

A Time to Listen Deeply


I love this time – the in-between time, the time after all the gatherings and lights, the time before we swing back into the regular routines of the new year.

It is the crack between the worlds, the place where dreaming can unfold and then spiral into being, quickly and quietly.

It is a place where, if we want them to, solitude and silence can surround us and the soul-hungers we have abandoned can find us once again.

It is a time to listen deeply, to stay with stillness open to the impulse to move from the deepest part of what we are.

~ Oriah Mountain Dreamer
via social media
December 30, 2025


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
In This Time of Liminal Space
A Season of Listening
Somewhere In-Between
Dwelling in Peace
The Light of This New Year’s Day

Image: Michael Bayly.


Derek Penwell’s Message to Those Waking Up to Consequences They Didn’t Think Had Their Name on Them


The following is written by Derek Penwell, Senior Minister at Douglass Blvd Christian Church. It's an open letter that Penwell first shared this piece on his substack, Heretic Adjacent, and then on Facebook, where I came across it.

On one level, this piece is for all of us living in the U.S. at this profoundly troubling time – something especially felt through Penwell’s call for each one of us to “be gentle and brave.” Yet at the same time and in particular, Penwell is imparting a very direct message to those “waking up to consequences they thought had someone else’s name on them.”

_________________

Friends,

Christmas is over now.

The music has faded, the manger scenes are being boxed up, and the country is stumbling back into ordinary time with a hangover nobody planned for. For some of you, that hangover isn’t just emotional. It’s the price of utilities. It’s the cost of medication your insurance no longer covers. It’s the neighbor who didn’t come home from work last week because ICE got there first. It’s the small business bleeding out because tariffs turned your supply chain into a hostage situation.

You’re waking up to consequences you didn’t think had your name on them.

You were told this would hurt “those” people. You know, the immigrants. The “illegals.” The queer kids who needed to be put back in their place. The women who wanted too much. The professors and librarians and “elites” who supposedly looked down on you. The cities. The coasts. The people who didn’t go to your church or vote like your family.

They told you the damage would be targeted, efficient, deserved.

You believed the suffering would be contained to people who had it coming.

And now you’re realizing it isn’t contained at all . . . unless, of course, you’ve got a couple billion you dropped in the couch cushions.

I want to say this carefully.

I’m not interested in gloating. Schadenfreude is cheap, and it rots the soul. I’m not going to mock your fear or dismiss your anger or tell you that you deserve everything you’re facing. Pain is pain. Fear is fear. Losing your footing in a system you trusted is genuinely destabilizing, regardless of who you are and whose team colors you’re wearing.

But I’m also not going to lie to you.

This. All this stuff unleashed on the world, it didn’t come out of nowhere.

But you’re in good company. The ground you’re standing on now is the same ground others have been standing on for a long time. Immigrant families have been holding their breath at every traffic stop for years. Queer teenagers have been calculating which parts of themselves to hide since middle school. Black parents have been having “the talk” about police encounters for generations. Disabled people have been fighting for scraps of a healthcare system that treats them like a budget problem. Women have been watching their bodies become legislative territory long before you noticed the court was stacked.

People told you what would happen. They tried to warn you. Some of you called them hysterical. Some of you called them divisive, said they were exaggerating, playing victim, making everything political.

Now you know, they weren’t just pushing leftover liberal talking points.

Here’s the hard truth most people never want to hear: cruelty never stays loyal. It doesn’t honor its contracts or keep its promises about who it will and won’t harm. It always widens its focus, looking for new bodies. So, eventually, it always finds its way home.

That’s not me being punitive. That’s me describing social/political/economic gravity.

The prophet Amos saw it clearly. “Let justice roll down like waters,” he thundered. But he also warned about what happens when it doesn’t. When we deny justice to the poor at the gate, when we trample the needy and push aside the afflicted, the whole vineyard withers. Not just their part of the vineyard. The whole damn vineyard. Because injustice isn’t a precision instrument. It’s poison dumped in the water table.

I get that some of you are angry right now. You feel betrayed by folks you thought cared about people like you, when it turns out they didn’t. And it makes sense. You were promised protection, told that their accumulation of strength meant someone else would absorb the pain. They sold you a story where order could be restored by sacrificing the right people.

But here’s the part of the story left out: once you decide some lives are expendable, you’ve already agreed that all lives are conditional. Including you, your kids, and your sweet aunt Mable, who never did anything wrong to anybody. Nobody’s safe.

I need to say something else, and I’m going to say it in as gentle a way as I know how:

Your pain doesn’t erase your participation.

You don’t get to pretend you were merely an observer because the outcome wound up surprising you. Advocacy for cruelty still counts, even if the blast radius expanded farther than you anticipated.

The ballot you cast, the policy you defended (or ignored), the joke you laughed at, the cruelty you explained away because it was pointed at someone you’d been taught doesn’t require your respect: all of it still happened. And me saying that isn’t an attack. It’s the beginning of honesty.

And honesty is the only place repentance can actually start.

The biblical word for repentance is metanoia. It doesn’t mean feeling really bad. It doesn’t mean groveling or self-flagellation. It means a complete reorientation, a turning around so thorough that you end up walking in the opposite direction. It means telling the truth about what you were willing to tolerate as long as it didn’t cost you too much. It means resisting the urge to rewrite your own history now that that history’s become a sore spot.

Repentance also means this: none of us gets to skip to the reconciliation scene without passing through accountability first. You don’t get to show up in the communities where your people lit a match and expect a hero’s welcome for finally noticing the fire. The people who’ve been burning this whole time don’t owe you cookies for showing up with a bucket.

But here’s the good news, if you're still here and you’re still willing to hear it.

This moment doesn’t have to harden you.

It can either calcify into resentment, a new grievance that finds new scapegoats, or it can crack open into something braver: solidarity that isn’t transactional. A refusal to build safety on somebody else’s suffering. A recognition that none of us gets to choose whose dignity counts without eventually paying for that choice.

If you want a bridge forward, it won’t be built out of denial. It will be built out of shared vulnerability and changed allegiance—not to a man or a party. And certainly not to the illusion that we can manage cruelty without becoming its collateral damage.

So what does that look like, practically?

I think it looks like showing up at a school board meeting to defend the teacher you once side-eyed for having a Pride flag in her classroom.

It looks like calling your congressman about ICE enforcement in your community, even though your family doesn’t have to worry about that . . . yet.

It looks like telling your uncle at the next holiday dinner that you were wrong, actually, and you’re not going to laugh at those jokes anymore.

It looks like giving money to the bail fund, the immigrant legal defense organization, and the clinic that’s still open.

It looks like saying out loud, in rooms where it costs you something: “I helped make this. And I’m done.”

After Christmas, the story Christians tell is no longer about cherubic angels and shepherds in bathrobes, but about a child who grows up under military occupation, who tells the truth about power until power does him to death, and who even on the cross refuses to call down the legions that could save him. The God we meet in Jesus doesn’t secure safety through domination. That God absorbs the violence of empire and breaks its power by refusing to return it.

That story is still on the table.

But it asks something of us.

It asks us to stop calculating who deserves protection and start practicing it as if everyone does . . . because they do.

This story challenges us to stop confusing our anger with innocence. To let this moment teach us what it’s been trying to teach us all along: that the only future worth having is one where nobody’s disposable.

I know it’s difficult. But if you’re willing to begin there, you won’t be alone. There are communities already doing this work, already practicing the politics of the Beatitudes instead of the culture war. And they’ve been at this for a while. They’ll make room for you. But you’ll need to come ready to listen more than you speak. Ready to follow instead of lead. Ready to sit with the discomfort of being the newcomer in a struggle others have been waging for years.

That will cost you something.

That’s how you’ll know it’s real.

Be gentle and brave.

Derek Penwell
via social media
December 30, 2025


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Doing What We Can to Stop Unjust Arrests of Immigrants
Susie Hayward on What’s Happening in Minneapolis
Photo of the Day – December 5, 2025
Omar Fateh: Quote of the Day – December 4, 2025
James Greenberg on Trumpism: “The Tactics Are Unmistakable”
“This Is What Fascism Looks Like”
Marianne Williamson: Quote of the Day – June 20, 2025
The Declaration of Resistance
The Choice Before Us
James Greenberg: “The Choices We Make Matter”
Derek Johnson on the “Courage to Call Fascism by Its Name”
An Incident That Feels “Ripped from a Dystopian Novel”
James Greenberg: “I Am in Mourning for America”

Opening image: ICE agents and federal officers detain a migrant as he walks out from a hearing during targeted detainment at a U.S. immigration court in Manhattan, October 27, 2025. (Photo: Reuters / David “Dee” Delgado)


Monday, December 29, 2025

Quote of the Day

As you watch war criminals Netanyahu and Trump meet at the White House, remember:

• The genocide of Palestinians is still ongoing

• Israel is still bombing Gaza with U.S. weapons

• Netanyahu is still blocking independent UN, ICC, ICJ, and media investigations into 10/7 and Gaza

• Israel is still illegally and violently annexing even more West Bank land, and

• At least 8,000 Palestinian hostages still remain in Israeli prisons.

And corporate media will likely ask about none of these atrocities.

Qasim Rashid
via social media
December 29, 2025


Related Off-site Links:
Trump Bemoans Not Winning Nobel Peace Prize During Netanyahu Hot Mic – Brett Wilkins (Common Dreams, December 29, 2025).
Netanyahu to Press for “Another Round of War With Iran” in Meeting With Trump This Week – Stephen Prager (Common Dreams, December 28, 2025).

UPDATES: “Whatever Israel Wants”: Trump Backs Netanyahu’s “Colonial” Wars in Gaza, Iran and BeyondDemocracy Now! (December 30, 2025).
Many in Gaza to “Lose Access to Critical Medical Care” as Israel Suspends Doctors Without Borders – Jake Johnson (Common Dreams, December 30, 2025).
The World Must Act Now to Abort the Next Phase of Extermination in Gaza – Ramzy Baroud (Common Dreams, December 31, 2025).


See also the following chronologically-ordered Wild Reed posts:
October 7, 2023: “Nothing About Today Is ‘Unprovoked’”
Phyllis Bennis: “If We Are Serious About Ending This Spiraling Violence, We Need to Look at Root Causes”
In the Midst of the “Great Unraveling,” a Visit to the Prayer Tree
Eric Levitz: Quote of the Day – October 11, 2023
Something to Think About – October 12, 2023
Prayer of the Week – October 16, 2023
Voices of Reason and Compassion on the Crisis in Israel and Gaza
More Voices of Reason and Compassion on the Crisis in Israel and Gaza
Ta-Nehisi Coates: Quote of the Day – November 2, 2023
Jehad Abusalim: Quote of the Day – December 8, 2023
Christmas 2023 – Reflections, Activism, Art, and Celebrations
Sabrina Salvati: Quote of the Day – January 2, 2024
Michael Fakhri: Quote of the Day – February 27, 2024
Phyllis Bennis: Quote of the Day – March 28, 2024
Josh Paul: Quote of the Day – March 28, 2024
“A Genocide Has Been Normalized”
“This Is a Genocidal Project”
Outrage and Despair
Naomi Klein’s Powerful Words on Israel’s and the West’s Ongoing Gaza Genocide
Judith Butler on the Ongoing Student Protests Against the Gaza Genocide
Kyle Kulinski: Quote of the Day – May 23, 2024
Something to Think About – June 28, 2024
Nina Turner: Quote of the Day – July 24, 2024
Phyllis Bennis: “We Can Never Give Up Hope”
John Cusack: Quote of the Day – July 26, 2024
Progressive Perspectives on the Presidential Nomination of Kamala Harris
Breaking Down Kamala Harris’s DNC Speech on Gaza
Yousef Munayyer: Quote of the Day – August 30, 2024
“It’s a Systematic Slaughter That We’re Funding”
Protesting Weapons Manufacturer and Genocide Enabler General Dynamics
Something to Think About – September 26, 2024
“A Year of War Against Children”
Anti-Genocide Presidential Candidate Jill Stein Reflects on the First Anniversary of Israel’s Genocide in Gaza
Liam Cosgrove Confronts U.S. State Department Spin Doctor Matthew Miller: “People Are Sick of the Bullshit”
“This Is a Tragic, Heartbreaking Moment in the History of Humanity”
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’ Faltering Presidential Campaign
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in the 2024 Presidential Election
Hope and Courage – Christmas 2024
Chris Hedges: “Israel Has No Intention of Halting Its Merry-Go-Round of Death”
The Lamentable Legacy of the Biden Administration
Caitlin Johnstone: Quote of the Day – January 22, 2025
Butch Ware: Quote of the Day – January 30, 2025
The Only Difference
Progressive Perspectives on Cory Booker’s Marathon Speech
Silence on Gaza Genocide Is “More Than a Mere Moral Abdication; It Is Lethal”
The Theft of One’s Soul: Omar El Akkad on the “Lesser of Two Evils” Argument
How Genocide Becomes Ordinary
Thomas Friedman: Quote of the Day – May 27, 2025
“A Holocaust, Live-streamed”
Why What’s Happening in Palestine – and Our Response to It – Is So Important
“Life Comes First”: An Interview with Thiago Ávila
Truth-telling in the Face of Systemic Power That Is Silent on Genocide
Caitlin Johnstone: Quote of the Day – July 23, 2025
U.S. Labor Leader Chris Smalls Joins the Crew of the Handala
Israel’s Actions in Gaza: “A Clear and Present Moral Collapse”
Protesting Israel’s “Starvation Campaign” in Gaza
Chris Smalls: Quote of the Day – August 5, 2025
Anas al-Sharif, 1996-2025
A Call to Divest from Israel
Idrees Ahmad: Quote of the Day – August 25, 2025
Michael Sala: Quote of the Day – August 29, 2025
A Poem That Remains Painfully Relevant
Memes of the Times
An “Illusion of Action”
Two Years of “Indescribable Horror”
No Justice, No Peace
Progressive Perspectives on Hillary Clinton’s Comments on Pro-Palestine “Propaganda” and TikTok
Phil Rockstroh: Quote of the Day – December 14, 2025


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
“The Mistreatment and Discrimination Against Palestinians Is Not Unprecedented. It’s Baked Into the Foundation of the Political System in Israel”
“Essential Viewing for All Who Care to Understand the Plight of the People of Palestine”
Progressive Perspectives on the Ongoing Israeli-Palestinian “Nightmare” (2021)
Something to Think About – July 29, 2018
Noura Erakat: Quote of the Day – May 15, 2018
For Some Jews, Israel’s Treatment of Palestinians is Yet Another Jewish Tragedy
Remembering the Six-Day War and Its Ongoing Aftermath
David Norris: Quote of the Day – August 12, 2014


Image: Photographer unknown.


Sunday, December 28, 2025

Something to Think About . . .


Write the Sisters of Charity, New York:

Today, on the Feast of the Holy Family, we find ourselves reflecting on how their story was one of courage, faith, and resilience as refugees and migrants.

Mary and Joseph, carrying the newborn Jesus, were forced to flee their homeland to escape danger and violence. They became refugees, seeking safety in a foreign land, trusting only in God and each other. Their journey was not just one of distance, but also a journey of hope through fear, uncertainty, and displacement.

As we honor the Holy Family, may we also remember the countless families today who are making difficult journeys, forced from their homes in search of peace, safety, and a future for their children. The Holy Family’s story is a reminder that God is with us in times of uncertainty, walking alongside every family in search of shelter and belonging.

On this feast day, let us pray for all migrants and refugees, and let our hearts be open to offering welcome and compassion – knowing we are all, in some way, travelers along life’s road.



Related Off-site Links:
Pope Leo Compares Jesus to Palestinians and Migrants in Christmas Message – Peter Aitken and Jason Lemon (Newsweek, December 25, 2025).
Green Leader Zack Polanski Urges an End to the “Demonising” of Migrants in Christmas Address from CalaisThe Independent via Yahoo! News (December 26, 2025).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Why This Gay Man Takes Heart from the Feast of the Holy Family
Let Us Be the Wise Ones They’re Waiting For
International Migrants Day
A Prayer for Refugees
2000+ Take to the Streets of Minneapolis to Express Solidarity with Immigrants and Refugees
Fasting, Praying, and Walking for Immigration Reform
Honoring Óscar and Valeria
Sanctuary for Gay Syrians Danny and Aamer
Celebrating the Presence of God Within All Families
Something to Think About – November 27, 2018
Christmas in America, 2018
Stephen Mattson: Quote of the Day – January 25, 2017


Winter Snowstorm


Writes Andrew Krueger of Minnesota Public Radio News:

A major winter storm swept into Minnesota on Sunday, bringing blizzard conditions on what was expected to be one of the busiest travel days of the holiday season.

Snowplows were pulled off highways in parts of the state due to poor visibility, with heavy snow accompanied by winds gusting to more than 50 mph at times. Several cities, including Minneapolis, declared snow emergencies.

The National Weather Service Twin Cities office warned of “dangerous, potentially life-threatening travel conditions” through the day Sunday into Monday morning – and said anyone with travel plans across the region should consider making alternate arrangements.

As of Sunday afternoon, steady snow continued to fall across much of the state, with winds gusting to near 50 mph. The Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) was advising no travel across much of the southern half of the state – including all of southwest and south-central Minnesota.

MnDOT said its no-travel advisories would also remain in place overnight, to be re-evaluated Monday morning. The agency also said snowplows would be taken off highways in south-central Minnesota after dark Sunday night, and resume operations early Monday.

. . . The State Patrol reported more than 190 crashes on state and federal highways across Minnesota between midnight and 1:30 p.m. Sunday, along with more than 160 spinouts or vehicles off the road and seven jackknifed semis.

“Please delay or cancel travel plans until the storm has passed,” the Patrol reported in an early afternoon social media post.

Metro Transit was reporting delays on close to half of its Twin Cities bus routes as of midday, though average delays were less than 10 minutes. As of early afternoon, the percentage of delayed routes was down to about a third.

At Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport, officials were expecting more than 50,000 people to pass through security checkpoints on Sunday – one of the two busiest days of the holiday travel season.

As of mid-afternoon, more than 120 flights had been canceled and the airport had called in extra workers to clear snow.

“We have a full crew callout as we normally would do in a situation like this,” said Jeff Lea, a Metropolitan Airports Commission spokesperson. ”That means hundreds of personnel and our contractors are actively clearing the runways, taxiways, ramp areas and the public side of the airport.”

Air travel across the country was snarled through the weekend as winter weather affected various parts of the U.S.



Related Off-site Link:
Live Updates: Potent Storm Slams Minnesota with Heavy Snow Blizzard – Joe Nelson (Bring Me the News, December 18, 2025).

See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Finally . . . A “Significant Snowfall” Across Southern Minnesota (2024)
Winter Vignettes (2023)
Photo of the Day – February 23, 2023
Photo of the Day – February 5, 2023
After Record-Breaking Snowfall, a Walk Through the Neighborhood (2023)
Saaxiib Qurux Badan – January 4, 2023
A Wintry Mix of Snow and Freezing Rain (2023)
The Light of This New Year’s Day
In This Time of Liminal Space
Solstice Storm (2022)
Photo of the Day – December 13, 2022
A Blizzard of Epic Proportions (2020)
After the Season’s First Snowstorm, a Walk Through the Neighborhood (2019)
December’s Snowy Start (2018)
The Spring Blizzard of 2018
Winter Beauty (2017)
Winter Storm (2016)
Winter’s Return (2014)
A Winter Walk Along Minnehaha Creek (2013)
Winter Storm (2012)
First Snowfall (2010)
Winter Arrives! (2009)
A Snowy December – With An Aussie Connection (2007)
Brigit Anna McNeill on “Winter’s Way”
Brigit Anna McNeill on Hearing the Wild and Natural Call to Go Inwards
Winter Light
That Quality of Awe
Out and About – Winter 2022-2023
Out and About – Winter 2020-2021
Out and About – Winter 2019-2020
Winter . . . Within and Beyond (2020)
Winter . . . Within and Beyond (2019)
Winter . . . Within and Beyond (2017)

Images: Michael J. Bayly (Minneapolis, 12/28/2025).