Unrelated developments / Trump’s ‘startling reversal’ / ‘Brutal flu season’

Unrelated developments. Texas and California National Guard members have been decamping from the Chicago region, returning home as Homeland Security has departed from its Naval Station Great Lakes hangout after a weekslong immigration enforcement effort.
‘The response from Chicago is a bunch of obscenities and No.’ A North Sider talks to the AP about the region’s reaction to the immigration crackdown—pushback now considered “a model for other cities” …
 … including Border Patrol’s latest obsession, Charlotte, North Carolina …
 City Cast recaps “Two months of ‘Midway Blitz.’

‘I had my hands raised in prayer, saying I was nonviolent.’ Two pastors arrested by local cops Friday while trying to pray with detainees at the Broadview immigration facility are asking Gov. Pritzker to investigate what they consider excessive use of force against them.
 The Tribune: The governor’s commission to hold the feds accountable for atrocities committed in Illinois has yet to get serious.

‘I could not be prouder of Chicago’s local journalists.’ Columnist and former Chicago TV news exec Jennifer Schulze talks to some of the retired local reporters who came together to raise the alarm about “state-sponsored terror in Chicago.”
 McKinley Park News’ Justin Kerr defends his publication’s use of words like abduction to describe Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s actions here—and knocks other news organizations that “apply standard crime reporting language … that markets ICE’s actions as legitimate.”

Trump’s ‘startling reversal.’ In a rare about-face, the president last night called on House Republicans to vote for release of all files in the case of his now-dead friend, sex offender Jeffrey Epstein …
 … and then he launched what The Daily Beast calls “a late-night pity party” on his Truth Social platform.
 Politico: “Trump shifted position because he was going to lose anyway” …
 … but AP alumnus Ron Fournier recommends you not “take Trump at face value. He still could:
• Kill the bill in the Senate.
• Veto the bill.
• Order the Justice Department to scrub the files of damning information.”
 USA Today’s Rex Huppke: “I don’t give a damn if Clinton … gets brought down by the release of the Epstein files.”
 The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Will Bunch (gift link, underwritten by Chicago Public Square supporters): “If the evil banality of the world’s most powerful people exposed in the Epstein emails doesn’t cause a revolution, nothing will.”
 Journalism ethics watchdog Margaret Sullivan: “Contrast this to a … New York Times feature story that puts a nostalgic gloss on Epstein’s world … Epstein Emails Reveal a Lost New York.
 Next major anti-Trump protest: Remove the Regime, this weekend in Washington …
 … an event for which the pseudonymously bylined Closer to the Edge has generously drafted Rachel Maddow’s script.
 The Epstein files were central to several Saturday Night Live bits—a sign that critic Bill Carter says shows “new spark—and a willingness to confront Trump.”

‘Trump is in the process of sending millions of dollars in taxpayer money directly to his political allies—and himself.’ Popular Information details a case of “grand theft government.”
 A joint Illinois Answers Project / Trib investigation finds record property tax increases for Chicago homeowners as downtown landlords see their bills fall.
 The Cook County treasurer’s office sees black neighborhoods hit hardest.
 A Trib editorial: “Own a home in Chicago? You should be cheering for commercial property values in the Loop.”
 The Sun-Times: A school board serving three suburbs has rejected calls for an investigation of alleged bribery and extortion.
 A 35-year-old man’s been arrested, accused of holding a staffer for Illinois Senate President Don Harmon at knifepoint during a robbery at Harmon’s Oak Park office Friday morning.

‘A brutal flu season.’ Your Local Epidemiologist explains that the latest flu mutations surfaced right before the season, meaning your vaccination “will likely recognize some, but not all, of this updated virus.”
 Bird flu cases are on the rise among the turkey population, spelling higher prices for Thanksgiving.

‘She kept at that reporting even … as her house and those of her parents and her boss were vandalized.’ John Oliver last night celebrated the work of WBEZ alumnus Lauren Chooljian as he spotlighted Republican defunding of public media …
  … and then he launched an online auction of Last Week Tonight relics—including Russell Crowe’s jockstrap and a giant sculpture of President Lyndon Johnson’s testicles—in a fundraiser for those broadcasters.
 The bidding’s quickly gone astronomical.

Next: Seth Meyers? Echoing what befell Jimmy Kimmel, Trump’s calling for NBC to dump Meyers’ show—and Trump’s Federal Communications Commission chair reposted it.
 The Hollywood Reporter: Trumpophiliac broadcaster Sinclair has its eye on 61 local broadcasters across the country—“consolidation that was simply not possible” before Trump took the White House and the FCC.

Corrections. Friday’s Chicago Public Square had a bad link to Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week and lacked a link to Sun-Times analysis that found Border Patrol poster boy Greg Bovino and his agents have favored Trump and Republicans in their campaign giving.

’Tis the season … Thanks to all the readers whose financial support has kept Square coming through the years—including Kathy O’Brien, Jim Owens, Peter Kuttner, James Madigan, Timothy Baffoe, Alex Riepl Broz, Alison Thomas, Cate Plys, Geoff Anderson, Daniel Honigman, William Bork, Jim Peterson, Timothy Mennel, Jerry D. Mason, Sarah Murphy, Yolanda Bada, Meghan Strubel, Walter Gallas, Dave Tan, Sonya Booth, Michelle Damico, William O’Donnell, Mark Nystuen, Marcie Dosemagen, Eric Reinert, William Lindsey Cochran, Holly Wallace, Paul Kungl, Katherine and Michael Raleigh, Ed Nickow, Carollina Song, Jayson Hansen, Jan Kodner, Ken Davis, Mena Boulanger, John Meissen, Anne Costello, Heather Alger, Peter Fuller, Taylor Kuether, Mike Dessimoz, Ronald Melody, Mark Mueller, Joanne Rosenbush, Maureen and Jerry Peifer and Kaiser, Stephan Benzkofer, Peggy Swanson, Lisa McNulty, Marc Blesoff, Helen Marshall, Judith Galleazzi, Paul Wedeen, Teresa Powell, Leslie Sutphen, Susan Karol, Jon Lederhouse, Lisa Fritz, Sarah Williams, Stephen Brenner, Margaret Brennan, Dave Walker and Annemarie Kill.
 Join their ranks—for as little as $1, just once—and see your name atop tomorrow’s expression of gratitude.
 Mike Braden made this edition better.

‘They’re out of control’ / Ready to act? / Quizzes / Journalism’s bad news

‘They’re out of control.’ That’s former Chicago top cop Garry McCarthy commenting on a WBEZ/Sun-Times analysis that finds federal immigration agents have been involved in eight car chases and used force in at least 76 Chicago-area incidents since Sept. 8.
 Block Club: Chicago’s police district councils want a public airing of how cops have helped or otherwise interacted with federal immigration enforcers.
 Sun-Times analysis finds Border Patrol poster boy Greg Bovino and his agents have favored Donald Trump and Republicans in their campaign giving.
 404 Media: Google’s chosen a side in Trump’s mass deportation effort—“hosting a Customs and Border Protection app that uses facial recognition to identify immigrants, and tells local cops whether to contact ICE about the person.”

Back to school. A Chicago daycare teacher abducted by the feds last week—in the presence of children—has been released.
 CNN: Trump’s administration has arrested thousands of parents and guardians of migrant kids.
 Chicago magazine: Trump’s immigration atrocities have united Chicago and its suburbs as never before.
 Author and columnist Dan Sinker: “Everyone I know is exhausted … from being witness to neighbors, friends and family going missing. … Everyone I know is exhausted. Everyone I know is ready to go another round.”

Ready to act? In a letter to the Tribune (gift link), a who’s who of retired Chicago broadcast news veterans appeals to the public to step up against “a brutal and illegal campaign against fellow Chicagoans, mainly Latinos. … Support groups fighting for due process or who help immigrants during this siege.”
 Axios points out five ways to report agent violations.
 Today at noon, the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois holds a virtual town hall meeting to answer your questions about immigration policy changes affecting the region’s everyday life.

‘It’s raining documents from the Jeffrey Epstein files and … Trump is flailing.’ USA Today’s Chicago-based columnist Rex Huppke sees “a mad MAGA movement facing a reckoning: Is Trump really worth all this? Or is it time for a breakup?
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: “We are watching the ideology of the far-right MAGAs smash against reality, with … Trump and his cronies madly trying to convince voters to believe in their false world rather than the real one.”
 Lyz Lenz’s Dingus of the Week: The Epstein Files. (Link corrected.)
 From the Square mailbag: Reader Barry Koehler takes issue with columnist Charlie Madigan’s contention that those files are useless. “The Epstein case isn’t just about Trump. … There are many, many more rich and powerful people that … need to be exposed and prosecuted if warranted. This must be brought to the brightest sunlight possible for all of America to see. If it isn’t, then rapists, child molesters and groomers will continue on to harm more innocent victims.”
 Sifting through some of them, The Atlantic’s Charlie Warzel comes away feeling like he’s witnessing an episode of HBO’s satire Veep.
 PolitiFact explains: “The Epstein files, Trump and Congress: What happens next?(Cartoon: Jack Ohman.)
 Media writer Tom Jones: Editors are treading carefully on the Epstein story—because “one careless line could spark a lawsuit.”

Guns and pregnancy. New state-by-state research finds that homicide rates among pregnant women rise with the rate of gun ownership.
 One man convicted of randomly punching women in downtown Chicago has been sentenced to seven years in prison—and another’s facing felony charges in two similar incidents.

5/8 is the new 6/8. Past Jeopardy! Tournament of Champions winner and The Conversation’s quizmaster Fritz Holznagel refuses to take it easy on your Chicago Public Square columnist. Can you get more than five right this week?
 How about topping 3/5 on City Cast’s Chicago news quiz?
 You’ll no doubt do better than 5/10 on Justin Kaufmann’s Chicago movie quote quiz.

Journalism’s bad news. Jim Avila, a Glenbard East High School graduate who went on to an award-winning career as a Chicago TV and ABC TV network reporter, is dead at 69.
 George Knue, a pioneering Trib editor who—among other groundbreaking moves in 43 years with the paper, founded ChicagoSports.com—is gone at 74.
 Sun-Times, Crain’s, Chicago Daily Law Bulletin and Tribune veteran—she launched the Trib’s Blue Sky Innovation tech section—Andrea Hanis is dead at 56.
 Longtime Reader theater critic Tony Adler was 71.
 Charlie Madigan mourns the newspaper business’ collapse: “Every good, honest reporter is on a mission. But it wasn’t the same mission as media owners … all about fat profits.”

Chicago’s own New Year’s Rockin’ Eve. ABC says we don’t have to stop celebrating the arrival of 2026 when New York’s broadcast is over: It’s going to air a Central Time version, from here to the rest of the nation.
 Former Chicago TV news anchor Deborah Norville has a new game show.
 R.I.P., “MSNBC”—as of tomorrow.

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