Revolutions follow residents standing up

While the big thinkers are plotting action against  Trump and his minions  (or pulling their hair out) on Feb. 4 about 100 residents of Hunterdon County, N.J.,  challenged their very Republican county board to stand up to the Trump ordered ICE raids, like the one in Newark, where people were  detained without warrants, including an American from Puerto Rico and an Army veteran

The county greeted Newark Mayor Ras Baraka and leaders  of the Hunterdon County  NAACP who presented the county commissioners with a request to write a resolution in opposition  to the ICE raids and to commit that Hunterdon county law enforcement would not support the federal raids, which they said violate the constitutional right against unlawful search and seizure.

Hunterdon County is an interesting place for such a gathering. It is very rich –  the 13th richest  county in the U.S. and very Republican.

Current image: a flag by a fence

In 1776, Trenton, where Washington ambushed the  Brits, was part of Hunterdon County.

The Hunterdon commissioners are not a bad governing body. It has a lot of money to play with – the property values upon which they base their taxes rise  by a millions each year. It is a county government with no debt, and which  over the past two years used  $24 million from Biden’s American Rescue Plan to help nonprofits and municipalities with numerous projects.

The county also built its first all-inclusive playground and planned a second.

Then, for old times sake and habit, they voted for Trump and the entire GOP team.

Two of the commissioners who faced the residents on Feb. 4 a up for re-election this year and were counting on floating to victory on the crests of the great Trump economy .

Then came the raids, and Trump firing the FBI and USAID, closing  down medical and science websites, releasing insurrectionists  from Jan. 6 and starting what even the Wall Street Journal called the dumbest trade war ever and allowing Elon Musk and his crew to  illegally mess about inside the US Treasury and government personnel files.

So, even then, came the residents.

Wives of  immigrant husbands.  Husbands of immigrant wives. Jewish granddaughters of Holocaust victims. Business owners whose families came decades ago for the American dream. Business owners afraid for their immigrant workers. Mothers of school kids afraid for their dark skinned friends. Grandsons of  Italian grandparents who were harassed and discriminated against  because they didn’t speak English. Sons of parents  in nursing homes whose staff are hiding. Gay mayors; Hispanic borough councilmen; LGBTQ advocates.

Americans.

Crying, pleading. Resolute.

And angry

Angry

Angry.

Angry at what they see their country becoming.
Angry enough to act.

Angry enough to tell their commissioners to do their job: Live up to their oath of office that had them swear to uphold the constitution.

Do your duty, or maybe, just maybe, quit.

One small meeting in one small town.

But Concord was a small town.

So was Trenton.

And so is Flemington, N.J.

They came to stand in the old  courthouse and said, loudly,  NO.

The word that starts revolutions.

The post Revolutions follow residents standing up appeared first on Michael Stephen Daigle.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on February 04, 2025 20:46
No comments have been added yet.