Operation Metro Surge: A Minnesotan’s Perspective

5Mind. The Meme Platform

I am a Minnesotan and a Minneapolis resident. Over the past month, my state has been the center of national debate. But for residents here, our experience is vivid, and not theoretical. You may wonder why our community is fighting against the presence of immigration enforcement when they are operating within a legal mandate. I hope you will join me in understanding why.

We are not resisting because ICE is targeting illegal immigrants. Our concern is that immigration enforcement is employing racial profiling to detain visa holders, native Americans and citizens.

As a Minneapolis resident, I have experienced this. My first experience was when my child’s former daycare had two of their caregivers detained and separated from their families. Both employees had valid work visas. Weeks later, the first of these employees was released, but with a $30,000 bond. On top of this, they had to pay for legal fees and a plane ticket from a Texas detention center.

My second experience was with my favorite restaurant. When my family placed a pickup order, we received a distressing text telling us the business was closed and the workers were fearful. I learned a week later that an employee, again with a legal visa, had been detained and separated from his family. Volunteers now man the front door of the restaurant to guard against unconstitutional searches and seizures.

It is difficult for Minnesotans like myself to view ICE favorably when abuses are prevalent enough to impact your friends and businesses. Detention of legal immigrants and citizens is so common that some districts report a third of their students will not risk attending school. Districts are instituting e-learning because large swaths of parents are uncomfortable risking detention of themselves or their children.

If the prevalence is insufficient to sway Minnesotans, the severity is. Consider the case of Castañeda Mondragón, who was admitted to the hospital with eight skull fractures and a brain bleed. Agents claimed he ran into a wall. An entire volunteer force exists solely to pick up citizens who were detained and discharged from Whipple. These people have their phones confiscated, and sometimes their IDs. They are released in below zero weather without proper clothing, sometimes in the woods, with no means of contacting anyone.

Arrests are made without judicial warrants, and held at Whipple in poor conditions without legal counsel. Detainees are fast-tracked to Texas detention centers often  against court orders. Once there, a lack of sanitation and overcrowding leads to disease. Reports of sexual abuse and beatings are also common. Minnesotans do not have to strain their imagination to draw historic parallels.


How should our state respond? Minnesota is being denied effective legal avenues to ensure justice when federal agents break the law. This is in contrast to often cited crimes with undocumented immigrants where the justice system has worked as intended. If you want to understand why Peggy Flanagan is advocating for protesting, it is because our best recourse is to sway public opinion. Our playbook is that of the civil rights movement.

There are limits to this approach, of course. Even in the era of Martin Luther King, the perception of visual evidence was heavily informed by entrenched beliefs. Nevertheless it was central to changing sentiment, as it is in the current moment.


What is an outside observer to believe? I recognize that there are those, across all walks of life, who have experienced crime, sexual abuse, or other tragedies. They are eager to prevent future harm. The spectre of millions of violent criminals may seem a compelling cause for action. But DHS has not found the violent criminals they say exist in our communities. To boost their numbers, many of whom they detain are already incarcerated and facing justice. My state, and you, are no safer due to these detentions.

Perhaps by the end of this article you are unmoved. You see personal anecdotes and view them as financed propaganda. You see the resignation of bureaucrats as a purging of the deep state, not as those with a conscience. You see the reports of farmers and nurses speaking out on local news outlets, but dispute them because they are too biased. You dispute our police officer accounts and our state government because you have been told they are non-cooperative. You see our detentions and presume guilt, because you cannot imagine otherwise.

If you find yourself in this position, ask yourself, what evidence would be sufficient to dispute the claims of this administration? Write it down. If and when that evidence arises, I challenge you to reconsider these reports. Minnesotans will do their best to document until you are ready to hear us.

Contact Your Elected Officials
Gregg Duckett
Gregg Duckett
Gregg Duckett is a Minneapolis resident and lover of hot dishes. His foray into journalism began with Operation Metro Surge. He believes that discourse can transcend political division, and is eager to lend a voice and ear in equal measure.

US Natural Gas Market Shielded From Global Price Shocks During Iran War

Analysts say East Asia could see hikes in energy costs after an Iranian strike wrecked Qatari LNG infrastructure that met 20 percent of the world’s demand.

Israel Targets Checkpoints That Hold Back Iranian Uprising

For decades, one of the most visible expressions of state power in Iran has not been found in govt. buildings or military bases, but in the streets.

The Limits of Power—and the Power Behind the Regime

Western policymakers assume regimes fall when they lose legitimacy. History shows they collapse when they lose the power—and money—to enforce control.

Momentum Builds for Regime Change in Cuba

Momentum builds for regime change in Cuba as Cuba’s leadership faces increased strain from U.S. policy and mounting protests on the island.
00:01:55

US Has a New Ally in Latin America—Here’s Why It Matters

“We are going to take back our country,” newly minted Chilean President José Antonio Kast told a crowd of thousands as he took office March 11.

Oil Falls Below $100 on Rising Hopes for Iran War Breakthrough

The global oil benchmark slipped below $100 a barrel in early trading as rising optimism over U.S. diplomatic efforts raised hopes of ending the Iran war.

FedEx Rolls Out Same-Day Delivery Service

FedEx launched a same-day delivery service as shipping and retail companies compete to meet growing customer expectations for near-instant order fulfillment.

Suspicious Drone Incursion Causes Alarm at US Bomber Base

Suspicious drone activity recently caused alarm at a U.S. military base in Louisiana that hosts long-range strategic bombers.

Stocks Slip, Oil Holds Above $100 as Iran Tensions Cloud Sentiment

U.S. stocks opened lower while oil prices held above $100 a barrel on March 24, as lingering doubts over easing Middle East tensions weighed on sentiment.

Markwayne Mullin Sworn In as DHS Secretary

Former Oklahoma Senator Markwayne Mullin was sworn in at the White House as the new Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
00:27:39

US Looking to Seize Iranian Defectors’ Money: Bessent

Treasury Sec. Scott Bessent said that the US is moving to seize funds transferred abroad by Iranian defectors, so it can be to returned to the Iranian people.

Trump Says He’s ‘Not Putting Troops Anywhere’ Amid Iran War

President Donald Trump met with Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi to discuss the Iran war, saying he is not inclined to send U.S. ground troops.

US Agencies Terminated or Reduced 95 Wasteful Contracts Worth $2 Billion: DOGE

Federal agencies canceled or scaled back 95 wasteful contracts worth up to $2B in the last four weeks, saving taxpayers $757M.
spot_img

Related Articles

Popular Categories

MAGA Business Central