Author Archives: Mary Turck

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About Mary Turck

News Day, written by Mary Turck, analyzes, summarizes, links to, and comments on reports from news media around the world, with particular attention to immigration, education, and journalism. Fragments, also written by Mary Turck, has fiction, poetry and some creative non-fiction. Mary Turck edited TC Daily Planet, www.tcdailyplanet.net, from 2007-2014, and edited the award-winning Connection to the Americas and AMERICAS.ORG, in its pre-2008 version. She is also a recovering attorney and the author of many books for young people (and a few for adults), mostly focusing on historical and social issues.

Taking an Eye, Taking a Knee

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Linda Tirado was shot by police on Friday, May 29. “I was aiming my next shot, put my camera down for a second, and then my face exploded,” she told the New York Times. She is a photojournalist, who had press credentials and a camera, and was covering the protests in Minneapolis. She lost her eye.

Soren Stevenson was shot by police on Sunday on University Avenue. “I’ll never be able to see out of this eye and I believe they’ll be removing this eye at a certain point,” he told CBS News. He was at a peaceful protest, well before the 8 p.m. curfew, friends said.

Both were shot with what the police call “less-than-lethal” weapons, what most people call rubber bullets. Though technically non-lethal, these weapons can maim and kill. Continue reading

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Goodbye, Mailbox

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Last week, my neighborhood had a mailbox here. 

All across St. Paul, corner mailboxes disappeared on Monday.

“A big flatbed truck loaded with mailboxes,” one neighbor told me. They had a mailbox on the corner in front of their house. I had walked over yesterday to mail a letter, not long after the mailbox disappeared.

Strange, I thought, but despite my news addiction, I had not heard anything about mailboxes being removed. Maybe this one was just going to be replaced. I was out for a walk anyway, so I headed over the Lake Street bridge, expecting to encounter a mailbox on some corner in Minneapolis.

Nope. Continue reading

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Is This the Morning After?

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I hope this is the morning after. I hope that tonight will bring no more fires, that familiar streetscapes will emerge from behind their plywood masks, that the work of rebuilding can begin in earnest on Lake Street and wherever fires and vandals destroyed parts of our cities. I hope that today and tomorrow and next week and next month and next year, Minnesota’s elected leaders will stick to the promises they made to address both the brutal history and culture of the Minneapolis Police Department and the deep racial disparities arising from structural racism in Minnesota. Continue reading

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Protest and Response

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If your windows were broken, your family business destroyed, in the protests and violence following the killing of George Floyd, how would you respond? With compassion and understanding, if you were any of business owners whose responses were compiled by Andrea Fjeldberg on her Facebook page. They focused on what is most important: the life and tragic death of George Floyd, murdered by Minneapolis police on Monday, May 25, 2020. They understand that this murder is part of structural racism in Minnesota, and they demand change and justice. Continue reading

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Who’s Rioting and Why

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Local voices tell the same story: white men in vans setting fires, protesters trying to stop arsonists, a white man with a hammer smashing windows, people coming from outside to destroy community institutions. The governor and other public officials insist that the rioters come from out of town, many from out of state.

Is that true? Where are these “outsiders” from?

The first reports from public officials proved less than accurate, and right now we just don’t know. We won’t know with any certainty and accuracy until all of this is over.

We do know that community residents are fiercely defending their homes and businesses and institutions. They are outraged by the burning of family businesses and community institutions. Continue reading

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Update in the Middle of It All

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Images of the Twin Cities burning made headlines around the world.

May 29, 2020—11 a.m.

I monitored news channels and Twitter until something past 2 a.m. this morning. My cities, my streets were burning. This morning I woke to news of the arrest of a Black CNN reporter, and then of his camera team, as they broadcast from Lake Street, as they asked police where they should go, and offered full cooperation.

All of this comes in the aftermath of the police killing of George Floyd on Monday, which lit fires of rage against the Minneapolis Police Department, with its long history of brutal racism.

The violence and destruction was not/is not all about protest or grief or anger. Some of it is about deliberate looting and destruction by people coming into our communities for that purpose.

Lake Street in Minneapolis and University Avenue in St. Paul are filled with small businesses: minority-owned, immigrant-owned family businesses. So much remains to be known, remains to be said, remains to be understood and acted on. So this is a report from the middle, compiled as I listen to Governor Tim Walz, Attorney General Keith Ellison, and Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington speak in a press conference and promise that the state response will not be just law enforcement but also a long-term commitment to changing the racist structures that have made Minnesota good for white people and simultaneously awful for Black people, for Native people, for people of color.  Continue reading

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‘I can’t breathe’ in Minneapolis

“I cannot breathe,” the black man tells the white police officer kneeling on his neck. “Don’t kill me!”

The man is on the ground, on his stomach, handcuffed behind his back. He is wedged against the tire of the patrol car, near 38th and Chicago in Minneapolis.

Yesterday.

In broad daylight.

In front of a crowd of witnesses. At least one of of the witnesses videotapes the whole thing, as the man pleads with police to get off of his neck, as he says he can’t breathe, as he gradually stops talking and stops moving. Continue reading

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Pandemic Profiteering

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Photo by Jernej Furman, published under Creative Commons license.

Big banks, billionaires, and small-time grifters: all are out for themselves, and profiting from the pandemic at the cost of small businesses, health care workers, and people suffering from COVID-19. Continue reading

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Covid, Corrupt Contracts, and Cadets at Risk

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Photo by Jernej Furman, published under Creative Commons license

Everybody knows that awarding no-bid contracts for medical equipment delivery to political cronies stinks of corruption. In my opinion, using West Point cadets to provide a captive audience for a president, at the risk of their health and safety, is equally corrupt.

We’ll be uncovering corrupt contracts for years to come, but one particularly egregious example has already surfaced: a no-bid contract for N-95 masks awarded to Panthera Worldwide, which filed for bankruptcy last fall: Continue reading

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‘Just Shoveling Money to Rich People’

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Photo by 401kcalculator.org, published under Creative Commons license

Stimulus checks and small business relief were prominent parts of the $2 trillion Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act passed in March. Now some of the less-publicized provisions are coming to light. On April 24, the New York Times reported on tax breaks to the very wealthy embedded in the CARES Act:

“As part of the economic rescue package that became law last month, the federal government is giving away $174 billion in temporary tax breaks overwhelmingly to rich individuals and large companies, according to interviews and government estimates. Continue reading

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