Why Minnesota Matters More Than Iran for America's Future
Opinion by Thomas Friedman, NY TImes
....All the big existential challenges humanity faces today are planetary in scale how to manage A.I., climate change, nuclear proliferation, pandemics and global migrations with so many people on the move. All of these challenges require planetary-scale collaboration. Either we figure that out soon or were heading for a really bad century together.
In Minnesota, I heard a talk by Ian Bassin, a founder and the executive director of Protect Democracy, a nonprofit that works to ensure election integrity. In a follow-up conversation, he told me a story that perfectly captured the power, peril and importance of what happened here.
A lifelong Minnesotan shared with me two lessons shed learned watching the recent federal assault on her hometown, said Bassin. The first was her jarring realization that there is no net below us. She had spent her life assuming that somewhere beneath the visible architecture of laws and institutions there existed a backstop guardrails that would prevent a fall into the unthinkable. Watching masked federal agents abduct her neighbors and shoot them with impunity forced her to reckon with the reality that no such net exists.
But the other lesson she drew from Minnesota, said Bassin, was that in the absence of solid safeguards, watching ordinary citizens show up for one another offering shelter, standing watch, car-pooling an endangered familys kids to school gave her a different kind of confidence. Not that formal checks will save us, but that solidarity remains a renewable resource that we are and can be our own net.
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/03/15/opinion/columnists/minneapolis-ice-trump-neighbor.html?unlocked_article_code=1.TlA.aSb9.iRWP5Z87J7Bx&smid=url-share