Nationwide protests this weekend sparked by the deaths of Minnesota residents


This weekend's series of protests were inspired by demonstrations in the Minnesota and fueled by outrage over recent fatal shootings by federal agents.

No Kings protest in Urbana

Photo: Sentinel/Clark Brooks

Demonstrators elicited honks from drivers passing them on Vine Street during last October's No Kings protest in Urbana. No local demonstrations are planned for this weekend's two protest over the recent deaths of Alex Pretti, Renée Good, Silverio Villegas González and Keith Porter Jr. perpetrated by ICE agents.

URBANA - A wave of coordinated protests will sweep across the country this week as organizers push for a nationwide shutdown Friday, followed by demonstrations at federal facilities Saturday. The twin actions, organized by a coalition of immigrant rights groups, labor organizations and student associations is calling for a nationwide protest this week, aim to challenge immigration enforcement practices following the fatal shootings of four people by federal agents in Minneapolis.

Urging people to walk out of work and school and halt consumer spending as part of a coordinated challenge to federal immigration enforcement, a “National Shutdown,” is scheduled for Friday, Jan. 30, and calls for “no school, no work and no shopping,” according to organizers. A second day of demonstrations is planned for Saturday, Jan. 31, when protesters are expected to gather outside Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention centers, ICE field offices, congressional offices and businesses connected to immigration enforcement under the banner “ICE Out of Everywhere.”

Organizers say the protests were inspired by demonstrations in the Twin Cities and fueled by outrage over recent fatal shootings involving federal agents, including the deaths of Alex Pretti, Renée Good, Silverio Villegas González and Keith Porter Jr. Protest leaders argue those incidents highlight what they describe as increasingly aggressive immigration enforcement tactics and a broader erosion of civil liberties.

“The people of the Twin Cities have shown the way for the whole country,” organizers wrote on the NationalShutdown.us website. “To stop ICE’s reign of terror, we need to shut it down.”

Organizers framed the moment as a turning point. Calls for participation have spread across social media and online forums, including local subreddits promoting solidarity actions and encouraging residents to refrain from work, school and shopping on Friday. In one post shared on a California-based forum, participants cited Pretti as a “union brother” and described the planned shutdown as a response to what they called government overreach.

Nearly two dozen organizations have formally endorsed the National Shutdown, including the Somali Student Association, Ethiopian Student Association and Black Student Union at the University of Minnesota, the Graduate Labor Union at the University of Minnesota, the Council on American-Islamic Relations, IFCO Pastors for Peace and the ANSWER Coalition. Organizers say hundreds of additional groups, including state and local chapters of Black Lives Matter Grassroots, student organizations and faith-based groups, have expressed support.

The people of Minneapolis "have shown the way for the whole country," according to the NationalShutdown.us website, adding that to halt what they describe as "ICE's reign of terror," Americans must "shut it down."

On Saturday, the advocacy group 50501 is coordinating the “ICE Out of Everywhere” national day of action, which aims to pressure lawmakers to block Department of Homeland Security funding and pursue legislation to dismantle ICE and DHS. The group is also urging local businesses, hotels and service providers to refuse service to ICE, Customs and Border Protection and DHS agents, and is calling for boycotts of hotels that house federal immigration personnel during enforcement operations.

“Elected officials need to publicly take a stand,” 50501 said in a statement, calling for legislation that would permanently remove ICE from communities and reduce federal funding for immigration enforcement agencies.

Organizers say details about local demonstrations and participation opportunities are available at NationalShutdown.us, with additional resources for Saturday’s actions provided through the “ICE Out of Everywhere” campaign.




AI innovation causes inequity concerns for Illinois' Black residents


Affordable access to education is critical for ensuring Black workers can participate in the AI-driven workforce. While the full scope of AI-related job displacement remains unclear, the environmental and health effects of data centers are already evident.

Photo: Emiliano Vittoriosi/Unsplash


by Judith Ruiz-Branch
Public News Service


As the nation prepares to honor the legacy of Martin Luther King Jr., concerns about the growth of artificial intelligence and its impact on communities of color is increasing.

Experts say AI will disproportionately affect Black workers through displacement and the environmental burden of data centers, which are more likely to be located in marginalized communities.

Keisha Bross, director of the NAACP's Center for Opportunity, Race and Justice, said Black workers are overrepresented in entry-level jobs, as well as manufacturing and logistics work.

"The best thing that these companies can do is really provide educational tools and resources because we don't want people displaced from the workforce," she said. "We want people to be back in the workforce but also earning a wage that's livable."

Bross underscored that it's still unclear exactly where and how AI will displace workers. However, the impact of data centers is more clear; they've already been linked to health impacts for people in communities near them. Illinois is a top destination for data centers, estimated to have nearly 200 across the state.

Bross said Black communities already face higher unemployment rates. Black unemployment was at 7.5% in December, compared with about 4.5% for the overall population. To ensure Black workers have a place in the new AI economy, she said, workers need affordable access to education.

"We have to embrace technology and we have embrace artificial intelligence, but we also have to have oversight," she said, "and we have to have governance in order to make sure that it's not discriminatory, and that we're not implementing technologies that are going to hurt populations of people."

Bross said the Trump administration's fight against diversity, equity and inclusion has hurt people of color, but added that it's important for companies to commit to diverse hiring practices because representation matters and a diverse workforce will make their companies more successful in the long run.





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