Even as Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem has promised to deploy an
even greater surge of federal agents into Minneapolis, ostensibly to investigate
fraud, city residents have shown up in large numbers to express their desire for
ICE to, as Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said, “get the fuck out of Minneapolis.”
Defying the strong resistance to ICE in the community following the tragic
shooting last week of 37-year-old Renée Good, federal agents appear to have
become even more aggressive in their enforcement activities. Agents have gone
door-to-door demanding entrance; they’ve pulled people from their cars, arrested
them for supposed immigration violations or specious infractions such as
interfering with operations while filming. If a person is caught protesting or
simply turning down the wrong street while driving, they are likely to face a
wall of masked and armed agents.
In addition to citizens with cellphones who diligently record the actions of
DHS, local photographers have been joined by photojournalists from around the
country and Canada to document federal agents and the stiff resistance they’ve
faced from brave Minnesontans. Here are a few of their images from the past
week.
People react to the ICE agent killing of Minnesota resident, Renée Nicole Good,
in Minneapolis.Cristina Matuozzi/Sipa USA/AP Larry T., who did not want to give
his last name, is at the Minnesota State Capitol in St. Paul, holding a sign
during a vigil honoring Renée Good.John Locher/AP Demonstrators confront
counter-protesters during a protest outside the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal
Building in Minneapolis. Michael Nigro/Sipa USA/AP A person walks past signage
memorializing Renée Good, who was fatally shot by an ICE officer earlier in the
week.Christopher Katsarov/The Canadian Press/AP People embrace while visiting a
makeshift memorial for Renée Good. US Border Patrol agents question a minor
before arresting him during immigration enforcement operations.Mostafa
Bassim/Anadolu/Getty Federal Agents clash with community members during the
ongoing immigration raids in Minneapolis.Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu/Getty A Federal
Agent deploys pepper spray against community members during the ongoing
immigration raids in Minneapolis.Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu/Getty A federal officer
breaks a car window as they remove a woman from her vehicle near an area where
ICE was operating in Minneapolis. Octavio Jones/AFP/Getty ICE and other federal
officers pull a woman from her vehicle in Minneapolis. Hundreds more federal
agents were heading to Minneapolis, the US homeland security chief said on
January 11, brushing aside demands by the city’s Democratic leaders to leave
after an immigration officer fatally shot a woman protester.Octavio
Jones/AFP/Getty Federal Agents arrest a woman after smashing her car windows for
allegedly blocking the street during an Immigration Enforcement Operation in
Minneapolis.Mostafa Bassim/Anadolu/Getty Demonstrators confront federal agents
as they protest outside the Whipple Federal Building in Minneapolis. Protests
have popped up around the city after a federal agent fatally shot a woman in her
car.Scott Olson/Getty A resident films as people gather to confront ICE agents
after two people from a residence were detained. The Trump administration has
deployed over 2,400 Department of Homeland Security agents to the state of
Minnesota in a push to apprehend undocumented immigrants. Stephen Maturen/Getty
Agents are hit with snowballs while patrolling the streets in
Minneapolis.Michael Nigro/Sipa USA/AP
Tag - Photoessays
In early May, the small city of Banning, California, hosted the Palm Springs Hot
Rodeo. The competition, which has occurred most years for the past 50, salutes
the homoeroticism of rodeo culture. The four-day event—an official stop on the
International Gay Rodeo Association circuit—features traditional rodeo events
like steer wrestling and calf roping, along with more whimsical activities like
a wild drag race, in which a person in drag rides a steer while their teammates
guide it, and goat dressing, in which a pair attempts to put tighty-whities on a
goat as quickly as possible.
All events are open to any gender—men can barrel race and women can bull ride.
“A lot of gay people can’t be incorporated into the other rodeo world,”
contestant Savannah Smith told me. “You can do whatever you want here,” she
added, “and everyone here is supportive.”
This year, the festive event took place against increasing attacks on queer
rights. Two days after the rodeo ended, the Supreme Court allowed the Trump
administration’s ban on transgender soldiers in the US military. It is unclear
what will be targeted next; some fear the overturning of Obergefell v. Hodges,
the landmark 2015 decision legalizing gay marriage. Against this backdrop, the
Hot Rodeo serves as an important reminder of the resilience of queer culture in
America, with its inclusive celebration of LGBTQ athleticism and joy.
Curt Black and Bob Bayne set up contestant registration at the Tool Shed, a gay
bar in Palm Springs, 30 minutes away from Banning, where the Hot Rodeo takes
place. Alexander Saites partners with Matthew Garcia during the rodeo’s dance
contest. Curt Black shows off his Palm Springs Hot Rodeo Outstanding Volunteer
buckle. Zac Rogen, a Hot Rodeo participant, says gay rodeos help keep queer
representation in Western culture. Brian Helander warms up his horse before
competing in the Hot Rodeo. Bob Bayne and Daniel Guevara participate in the
rodeo’s “riderless horse” tradition. The riderless horse symbolizes those
involved with the International Gay Rodeo Association who have since died,
particularly those who died from complications with AIDS. Rodeo director Sylvia
Mower takes off her hat during the riderless horse procession. David Lawson and
Greg Begay compete in the steer decorating event. The goal is for a team of two
to tie a ribbon on a steer’s tail as quickly as possible. Begay, who has been
involved with gay rodeos for years, says, “It’s always been my goal in life to
rodeo, and it just so happens that I’m gay.” Brian Contratto and Gunner Sizemore
compete in the goat dressing event. The goal is to catch a goat and place a pair
of underwear on it as quickly as possible. Brian Contratto shows off a tooth
that broke in half during his steer riding event. Katie Shaw and Pepe Lozada
compete in the team roping event. Love Bailey, the rodeo’s community grand
marshal, performs during the grand entry. Chris Otten holds his cowbell, painted
with a pride flag, after competing in the bull riding event. Rodeo contestants
Steven Housley and Scott Reed pose for a portrait. The Palm Springs Hot Rodeo is
the first gay rodeo Reed has participated in. “It’s the most welcoming group
I’ve ever been around,” he says, adding, “Everyone here is equal.” Two men dance
together at the Dancing Under the Stars party hosted by the Palm Springs Hot
Rodeo at Oscar’s, a bar in downtown Palm Springs.
This story was produced in collaboration with Talking Eyes Media and Amplifier
Fellows.
Four years ago, Georgia was at the center of a political maelstrom. On top of
the two runoff elections that resulted in Democratic control of the Senate,
there was also Donald Trump’s demand that Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger
“find” 11,779 votes to secure his victory there. Georgia delivered high drama on
an impressive scale.
The state is likely to be the site of a neck-and-neck race between Trump and
Kamala Harris this year, with shifting demographics slowly nudging it from red
to blue. The change is driven by growing numbers of immigrants, African
Americans, and young people. But as we traveled around the state, it was clear
that Georgia’s youth vote isn’t a gimme for Democrats.
Earlier this month in Athens, Georgia, a young voter told me, “If there is a
threat to democracy, it’s certainly not Donald Trump.” He detailed what he saw
as the alleged abuses perpetrated by Democrats, including jailing Trump
supporters and indicting him four times. “They forced Joe Biden off the top of
the ticket against his will and appointed a replacement nominee,” he added. “Not
elected, appointed a replacement nominee.”
Young conservatives are a formidable presence in Georgia, which has the highest
proportion of people under 30 of any swing state. They will be instrumental in
determining the outcome of the election. During my recent conversations with
them, the economy repeatedly ranked as their top concern. Hardly anyone
mentioned abortion, gender, or climate change. Most of them were politically
active, belonging to groups like the College Republicans, Turning Point USA, and
the Young Patriots Association, and several had interned at the state capitol.
> “I think it’s insulting to assume that the people cannot tell whether
> information is true or it’s false.”
Jefry Capinegro, a junior at the University of Georgia, is a thoughtful, serious
24-year-old who sees himself as “pretty far to the right.” He says he’s deeply
committed to the truth, and he reads the Wall Street Journal, the Washington
Post, and the New York Times, as well as bouncing between multiple TV news
sources.
When I asked about potential threats to democracy, Jefry told me that Democrats
are trying to censor conservatives on social media, a sentiment I heard multiple
times from other young people. I pressed Jefry on whether it was okay to limit
information that is false or incites violence. “I think it’s insulting to assume
that the people cannot tell whether information is true or it’s false,” he said.
He insisted that it is dangerous to allow the government to decipher fact from
fiction because “we’ve seen these fact-checks to be wrong on numerous
occasions.”
Jefry cited Trump and JD Vance’s claim that Haitians in Springfield, Ohio, were
eating people’s pets. He said that while it sounded crazy at first, it was
actually based in truth—he had seen the video. He described police body cam
footage that shows a Haitian woman with blood on her face as officers ask her
repeatedly if she ate a cat that laid on the ground.
I found the video he was referencing. It turns out the incident happened 174
miles from Springfield, and it shows an American-born Black woman who later
pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to multiple criminal charges. When I
shared this information with Jefry via text, he immediately responded, “Thank
you for finding that. I stand corrected. Perhaps not the best example to cite,
but glad to know now.”
The following excerpts have been condensed for clarity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daniel Shaver
18-year-old college student, founder of Young Patriots Association
Daniel Shaver in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
We’ve gone to a point now where the polarization between the Republican and the
Democratic Party has gotten so bad that people are afraid to speak out. And I
feel like to an extent that is a violation of people’s rights to freedom of
thought and expression. I know people who have personally lost their jobs
because their employers did not agree with their political beliefs. I’ve also
seen people have things taken down on social media because their views were
considered misinformation. And I think that is dangerous to personal freedom.
I have felt pressure, as far as societal pressure. If you don’t agree with me on
this, then you’re not going to be part of our club. You’re not going to get this
job. There’s a lot of that pressure going on. It’s the unspoken, the silent
tension that people have to deal with. And I feel like that is very sad and it’s
dangerous to the future of our country. You shouldn’t have to be afraid to say,
I’m Republican, I’m Democrat, I’m independent. You shouldn’t have to feel that
way. And we have to make sure that we’re all fighting to make sure that people
feel safe to share their beliefs.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Miracle Jones
27-year-old health care human resources professional
Miracle Jones in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I am a Christian, and I am a devoted Christian. So everything, my point of view,
they are heavily biblically based. So when I’m looking for policies, I’m looking
for policies that align more so with the Bible than anything else. Because for
me, it’s always God first.
Fun fact: I’ve never registered to vote until this election, because I’m
worried. I’ve never been worried. I’ve always had the mindset of God will take
care of me, either way, no matter who gets in the office. But now, this time, I
feel like it actually matters who gets in the office.
So with Trump policies, for instance, the gun laws, he’s, you know, pro-guns,
the Lord, whether people have read that part in the Bible or not. He’s also for
protecting ourselves. And then Trump he’s not for teaching you know 73 different
genders or allowing men to participate in women’s sports. We all know what the
Lord says about homosexuality and things of that nature. And then when it comes
to the border thing, God is, he’s for borders, he’s for different nations.
That’s why we have different nations and different languages to begin with,
because if all the people try to come together like they once did back in the
day, then they try to play God and he can’t have that, so he’s for the borders.
If you ask me, I think the Democratic Party is silencing me. I feel like they
are the ones behind like the social media fact-checkers in some form or fashion,
whether directly or indirectly. I think the freedom of religion is more so
supported by the Republican Party than the Democratic Party.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jose Barrera Bales
20-year-old election protection organizer for Common Cause, Georgia
Jose Barrera Bales in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I am disappointed in the 2024 election because the candidates are both on very
extreme sides of the aisle. Neither one of them, you know, very much resonates
with me politically. And they both have extraordinary plans that they want to
implement that will increase our deficit probably more than we’ve ever seen
before.
Julie Winokur: What do you say to your friends who are not voting?
Jose: I would say vote anyways, because, you know, even if it’s a protest vote,
it still shows how un-content the American populace is. And even if you do vote
for, you know, for somebody that I might not particularly agree with, it is a
civic duty. It’s a civic responsibility. And it’s good for you to keep your
voice as an individual out there.
I want to go into politics. Hope to be one of the first elected independents in
Georgia. It’s a very lofty goal, some may even say impossible, but if I do
achieve it, then, you know, it’ll change the status quo for the better,
hopefully. The sense of hope for me is hopefully the future independent movement
in Congress eventually will achieve term limits and corporate lobbying and end
the political division between the Republicans and the Democrats. Maybe then the
middle ground can start to mend the country a little bit.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aqui B’Nek Wingo
26-year-old union electrician
Aqui B’Nek Wingo in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
Being black and a union member and not being a Democrat, it looks really, really
weird. I see myself as a Republican in a lot of sense, but mostly I wish we had
a more European style system where we have multiple different parties and
everything, because there are some things Republicans do that I’m not really a
big fan of and there’s some things the Democrats do that I’m a fan of.
Ever since I came out as a Black conservative, I’ve taken a lot of flak from my
extended family members. I take a lot of flak even in my union. Just the other
day, another black person made a racial slur towards me because I’m a
Republican.
I’m not a big fan of free college for all because I’m not going to waste my own
tax dollars on a useless liberal arts degree like gender studies or wherever
these titles they bunch up together so people get degrees. That seems a huge
waste of time and money. If we’re investing more into, let’s say, trade programs
that we can go out to work, that’ll be better because in construction fields
across the country, it’s such a huge shortage of people because the last 30
years there’s been a push for college, college, college. Trade is bad, trade is
bad, trade is bad.
I don’t trust Western media, and I hate saying it like that, but our media,
especially here in the US, is extremely biased. So what I always do is I go to
Sky News. I’ll go to Visegrád 24 on Twitter. There’s Polish news I look at. I
also look at DW, France 24, and sometimes the Japanese, because I want the most
unbiased stuff that I can get, and the best way I can get it is by one looking
at different countries in different news sources outside the country and
multiple sources to gain a broader picture of what I want to see.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jefry Capinegro
24-year-old college student
Jefry Capinegro in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I am an immigrant to this country. I was born in Guatemala, and I was adopted
when I was six months old. At the time, the immigration issue was maybe not as
in the headlines as it is today, but as the immigration issue has come to the
forefront.
Here at the University of Georgia, this community, this campus, we’ve seen the
ugly side. Laken Riley took a jog one morning down by the intramural fields on
the south campus, as many people do. But she was in the wrong place at the wrong
time. And it was an illegal immigrant who attacked her, who sexually assaulted
her, and who murdered her. It should have never happened. It happens far too
often. One time was too many. But this community felt the impact.
Oftentimes people perceive the whole immigration argument is very black and
white, very pro-immigration or anti-immigration. Well, certainly I’m
pro-immigration. I myself am an immigrant. But the key word in there that seems
to be somehow lost is ‘illegal’. The Republican Party, the conservative,
whatever you want to call them, we are absolutely pro-immigration. I think we
all understand that this country was founded and built on immigration. We are
very pro-immigration. We’re just not pro-illegal immigration.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Abigail Ray
22-year-old college student
Abigail Ray in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
My feelings about the upcoming election, I would have to say, are: It’s
nerve-wracking. It’s really nerve-wracking because I feel like we’re on a
trajectory—like heading towards a cliff, like we’re going towards a cliff. We’re
speeding there. And I feel like if we do not secure this election and if, in my
opinion, the Republican candidate, Donald Trump, doesn’t win, I feel like we
will not be able to, you know, turn the wheel and jerk it and save our country.
I feel like we need to save the country from further annihilation. I’ll give you
an example. Flying around Athens, Georgia, for the last three days has been an
airplane toting the banner that says: Abortion pills by mail. And rather than
Kamala Harris of the Democratic Party wanting to advocate for, you know, a
happier, healthier society where people can afford to have children and where
men actually want to impregnate women and want to raise kids and have a happy
family and a good society where kids can thrive, rather than do that, they want
to make it easier for Americans to cut themselves down at the knee. They want to
make it easier to take away our rights. And it just doesn’t make any sense.
Julie Winokur: The abortion pill airplane, is that a Harris campaign
advertisement?
Abigail: No, there’s no name on the on the sign, but it’s blue. And we know that
there were abortion vans outside the Democratic National Convention where they
were literally having people come and get an abortion in a van. And so what you
can detect from that is that they must not want to advocate for pro-American
life. They must not actually love us.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Chaston Atkins
19-year-old college student, state secretary of the Georgia Association of
College Republicans
Chaston Atkins in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I’ve always necessarily been critical of President Trump, and I think that I
have not necessarily been on the populist bandwagon.
Because I am a political science major, a lot of my friends are politically
engaged. I would say that maybe 35 to 45 percent of my friends are actually
liberal or moderate or not necessarily conservative. And, you know, that just
comes with the territory of being on a college campus, engaging with people who
have different ideas. And so it just comes to dealing with those people, being
cordial, being kind, knowing that we’re not going to agree on everything, but we
have other things that we can agree on and that we should work on those things
and try not to be hyperpartisan, which I think is detrimental not just to the
individual but to the government and to society as a whole.
I don’t necessarily believe that there is a threat to democracy. I think people
are hyperpartisan, they’re mad, they’re angry, they’re being hostile, and that’s
something that you can say is brought on by politicians who are seen as somewhat
demagogue-like.
I believe that former President Trump has already said that he would step down
in case of him losing the election, but regardless as to whether he said it or
not, I think he ultimately will. I think that everyone learned their lesson from
what happened last time, that you can’t let things get out of control. You can’t
let things become riotous. I don’t think that’ll happen at all this time. I
think that regardless of the outcome, I think we’re going to be in safe hands.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Laura Kelley
22-year-old college student
Laura Kelley in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
Everything is so difficult with politics, in my opinion, because I’m a
conservative and I believe that government should not be super involved in
people’s lives. People should have the freedom to do what they want, and that’s
the best thing about America.
So with books in schools, that’s so difficult. My mom is actually a librarian in
an elementary school and it’s in a northern county in Georgia, so obviously the
population is very conservative. And when this topic came to light the school
board was super against certain books to be put into the schools. So therefore,
my mom had to make those selections. But also it’s like those kids want to read
those books. So it’s just so complicated, like maybe the kids should be able to
buy it outside school if they really want to read those. But if the taxpayer is
saying those books shouldn’t be allowed in schools, they shouldn’t. So I really
don’t know what I believe in that.
This story was produced in collaboration with Talking Eyes Media and Amplifier
Fellows.
Four years ago, Georgia was at the center of a political maelstrom. On top of
the two runoff elections that resulted in Democratic control of the Senate,
there was also Donald Trump’s demand that Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger
“find” 11,779 votes to secure his victory there. Georgia delivered high drama on
an impressive scale.
The state is likely to be the site of a neck-and-neck race between Trump and
Kamala Harris this year, with shifting demographics slowly nudging it from red
to blue. The change is driven by growing numbers of immigrants, African
Americans, and young people. But as we traveled around the state, it was clear
that Georgia’s youth vote isn’t a gimme for Democrats.
> Post by @motherjonesmag
> View on Threads
Earlier this month in Athens, Georgia, a young voter told me, “If there is a
threat to democracy, it’s certainly not Donald Trump.” He detailed what he saw
as the alleged abuses perpetrated by Democrats, including jailing Trump
supporters and indicting him four times. “They forced Joe Biden off the top of
the ticket against his will and appointed a replacement nominee,” he added. “Not
elected, appointed a replacement nominee.”
Young conservatives are a formidable presence in Georgia, which has the highest
proportion of people under 30 of any swing state. They will be instrumental in
determining the outcome of the election. During my recent conversations with
them, the economy repeatedly ranked as their top concern. Hardly anyone
mentioned abortion, gender, or climate change. Most of them were politically
active, belonging to groups like the College Republicans, Turning Point USA, and
the Young Patriots Association, and several had interned at the state capitol.
> “I think it’s insulting to assume that the people cannot tell whether
> information is true or it’s false.”
Jefry Capinegro, a junior at the University of Georgia, is a thoughtful, serious
24-year-old who sees himself as “pretty far to the right.” He says he’s deeply
committed to the truth, and he reads the Wall Street Journal, the Washington
Post, and the New York Times, as well as bouncing between multiple TV news
sources.
When I asked about potential threats to democracy, Jefry told me that Democrats
are trying to censor conservatives on social media, a sentiment I heard multiple
times from other young people. I pressed Jefry on whether it was okay to limit
information that is false or incites violence. “I think it’s insulting to assume
that the people cannot tell whether information is true or it’s false,” he said.
He insisted that it is dangerous to allow the government to decipher fact from
fiction because “we’ve seen these fact-checks to be wrong on numerous
occasions.”
Jefry cited Trump and JD Vance’s claim that Haitians in Springfield, Ohio, were
eating people’s pets. He said that while it sounded crazy at first, it was
actually based in truth—he had seen the video. He described police body cam
footage that shows a Haitian woman with blood on her face as officers ask her
repeatedly if she ate a cat that laid on the ground.
I found the video he was referencing. It turns out the incident happened 174
miles from Springfield, and it shows an American-born Black woman who later
pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to multiple criminal charges. When I
shared this information with Jefry via text, he immediately responded, “Thank
you for finding that. I stand corrected. Perhaps not the best example to cite,
but glad to know now.”
The following excerpts have been condensed for clarity.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Daniel Shaver
18-year-old college student, founder of Young Patriots Association
Daniel Shaver in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
We’ve gone to a point now where the polarization between the Republican and the
Democratic Party has gotten so bad that people are afraid to speak out. And I
feel like to an extent that is a violation of people’s rights to freedom of
thought and expression. I know people who have personally lost their jobs
because their employers did not agree with their political beliefs. I’ve also
seen people have things taken down on social media because their views were
considered misinformation. And I think that is dangerous to personal freedom.
I have felt pressure, as far as societal pressure. If you don’t agree with me on
this, then you’re not going to be part of our club. You’re not going to get this
job. There’s a lot of that pressure going on. It’s the unspoken, the silent
tension that people have to deal with. And I feel like that is very sad and it’s
dangerous to the future of our country. You shouldn’t have to be afraid to say,
I’m Republican, I’m Democrat, I’m independent. You shouldn’t have to feel that
way. And we have to make sure that we’re all fighting to make sure that people
feel safe to share their beliefs.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Miracle Jones
27-year-old health care human resources professional
Miracle Jones in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I am a Christian, and I am a devoted Christian. So everything, my point of view,
they are heavily biblically based. So when I’m looking for policies, I’m looking
for policies that align more so with the Bible than anything else. Because for
me, it’s always God first.
Fun fact: I’ve never registered to vote until this election, because I’m
worried. I’ve never been worried. I’ve always had the mindset of God will take
care of me, either way, no matter who gets in the office. But now, this time, I
feel like it actually matters who gets in the office.
So with Trump policies, for instance, the gun laws, he’s, you know, pro-guns,
the Lord, whether people have read that part in the Bible or not. He’s also for
protecting ourselves. And then Trump he’s not for teaching you know 73 different
genders or allowing men to participate in women’s sports. We all know what the
Lord says about homosexuality and things of that nature. And then when it comes
to the border thing, God is, he’s for borders, he’s for different nations.
That’s why we have different nations and different languages to begin with,
because if all the people try to come together like they once did back in the
day, then they try to play God and he can’t have that, so he’s for the borders.
If you ask me, I think the Democratic Party is silencing me. I feel like they
are the ones behind like the social media fact-checkers in some form or fashion,
whether directly or indirectly. I think the freedom of religion is more so
supported by the Republican Party than the Democratic Party.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jose Barrera Bales
20-year-old election protection organizer for Common Cause, Georgia
Jose Barrera Bales in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I am disappointed in the 2024 election because the candidates are both on very
extreme sides of the aisle. Neither one of them, you know, very much resonates
with me politically. And they both have extraordinary plans that they want to
implement that will increase our deficit probably more than we’ve ever seen
before.
Julie Winokur: What do you say to your friends who are not voting?
Jose: I would say vote anyways, because, you know, even if it’s a protest vote,
it still shows how un-content the American populace is. And even if you do vote
for, you know, for somebody that I might not particularly agree with, it is a
civic duty. It’s a civic responsibility. And it’s good for you to keep your
voice as an individual out there.
I want to go into politics. Hope to be one of the first elected independents in
Georgia. It’s a very lofty goal, some may even say impossible, but if I do
achieve it, then, you know, it’ll change the status quo for the better,
hopefully. The sense of hope for me is hopefully the future independent movement
in Congress eventually will achieve term limits and corporate lobbying and end
the political division between the Republicans and the Democrats. Maybe then the
middle ground can start to mend the country a little bit.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Aqui B’Nek Wingo
26-year-old union electrician
Aqui B’Nek Wingo in Kennesaw, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
Being black and a union member and not being a Democrat, it looks really, really
weird. I see myself as a Republican in a lot of sense, but mostly I wish we had
a more European style system where we have multiple different parties and
everything, because there are some things Republicans do that I’m not really a
big fan of and there’s some things the Democrats do that I’m a fan of.
Ever since I came out as a Black conservative, I’ve taken a lot of flak from my
extended family members. I take a lot of flak even in my union. Just the other
day, another black person made a racial slur towards me because I’m a
Republican.
I’m not a big fan of free college for all because I’m not going to waste my own
tax dollars on a useless liberal arts degree like gender studies or wherever
these titles they bunch up together so people get degrees. That seems a huge
waste of time and money. If we’re investing more into, let’s say, trade programs
that we can go out to work, that’ll be better because in construction fields
across the country, it’s such a huge shortage of people because the last 30
years there’s been a push for college, college, college. Trade is bad, trade is
bad, trade is bad.
I don’t trust Western media, and I hate saying it like that, but our media,
especially here in the US, is extremely biased. So what I always do is I go to
Sky News. I’ll go to Visegrád 24 on Twitter. There’s Polish news I look at. I
also look at DW, France 24, and sometimes the Japanese, because I want the most
unbiased stuff that I can get, and the best way I can get it is by one looking
at different countries in different news sources outside the country and
multiple sources to gain a broader picture of what I want to see.
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Jefry Capinegro
24-year-old college student
Jefry Capinegro in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I am an immigrant to this country. I was born in Guatemala, and I was adopted
when I was six months old. At the time, the immigration issue was maybe not as
in the headlines as it is today, but as the immigration issue has come to the
forefront.
Here at the University of Georgia, this community, this campus, we’ve seen the
ugly side. Laken Riley took a jog one morning down by the intramural fields on
the south campus, as many people do. But she was in the wrong place at the wrong
time. And it was an illegal immigrant who attacked her, who sexually assaulted
her, and who murdered her. It should have never happened. It happens far too
often. One time was too many. But this community felt the impact.
Oftentimes people perceive the whole immigration argument is very black and
white, very pro-immigration or anti-immigration. Well, certainly I’m
pro-immigration. I myself am an immigrant. But the key word in there that seems
to be somehow lost is ‘illegal’. The Republican Party, the conservative,
whatever you want to call them, we are absolutely pro-immigration. I think we
all understand that this country was founded and built on immigration. We are
very pro-immigration. We’re just not pro-illegal immigration.
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Abigail Ray
22-year-old college student
Abigail Ray in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
My feelings about the upcoming election, I would have to say, are: It’s
nerve-wracking. It’s really nerve-wracking because I feel like we’re on a
trajectory—like heading towards a cliff, like we’re going towards a cliff. We’re
speeding there. And I feel like if we do not secure this election and if, in my
opinion, the Republican candidate, Donald Trump, doesn’t win, I feel like we
will not be able to, you know, turn the wheel and jerk it and save our country.
I feel like we need to save the country from further annihilation. I’ll give you
an example. Flying around Athens, Georgia, for the last three days has been an
airplane toting the banner that says: Abortion pills by mail. And rather than
Kamala Harris of the Democratic Party wanting to advocate for, you know, a
happier, healthier society where people can afford to have children and where
men actually want to impregnate women and want to raise kids and have a happy
family and a good society where kids can thrive, rather than do that, they want
to make it easier for Americans to cut themselves down at the knee. They want to
make it easier to take away our rights. And it just doesn’t make any sense.
Julie Winokur: The abortion pill airplane, is that a Harris campaign
advertisement?
Abigail: No, there’s no name on the on the sign, but it’s blue. And we know that
there were abortion vans outside the Democratic National Convention where they
were literally having people come and get an abortion in a van. And so what you
can detect from that is that they must not want to advocate for pro-American
life. They must not actually love us.
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Chaston Atkins
19-year-old college student, state secretary of the Georgia Association of
College Republicans
Chaston Atkins in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
I’ve always necessarily been critical of President Trump, and I think that I
have not necessarily been on the populist bandwagon.
Because I am a political science major, a lot of my friends are politically
engaged. I would say that maybe 35 to 45 percent of my friends are actually
liberal or moderate or not necessarily conservative. And, you know, that just
comes with the territory of being on a college campus, engaging with people who
have different ideas. And so it just comes to dealing with those people, being
cordial, being kind, knowing that we’re not going to agree on everything, but we
have other things that we can agree on and that we should work on those things
and try not to be hyperpartisan, which I think is detrimental not just to the
individual but to the government and to society as a whole.
I don’t necessarily believe that there is a threat to democracy. I think people
are hyperpartisan, they’re mad, they’re angry, they’re being hostile, and that’s
something that you can say is brought on by politicians who are seen as somewhat
demagogue-like.
I believe that former President Trump has already said that he would step down
in case of him losing the election, but regardless as to whether he said it or
not, I think he ultimately will. I think that everyone learned their lesson from
what happened last time, that you can’t let things get out of control. You can’t
let things become riotous. I don’t think that’ll happen at all this time. I
think that regardless of the outcome, I think we’re going to be in safe hands.
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Laura Kelley
22-year-old college student
Laura Kelley in Athens, GeorgiaEd Kashi/VII/Redux Pictures
Everything is so difficult with politics, in my opinion, because I’m a
conservative and I believe that government should not be super involved in
people’s lives. People should have the freedom to do what they want, and that’s
the best thing about America.
So with books in schools, that’s so difficult. My mom is actually a librarian in
an elementary school and it’s in a northern county in Georgia, so obviously the
population is very conservative. And when this topic came to light the school
board was super against certain books to be put into the schools. So therefore,
my mom had to make those selections. But also it’s like those kids want to read
those books. So it’s just so complicated, like maybe the kids should be able to
buy it outside school if they really want to read those. But if the taxpayer is
saying those books shouldn’t be allowed in schools, they shouldn’t. So I really
don’t know what I believe in that.