Keith D Johnson
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keithdjohnson.sfba.social.ap.brid.gy
Keith D Johnson
@keithdjohnson.sfba.social.ap.brid.gy
🌈💚 Editorial Guild at Permaculture Design Magazine / Teacher-Designer #Agroecology #EarthRepair🌎
https://www.permaculturedesignmagazine.com/
Born@312ppm CO2 […]

🌉 bridged from ⁂ https://sfba.social/@KeithDJohnson, follow @ap.brid.gy to interact
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
"We are far past the stage of permissiveness with white-supremacist violence inside DHS. We are at the stage of active, enthusiastic commission of it."

Big Journalism doesn't get it, because it doesn't want to. So we have to rely on independent reporting that does […]
Original post on mastodon.social
mastodon.social
January 13, 2026 at 12:25 AM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
DEMAND GoFundMe remove and deny any fundraiser for ICE agent Jonathan Ross for murder. - Sign the Petition! https://c.org/rNFCPQPX8M via @Change

#reneenicolegood #ice #jonathanross #dhs #Minneapolis #kristinoem #norepublicanseveragain #USpol
Sign the Petition
DEMAND GoFundMe remove and deny any fundraiser for ICE agent Jonathan Ross for murder.
www.change.org
January 12, 2026 at 9:46 PM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
Tom Homan: If Democrats Don’t Stop Calling Us Murderers, We’re Just Going To Be Forced To Keep Murdering You.

"You can see how fragile and pathetic these men are. They are so desperate to subjugate and suppress people who disagree with them politically. They seemed to think that once they were […]
Original post on hachyderm.io
hachyderm.io
January 12, 2026 at 8:47 PM
RE: https://mstdn.social/@noelreports/115883924382159600

What a fucking idiot. NOT fine.
mstdn.social
January 13, 2026 at 1:35 AM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
How much money are Republicans making by buying gold and silver right now?

#trumpmustgo #trumpkillsamerica #republicansdidthis #norepublicanseveragain #USpol
January 12, 2026 at 7:23 PM
RE: https://lgbtqia.space/@dianea/115883765860029927

In Search of the Elusive Cursor. Help needed to bust this caper.
lgbtqia.space
January 12, 2026 at 7:53 PM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
CBS = CIA?
"William Paley, the legendary midcentury CBS president, "enjoyed an easy working & social relationship" with CIA Director Allen Dulles, to the point where CBS was "unquestionably the CIA's most valuable broadcasting asset.""
"Spencer Ackerman‬
@attackerman.bsky.social
· 1d
As it […]
Original post on sfba.social
sfba.social
December 31, 2025 at 8:40 PM
RE: https://sfba.social/@KeithDJohnson/115816139903855286

This was story / quote was so on target that it bears repeating.
Bari "Weiss is reciting right-wing shibboleths designed to reassure right-wing social media and the Ellisons that she will stop such journalism from airing. She is 100 percent right that public trust in mainstream media has vanished, but she will only ever reproduce the failures of credulous […]
Original post on sfba.social
sfba.social
January 12, 2026 at 7:49 PM
spore.social
January 12, 2026 at 7:49 PM
The mood in the world that too many USAnians are unaware, unexposed, or oblivious to.
Which is to say, they're not too fond of our idiot king & his court, with many excellent fucking reasons AND they are boycotting the fuck out of us.

To which I say, thank you […]

[Original post on sfba.social]
January 12, 2026 at 7:47 PM
CBS = CIA?
"William Paley, the legendary midcentury CBS president, "enjoyed an easy working & social relationship" with CIA Director Allen Dulles, to the point where CBS was "unquestionably the CIA's most valuable broadcasting asset.""
"Spencer Ackerman‬
@attackerman.bsky.social
· 1d
As it […]
Original post on sfba.social
sfba.social
December 31, 2025 at 8:40 PM
December 31, 2025 at 8:18 PM
said Chuck, massively understating the obvious.
Chuck Schumer
@schumer.senate.gov
"This latest reporting shows Bondi, Blanche, and others at the DOJ have been lying to the American people about the Epstein files since day one.

The less than 40,000 pages that […]

[Original post on sfba.social]
December 31, 2025 at 6:32 PM
Clay Jones' best cartoons of 2025 https://claytoonz.substack.com/p/best-of-2025
Best of 2025
My best cartoons from 2025 chosen by readers (mostly)
claytoonz.substack.com
December 31, 2025 at 6:25 PM
How to convert an economy based on fear to one based on joy by Scott Santens. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fTZ2A_GknZM&t=11s
December 31, 2025 at 6:13 PM
Donald J Pimp?
"Mar-a-Lago wasn't merely a frequent hangout for Epstein; the country club would also send Epstein young women to handle his "massages, manicures and other spa services."

A former Mar-a-Lago employee told the Journal that the "services" went on for years." […]
Original post on sfba.social
sfba.social
December 31, 2025 at 6:03 PM
RE: https://spore.social/@_noelamac_/115657942359480905

It certainly does sum it up well. Thanks.
spore.social
December 4, 2025 at 12:27 AM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
Imagine throwing your career away and going to prison for Pete M'fing Hegseth.
Hegseth is scum for throwing Bradley under the bust. But if he was willing to interpret any ambiguity in Hegseth's instructions in the direction of maximum war criminality, then he deserves to be maximally "scrutinized" and maximally punished. www.nytimes.com/2025/12/02/u...
After Decades in Combat, a SEAL Suddenly Comes Under Scrutiny
www.nytimes.com
December 3, 2025 at 10:12 PM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
Just going to reiterate this, as a supporter of gun rights: Open carry at protests and other public events where there is high potential for conflict is a really bad idea.
Nearly six months later.
December 3, 2025 at 10:16 PM
RE: https://mstdn.social/@DemocracyMattersALot/115657776728842212

Ho lee fork! This is straight up fascist "Big Brother" shit.

"A visit to the White House “Media Offenders” page shows the administration attacking top outlets like CBS News, The Washington Post and CNN over their coverage of the […]
December 3, 2025 at 10:38 PM
It sure-as-shit is NOT about drugs.
Open up a few of these maps to get a sense of some of the reasons for the ongoing crisis in Venezuela. Pay close attention to the names of the corporations already there. https://energy-cg.com/OPEC/Venezuela/Venezuela_OilGas_Industry.html
The Upstream Oil and Gas Industry In Venezuela
Map image showing overview of the Venezuela oil and gas, exploration production industry
energy-cg.com
December 3, 2025 at 9:31 PM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
Of all the guys not worth it, Pete Hegseth is the MOST not worth it!

Dear Troops: Please Don’t Go to Jail for Pete Hegseth
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2025/12/dear-troops-jail-for-pete-hegseth.html

#fuckpetehegseth #firehegseth #petehegseth #republicansownthis #trumpkakistocracy […]
Original post on mstdn.social
mstdn.social
December 3, 2025 at 8:53 PM
Best of 3 segments. https://youtu.be/NLAeAAfyGAk
December 3, 2025 at 9:15 PM
Reposted by Keith D Johnson
Homeland Security Investigations officers search for two individuals who fled the scene after being stopped while selling flowers on the side of the road on Nov. 16, 2025, in Charlotte, N.C. Photo: Ryan Murphy/Getty Images Alain Stephens is an investigative reporter covering gun violence, arms trafficking, and federal law enforcement. On a chilly evening in mid-November, about 135 people gathered along a highway in Boone, North Carolina, a small Appalachian college town not known as a hotbed of leftist protest. They held signs reading “Nazis were just following orders too” and “Time to melt the ICE,” and chanted profane rebukes at Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents rumored to be in the area. “They came here thinking they wouldn’t be bothered,” one Appalachian State University student told The Appalachian at the impromptu rally. “Boone is a small, southern, white, mountain town. We need to let them know they’ll be bothered anywhere they go.” In a region often stereotyped as silently conservative, this flash of defiance was a startling sign that the battle lines of American politics are shifting in unexpected ways. For the past several weeks, the Trump administration has been rolling out a mass deportation campaign of unprecedented scope — one that is now reaching deep into Appalachia. Branded “Operation Charlotte’s Web,” a deployment of hundreds of Department of Homeland Security and Border Patrol agents descended on North Carolina in mid-November, making sweeping arrests in and around Charlotte and into the state’s rural mountain counties. Officials billed the effort as targeting the “worst of the worst” criminal aliens, but the numbers tell a different story: More than 370 people were arrested, only 44 of whom had any prior criminal record, according to DHS. The vast majority were ordinary undocumented residents — people going to work or school, not “violent criminals” — which underscores that the crackdown is less about public safety than meeting political quotas. Indeed, Trump campaigned on conducting the largest deportation operation in U.S. history, vowing to round up 15 to 20 million people (which is more than the estimated 14 million undocumented people living in the U.S.) and pressuring ICE to triple its arrest rates to 3,000 per day. The federal dragnet has already driven ICE arrests to levels not seen in years; immigrants without criminal convictions now make up the largest share of detainees. But the administration is also facing widespread resistance to its policy of indiscriminate arrests and mass deportations, not as the exception, but as the rule — and among everyday, fed-up Americans across the country. ## Most Read Entire Chain of Command Could Be Held Liable for Killing Boat Strike Survivors, Sources Say Nick Turse U.S. Attacked Boat Near Venezuela Multiple Times to Kill Survivors Nick Turse Elon Musk’s Anti-Woke Wikipedia Is Calling Hitler “The Führer” Tekendra Parmar ## **Kicking the Hornets’ Nest** What officials didn’t seem to anticipate was that this crackdown would face fierce pushback not only in liberal hubs with large immigrant communities like Los Angeles or Chicago, but in predominantly white, working-class communities. ## Related ### A County Sheriff’s Election in North Carolina Has Become a Referendum on ICE’s Deportation Machine In Charlotte, a city on the edge of the Blue Ridge foothills, activists scrambled to implement a broad early-warning network to track federal agents. Thousands of local volunteers — many of them outside the city’s political establishment — mobilized to monitor convoys and alert vulnerable families in real time. They patrolled neighborhoods, followed unmarked vehicles, and honked their car horns to warn others when Customs and Border Protection or ICE agents were spotted: acts of quiet guerrilla resistance that Border Patrol’s local commander derided as “cult behavior.” The effort spanned from downtown Charlotte into the rural western counties, with observers checking hotels and Walmart parking lots in mountain towns for staging areas and relaying tips across the region. By the time the sheriff announced the feds had pulled out — and video showed a convoy hightailing it down the highway — locals were already hailing it as a “hornet’s nest” victory, comparing the retreat to British Gen. Charles Cornwallis’s abrupt withdrawal from the area during the Revolutionary War after being met with unexpectedly fierce resistance. ## Related ### Local Cops Aren’t Allowed to Help ICE. Did the Feds Dupe Them Into Raids That Rounded Up Immigrants? Charlotte’s mostly quiet, semi-official resistance — dubbed the “bless your heart” approach for its polite-but-pointed Southern style — was notable. But the open rebellion brewing in coal country may be even more significant. In Harlan County, Kentucky — a storied epicenter of the Appalachian labor wars — residents recently got an alarming preview of the deportation machine’s reach. Back in May, a convoy of black SUVs rolled into the town of Harlan, and armed agents in tactical gear stormed two Mexican restaurants. At first, the operation was framed as a drug bust; Kentucky State Police on the scene told bystanders it was part of an “ongoing drug investigation.” But despite being carried out by DEA agents, it was an immigration raid, and local reporter Jennifer McDaniels noted that of the people arrested and jailed, their cases were listed as “immigration,” without a single drug-related offense. Once the shock wore off, residents were livid. “We took it personal here,” McDaniels, who witnessed the raid, told n+1 magazine. Watching their neighbors being whisked away in an unmarked van — with no real explanation from authorities — rattled this tight-knit community. “I don’t like what [these raids] are doing to our community,” McDaniels continued. “Our local leaders don’t like what it’s doing to our community. … We just really want to know what’s happening, and nobody’s telling us.” It turned out at least 13 people from Harlan were disappeared that day, quietly transferred to a detention center 70 miles away. In Harlan – immortalized in song and history as “Bloody Harlan” for its coal miner uprisings — the sight of government agents snatching low-wage workers off the job struck a deep nerve of betrayal and anger. This is a place that knows what class war looks like, and many residents see shades of it in the federal government’s high-handed raids. ## **Blood in the Hills** For decades, Appalachia has lived with the same lesson carved into the hills like coal seams: When Washington shows up, it’s rarely to help. When the mining ended and industry dried up and when opioids ripped through these communities, the federal response was always too little, too late. When hurricanes and floods drowned eastern North Carolina — Matthew in 2016, Florence in 2018 — thousands of homes sat unrepaired a decade later, with families still sleeping in FEMA trailers long after the rest of the country had moved on. After Helene floods smashed the western mountains in 2024, relief trickled in like rusted pipe water — with just $1.3 billion delivered to address an estimated $60 billion in damage. A year later, survivors were living in tents and sheds waiting for their government to step in. > Help arrives slow; enforcement arrives fast and armored. But the federal government’s priority is a parade of bodies — arrest numbers, detention quotas, a spectacle of force — and so suddenly, these forgotten communities are lit up with floodlights and convoys. Operation Charlotte’s Web saw hundreds of ICE and Border Patrol agents deployed overnight. Help arrives slow; enforcement arrives fast and armored. It only reinforces the oldest mountain wisdom: Never trust the government. It’s a paradoxical arrangement that to many working Appalachians is simply untenable. “It’s a rural area with low crime,” one organizer in Boone pointed out, calling ICE’s authoritarian sweep “disgusting and inhumane.” The organizer also said, “That’s the number one conservative tactic: being tough on crime even when that crime doesn’t exist.” In other words, the narrative about dangerous criminals doesn’t match what people are actually seeing as their friends, classmates, and co-workers are being carted off. Read Our Complete Coverage ## The War on Immigrants To be sure, public opinion in Appalachia isn’t monolithic; plenty of folks still cheer any crackdown on “illegals” as a restoration of law and order. But the growing resistance in these communities suggests a profound shift: Class solidarity is beginning to trouble the traditional partisan lines. The old playbook of stoking rural white fears about immigrants begins to lose its potency when those same immigrants have become neighbors, co-workers, or fellow parishioners — and when federal agents descend like an occupying army, indiscriminately disrupting everyone’s lives. “Abducting a so-called violent gang member at their place of employment is a contradiction,” a local Boone resident scoffed. It doesn’t take a Marxist to see the underlying reality: This isn’t about protecting rural communities, it’s about using them for political ends. For many who’ve been told they’re the “forgotten America,” the only time Washington remembers them is to enlist them as pawns — or body counts — in someone else’s culture war. And increasingly, they are saying no. Appalachia has a long, if overlooked, tradition of rebellion from below. A century ago, West Virginia coal miners fought the largest armed labor uprising in U.S. history at Blair Mountain, where thousands of impoverished workers (immigrants and native-born alike) took up arms together against corrupt coal barons. In the 1960s, poor white migrants from Appalachia’s hills living in Chicago formed the Young Patriots Organization: Confederate-flag-wearing “hillbillies” who shocked the establishment by allying with the Black Panthers and Young Lords in a multiracial fight against police brutality and poverty. That spirit of solidarity across color lines, born of shared class struggle, is reappearing in today’s mountain towns. You can see it in the way Charlotte activists borrowed tactics from Chicago’s immigrant rights movement, setting up rapid-response networks and legal support. You can see it in how North Carolina organizers are sharing resistance blueprints with communities in Louisiana and Mississippi ahead of “Swamp Sweep,” the next phase of Trump’s crackdown, slated to deploy as many 250 agents to the Gulf South on December 1 with the goal of arresting 5,000 people. And you can certainly see it each time a rural Southern church offers protection to an undocumented family, or when local volunteers protest Border Patrol outside their hotels. ## We’re independent of corporate interests — and powered by members. Join us. Become a member ## Join Our Newsletter Thank You For Joining! Original reporting. Fearless journalism. Delivered to you. Will you take the next step to support our independent journalism by becoming a member of The Intercept? I'm in Become a member By signing up, I agree to receive emails from The Intercept and to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. ## Join Our Newsletter ## Original reporting. Fearless journalism. Delivered to you. I'm in ## **No Southern Comfort for Feds** This all puts the Trump administration — and any future administration tempted to wage war on Trump-labeled “sanctuary cities” — in an uncomfortable position. It was easy enough for politicians to paint resistance to immigration raids as the province of big-city liberals or communities of color. But what happens when predominantly white, working-class towns start throwing sand in the gears of the deportation machine? In North Carolina, activists note that their state is not Illinois — the partisan landscape is different, and authorities have been cautious — but ordinary people are still finding creative ways to fight back. They are finding common cause with those they were told to blame for their economic woes. In doing so, they threaten to upend the narrative that Appalachia — and perhaps the rest of working-class, grit-ridden, forgotten America — will forever serve as obedient foot soldiers for someone else’s crusade. The resistance unfolding now in places like Boone and Harlan is not noise — it’s a signal. It suggests that America’s political fault lines are shifting beneath our feet. The coming deportation raids were supposed to be a mop-up operation executed in the heart of “real America,” far from the sanctuary cities that have defied Trump. Instead, they are turning into a slog, met with a thousand cuts of small-town rebellions. This is hardly the passive or supportive response that hard-liners in Washington might have expected from the red-state USA. On the contrary, as the enforcement regime trickles out into broader white America, it is encountering the same unruly spirit that has long defined its deepest hills, valleys, and backwoods. The message to Washington is clear: If you thought Appalachia would applaud or simply acquiesce while you turn their hometowns into staging grounds for mass round-ups, bless your heart. Share * Copy link * Share on Facebook * Share on Bluesky * Share on X * Share on LinkedIn * Share on WhatsApp _IT’S EVEN WORSE THAN WE THOUGHT._ What we’re seeing right now from Donald Trump is a full-on authoritarian takeover of the U.S. government. This is not hyperbole. Court orders are being ignored. MAGA loyalists have been put in charge of the military and federal law enforcement agencies. The Department of Government Efficiency has stripped Congress of its power of the purse. News outlets that challenge Trump have been banished or put under investigation. Yet far too many are still covering Trump’s assault on democracy like politics as usual, with flattering headlines describing Trump as “unconventional,” “testing the boundaries,” and “aggressively flexing power.” The Intercept has long covered authoritarian governments, billionaire oligarchs, and backsliding democracies around the world. We understand the challenge we face in Trump and the vital importance of press freedom in defending democracy. ## We’re independent of corporate interests. Will you help us? $15 $25 $50 $100 $5 $8 $10 $15 One Time Monthly Donate ## Contact the author: Alain Stephens @alainstephens on X ## Related ### Kat Abughazaleh on the Right to Protest ### Trump “National Police Force” Built on ICE Partnerships With Local Agencies Like… Wildlife Commissions? ### Courts Block Meta From Sharing Anti-ICE Activists’ Instagram Account Info With Feds ### What to Do When You See ICE in Your Neighborhood ## Latest Stories Collateral Damage ### Episode Eight: Legalized Takings Collateral Damage - 6:00 am Donald Scott was killed in his home by an ad hoc team of raiding cops who were looking for marijuana — but the larger prize may have been his 200-acre Malibu ranch. ### Department of War Disputes Second Attack on Boat Strike Survivors Was a “Double-Tap” Nick Turse - Dec. 2 “Quibbling over the semantics of ‘double-tap’ doesn’t change the reality that the strike was a summary execution of men clinging to the remains of a boat.” ### Bipartisan House Resolution Seeks to Block Trump War With Venezuela Matt Sledge - Dec. 2 The war powers legislation would prohibit Trump from launching “hostilities within or against Venezuela” without congressional approval. Join The Conversation
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December 3, 2025 at 8:45 PM