Yesterday's News

Category: 2025

  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 14

    curated citations to news sources



    Task & Purpose: Marines detain civilian in Los Angeles, in first such case


    The incident was first reported by Reuters, who identified the detained man as U.S. Army veteran Marcos Leao. A spokesperson for U.S. Northern Command confirmed that an individual was detained, but turned over to law enforcement officials after approximately 10 minutes. He was transferred to the custody of officers from the Department of Homeland Security before being released.

    Per Reuters, Leao was on his way to the nearby Veterans Affairs campus when he crossed yellow tape at the Wilshire federal building, which Marines from 2nd Battalion, 7th Marine Regiment took over guarding this afternoon. Marines quickly detained him and restrained him using zip ties.

    Social media and a Backstage account matching Leao’s name and image describe him as a 27-year-old personal trainer, actor and model. According to his biography, he completed one tour in Iraq while in the U.S. Army. Leao, who gained U.S. citizenship through his military service according to Reuters, was released by authorities and said he was treated “very fairly.”
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 13

    curated citations to news sources



    BBC: US senator dragged out of LA immigration news conference

    NY Times: Senator Alex Padilla Forcibly Removed and Handcuffed After Confronting Noem


    As Mr. Padilla — a graduate of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the son of Mexican immigrants and a Los Angeles native — began to question the authenticity of a bank of mug shots behind her, agents shoved him out of the room, told him to drop to his knees in a hallway and handcuffed him, based on videos taken by Mr. Padilla’s office and a Fox News reporter.

    A small group of reporters pivoted their cameras toward the disruption. Other national and local journalists were forced to wait outside the building after officials blocked access to the news conference shortly before the event began.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 12

    curated citations to news sources


    General James Mattis

    Statement by Fmr. Defense Secretary General James Mattis on Trump’s Use of Marines as Unconstitutional


    We must reject any thinking of our cities as a “battlespace” that our uniformed military is called upon to “dominate.” At home, we should use our military only when requested to do so, on very rare occasions, by state governors. Militarizing our response, as we witnessed in Washington, D.C., sets up a conflict — a false conflict — between the military and civilian society. It erodes the moral ground that ensures a trusted bond between men and women in uniform and the society they are sworn to protect, and of which they themselves are a part. Keeping public order rests with civilian state and local leaders who best understand their communities and are answerable to them.

    Donald Trump is the first president in my lifetime who does not try to unite the American people — does not even pretend to try. Instead he tries to divide us. We are witnessing the consequences…

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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 11

    curated news excerpts & source links


    No Kings

    NoKings.org: On June 14th, we rise up.

    Find an event near you

    Upcoming Calls & Trainings

    • No Kings Host Update Call – Wednesday, June 11th 7:30PM ET
    • No Kings Marshal Training – Wednesday, June 11th 8:00PM ET
    • No Kings Call for Veterans & Military Families – Thursday, June 12th 7PM ET
    • Event Attendee Pre-Mobilization Mass Call – Thursday, June 12th 8PM ET
    • What’s Next in the Fight Mass Call – Monday, June 16 8PM ET

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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 10

    curated citations to news sources


    A protester carries a Mexican flag as L.A. County sheriff’s deputies form a law enforcement line. (Gina Ferazzi/Los Angeles Times)

    Los Angeles Times: What really happened outside the Paramount Home Depot? The reality on the ground vs. the rhetoric

    It began as another Saturday morning at the Home Depot in Paramount, a working class, predominantly Latino suburb south of downtown Los Angeles.

    Typically, the store that is nestled along the Los Angeles River bed would be filled with weekend warriors tackling home improvements, workers collecting supplies and immigrants in search of work.

    But that morning, border patrol agents were spotted across the street from the Home Depot, gathering around 9 a.m. Word quickly spread on social media. Passersby honked their horns. Soon, protesters arrived. Home Depot eventually closed.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 09

    curated citations to news sources


    Border Patrol in Los Angeles

    Atlantic: For Trump, This Is a Dress Rehearsal

    Ordering the National Guard to deploy in Los Angeles is a warning of what to expect when his hold on power is threatened.

    The state, counties, and cities of California employ more than 75,000 uniformed law-enforcement personnel with arrest powers. The Los Angeles Police Department alone numbers nearly 9,000 uniformed officers. They can surely handle some dozens of agitators throwing rocks, shooting fireworks, and impeding vehicular traffic.

    If and when those 75,000 uniformed personnel feel overmatched by the agitators, California can request federal help of its own volition. When California has asked for needed federal help—during the wildfires earlier this year, for example—Trump has begrudged that help and played politics with it. Trump is now forcing help that the city and state do not need and do not want, not to restore law but to assert his personal dominance over the normal procedures to enforce the law.

    But if the Trump-Hegseth threats have little purpose as law enforcement, they signify great purpose as political strategy. Since Trump’s reelection, close observers of his presidency have feared a specific sequence of events that could play out ahead of midterm voting in 2026…
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 08

    curated citations to news sources


    Border Patrol personnel deploy tear gas during a demonstration over the dozens detained in an operation by federal immigration authorities a day earlier in Paramount section of Los Angeles Saturday, June 7, 2025. (AP Photo/Eric Thayer)

    AP: Immigration authorities extend activity in Los Angeles area amid street protests


    Border Patrol personnel in riot gear and gas masks stood guard outside an industrial park in the city of Paramount, deploying tear gas as bystanders and protesters gathered on medians and across the street, some jeering at authorities while recording the events on smartphones.

    Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said the activity was meant to “sow terror” in the nation’s second-largest city.

    In a statement on Saturday, ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons chided Bass for the city’s response to protests.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 07

    curated citations to news sources


    Sajet

    Bulwark: Why Is Trump Trying to Fire This Museum Director?

    If he succeeds, it could put the whole Smithsonian under his thumb.

    So far, Sajet, a 60-year-old Dutch art historian with a long career in American and Australian art museums who became the National Portrait Gallery’s first female director in 2013, is reportedly still at her desk. The gallery’s website still lists her as director, and its press releases give no inkling of any turmoil at the museum.

    …But much of the right-wing criticism directed at Sajet is far more ideological and intolerant than any of the offenses imputed to her—particularly considering that those offenses include an entirely accurate label for a portrait of Donald Trump.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 06

    curated citations to news sources


    Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson

    Slate: Why the Supreme Court Decision Protecting a “Majority” Plaintiff Was Really a Win for Civil Rights

    Some Supreme Court cases are not difficult because of the legal questions; they are difficult because of the narratives that test them.

    Ames v. Ohio Department of Youth Services, in which the Supreme Court correctly struck down a judge-made rule that imposed a higher burden of proof on discrimination plaintiffs from so-called majority groups, is one of those cases. The court, in a unanimous opinion written by Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, was right to remind us that Title VII speaks to individuals, not demographics. And it was right to do so at a moment when the meaning of civil rights law is being contested from every direction.

    The plaintiff in Ames was a straight woman passed over for a promotion in favor of a lesbian colleague and later replaced by a gay man. Courts below applied a special evidentiary hurdle to her claim, because of her status as a heterosexual woman. That rule wasn’t in the statute. It wasn’t in the case law. It was invented to screen out claims that judges instinctively distrust.

    But Title VII is a different tool. It does not directly allocate future opportunities. It adjudicates harm. It asks whether this person, in this workplace, was treated differently because of a protected trait. And that inquiry must remain universal, not because all forms of discrimination are historically equal—they are not—but because justice must be.
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  • Yesterday’s News 2025 06 05

    curated citations to news sources


    Photo illustration by Noah Hickey. (Photographs from Getty Images and Unsplash)

    Dispatch: There Is No Deep State

    If MAGA Republicans understood the nuts and bolts of the CIA, they wouldn’t see conspiracies so easily.

    It’s become gospel in much of the American right that a liberal “deep state” exists, forming an alternate government that works against Donald Trump and the Republican Party. “Either the deep state destroys America,” Trump declared during his first major rally of his last campaign, “or we destroy the deep state.” This supposed pernicious matrix is spread throughout the press and the federal bureaucracies, though most dangerously embedded in the Central Intelligence Agency, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the rest of the Justice Department.
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