“Do you want to see it? Do you have time?” D asks. It’s the start of the Derek Chauvin trial and D, who works in finance in downtown Minneapolis, drives to the area around Lake Street, scene of the riots following the death of George Floyd.
“So the first one happens on Wednesday. On Thursday, Mayor Frey holds a press conference and says, ‘I understand your pain. Everything you do is probably justified’ – I’m paraphrasing – ‘and by the way… we’re pulling the cops.’ All hell’s gonna break loose, right?
"And that’s really what happened. They basically went down Lake Street like Godzilla. They burned up like six square blocks. It was like Dresden.
“I was down here that whole time. I saw the cops climbing up this huge transit station with rubber bullet cannons. At the same time, I saw people looting the Wells Fargo while was still smoldering.
"I saw people spray painting, and I saw people from the suburbs sweeping up and trying to scrub the graffiti. It was like a Richard Scarry picture [book], all the shit going on.
"Meanwhile, there was some famous MSNBC guy doing takes like it was a movie. He’d be like, ‘Live! From Minneapolis!’ and then, if the background didn’t fit the narrative, they would redo it. I watched him do three takes.
“That’s where they burned up the post office. I heard this radio account that morning, of strangers running into the burning post office to grab people’s mail, to save their mail.
"How touching that was; they’re doing the service for a stranger they don’t even know, in the middle of all this chaos.
“I also saw white college students carrying Black Lives Matter signs and confronting black cops, which just showed how complicated this is and also how class-driven it is. The thing that really hurts me, as a citizen.
"The black population are my brothers, and it really aches because the focus on race and the racialization of everything really obscures the fact that it is very much about class and class-based issues.
"This whole mentality about, ‘fuck the police, fuck the state.’ That’s great, but you’re basically victimizing the most vulnerable people, because they’re the ones that are most reliant on the services that are being withdrawn.
“So that Target got looted. My wife and I came down here and it was like, bring a penny take a penny. Everybody just brought their looted shit and put it on the lawn and if you wanted something, you could take it. It was like this community looting effort.
"They would loot all the grocery stores and then drag out all the food and water and put it on the corners. Like when you run a marathon, you could just grab a granola bar.”
“My assessment of this story this summer is, you have the legitimate protesters. You have the protester-adjacent people that are maybe breaking windows or just acting mostly in good faith but are outraged and letting their emotions get it a little bit out of control.
"Then you have the people that were coming in at night and just burning shit up. But the people that were doing all the burning and stuff were not politically motivated.
"They’re not antifa; we don’t have the black bloc as you depicted in your writings in Portland, where it’s like 'Pirates of the Caribbean' every night.
“There are so many confluences with Floyd. One thing about Minnesota, we all have like really bad cabin fever because the winter’s so long. At that time of year, everybody is like a coiled spring. If Floyd has died in January, how different would it have been?
"Because people wouldn’t have been outside; it’s ten below zero.
"And just the meta of Covid. George Floyd was a bouncer at a nightclub. I suspect if Covid had not occurred, he would have been employed and wouldn’t have had to resort to allegedly passing off of counterfeit dollar because he’d be working.
"The clerk at Cup Foods called the cops for the counterfeit bill, but if you listen or see the transcript, he also called because he could tell like something was wrong with Floyd, he wasn’t acting normal.
"It wasn’t, ‘There’s a black guy and he’s criminal and come arrest him.’ It was, ‘There’s something going on here. I just want my cigarettes back and this guy’s acting weird and I’m worried about his safety.’ It’s a much richer context than what’s reported.”
“I’m not a lawyer but it seems like there’s enough there for reasonable doubt [for Chauvin to escape conviction]. You only need one juror. I don’t think there’s any outcome that’s satisfactory, if there is a scenario that it satisfactory. And then what happens after that?
"I don’t know.”

(Recorded one week before the shooting death of Daunte Wright.)

(photos by D)

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More from @NancyRomm

6 Feb
This is adapted from last week's Substack; go ahead and subscribe, nancyrommelmann.substack.com.
Some of us have been writing and podcasting for a week about Donald McNeil, who left the New York Times today, after 45 years and a week of outrage from some of his colleagues, for using the n-word in context during a student trip to Peru in 2019.
I suggested the context might have been quoting from a book or song.

Bingo: McNeil told us as much in his resignation letter, though apparently he was also about to be fired.
Read 16 tweets
10 Nov 20
Portland to Progressives: Not So Fast

While the nation waits to see how badly presidential pollsters got things (again), Portlanders already know how far off local statisticians were: 11 points.
That was the spread touted several weeks ago, in terms of how far ahead Sarah Iannarone, openly pro-antifa and partial to skirts featuring murderous dictators, was in her bid for mayor.
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8 Nov 20
I am wearing a small black leather jacket, kind of a Patti Smith-1970s thing, I imagine, though maybe it’s because my friend has just sent me this image and it’s in my mind. Image
I think, maybe, what Smith was saying was in reference to the Chelsea Hotel. I can tell you that this guy I slept with, who lived in his mother’s brownstone (we were 23) on East 3rd, part of the Hell’s Angels encampment, told me he once had to jump out of a window at the Chelsea.
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Read 6 tweets
3 Nov 20
It's Election Night 2020 and we have no idea how calm or not calm it will be in Portland and other cities across the country.
There has only been one killing directly related to the protests in Portland, a killing the news cycle carried off quickly, for reasons talked and not talked about.
Some thoughts on, An Inconvenient Murder

Chandler Pappas was walking in downtown Portland on August 29th when he heard gunshots.

“The first reaction you have is like, ‘Did that really just happen?’” he says. “There was no altercation. We didn’t see anybody.
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7 Oct 20
The opening of this @wethefifth Patreon is so in my wheelhouse it’s nuts. Not appreciating that people will make up stories of abuse for status/sympathy betrays either an agenda or a lack of imagination/1 patreon.com/posts/special-…
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Meet Laura Albert/JT Leroy, who, after suckling off people's time and money and love and concern, told me it shouldn’t matter that she was a 40-something woman and not a teenage transgender HIV+ hooker. “Maybe it allowed you to have compassion by proxy.”
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Read 11 tweets
6 Oct 20
A lot to say, here goes: I'm not sure what to make of this. @wweek has been (and it pains me to say it) less than objective in much of its on the ground reporting. But they seem to present this squarely, including that poll comes from a pro-Wheeler org

wweek.com/news/city/2020…
.@sarahforpdx is, as many of you know, pro-antifa. I've wanted to know more about this, and her, for months. Tried to interview her; she didn't show and her peeps won't get back to me. Come on, @GregoryMcKelvey, let's do this already!
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