Life During Wartime
Feb. 10th, 2026 04:32 pmHow are things in Minneapolis/the Twin Cities/Minnesota and environs? Honestly: really bad.There have been some wins but people are burning themselves out to the core to foil kidnappings, help people who can't leave their homes, help children who've been kidnapped, help children who are left behind when their parents are kidnapped, help pets whose humans have been kidnapped, help small businesses survive, help people who can't pay rent pay rent, deal with legal challenges, etc.,etc. We're going on three months now and we have bus and train stop monitors, school bus monitors, people doing deliveries, people chasing these fuckers around despite harassment and retaliation, people doing donation drives, people doing fundraisers, people protesting at the Whipple Building (where they're holding folks who've been kidnapped), people waiting at Whipple to help folks who've been released with no winter coats (in MN winter) or phones, people protesting at the hotels hosting ICE (hello, Hilton chain!) and on and on. There are so many heroes.
But in three months, we have collectively been:
That said, here are a few places where small donations help a lot. Please donate if you can, book if you can't. "Everything little bit helps," as the bus stop monitor I spoke to the other day on my way to drop off toiletry donations at the Pride Cultural Center Pantry said.
But in three months, we have collectively been:
- Shot and killed.
- Regularly teargassed.
- Threatened with guns.
- Beaten (also by the Hennepin County Sheriff's Department, so not just ICE)
- Had ICE kidnap legal observers, harass legal observers by showing up at their homes, harass businesses, etc.
- Had a huge portion of our population go into hiding, which means they need food, toiletries, rent paid, pet food, diapers, and so forth.
- Families have been broken up and traumatized.
- There are horror stories about pets and livestock left to starve.
- Small businesses are closing or on the brink because they've lost workers or their workers are stuck at home.
That said, here are a few places where small donations help a lot. Please donate if you can, book if you can't. "Everything little bit helps," as the bus stop monitor I spoke to the other day on my way to drop off toiletry donations at the Pride Cultural Center Pantry said.
- Twin Cities Pride has rainbow Resistance Loon t-shirts that they're selling as a fundraiser for the food pantry.
- Music for Good - local musicians teamed up to produce protest songs for a mutual aid fundraiser.
- DreamHaven Book GoFundMe - Greg Ketter is donating all new donations to local foodshelves and school book drives.
- ICE Hurts Animals Too - animal rescue for abandoned pets/help for folks stuck at home.
- The best overall fundraiser list - Stand With Minnesota
- The multi-faceted approach, not just donations - Naomi Kritzer's "How to Help if You are Outside MInnesota"