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Alex Pretti Killed During Federal Immigration Enforcement Operation in Minneapolis.
Over the weekend in Minneapolis, federal immigration agents shot and killed 37-year-old Alex Jeffrey Pretti , an intensive care nurse at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Medical Center, during a large immigration enforcement operation that has drawn intense local and national scrutiny. According to federal authorities, a U.S. Border Patrol agent fired on Pretti during a confrontation early Saturday morning. The Department of Homeland Security has claimed that Pretti was armed
Triston Grant
Jan 273 min read


Proud and Alone: America's Drift in Foreign Policy (US Politics)
Only a year ago, the United States boasted a prospering, growing alliance, unmatched credibility on the world stage, and numerous trade agreements & partners. Only a year ago, being American would not have been met with immediate wariness or hostility in Greenland or Canada. Only a year ago, the United States was the force that countries and people in need alike appealed to for protection against oppression and violence. Now, the US has utilized violence to force the hand of
Nyk Klymenko
Jan 263 min read


The Silence That Followed Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
For decades, public recognition of Martin Luther King Jr. Day has been a presidential constant. When that recognition becomes delayed, conditional, or optional, it raises a deeper question about how power remembers and what it chooses to forget.
Triston Grant
Jan 233 min read


Democracy Isn't Dying. It's Being Diluted.
How endless debate weakens rights without removing them Public conversations about democratic decline often rely on dramatic imagery. The fall of institutions. The suspension of elections. Authoritarian takeovers. These images are not wrong, but they are incomplete. Democratic erosion rarely arrives as collapse. More often, it arrives as dilution. Rights are not typically abolished outright. They are discussed. Reconsidered. Reframed. Narrowed. Qualified. Deferred. Each step
Triston Grant
Jan 172 min read


The Fairness Question: What Transgender Athletes Reveal About How We Define Equality.
As the Supreme Court prepares to rule on transgender athlete bans, America confronts a collision between competing visions of justice. On January 13, 2026, the Supreme Court will hear arguments in two cases that distill one of the most contentious questions in contemporary American law: What does fairness mean when fundamental rights collide? The cases involve two transgender athletes Lindsay Hecox, a 24-year-old seeking to compete on Boise State's women's track team, and B.P
Triston Grant
Jan 134 min read


The Great Firing: Trump’s War on Bureaucracy, or Just Bureaucracy as War?
Trump is back, and this time he’s not tweeting, he’s firing. Thousands of federal employees, gone overnight, the largest reduction in force in modern U.S. history. Officially, it’s about “efficiency.” Unofficially, it’s about power. The headlines call it a “restructuring,” but the language feels familiar; cleansing, draining, cutting. Words that sound managerial but echo something darker. The president who once promised to “drain the swamp” has finally pulled the plug, and Wa
Triston Grant
Oct 12, 20252 min read


Kamala Harris Has Entered Her "What's Really Going on?" Era
She’s not running, she’s reflecting and maybe reminding us that politics was never supposed to be this absurd. Harris is back, and she’s tired of pretending otherwise. At a Los Angeles book event, she leaned into the mic and dropped what might be the most relatable line of her career: “These mothaf–kas are crazy.” The crowd roared. Twitter exploded. For a moment, America agreed on something: Kamala said what everyone was already thinking. The moment was funny, but it was als
Triston Grant
Oct 12, 20252 min read
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