Arrest The Real Insurrectionists: Why Minnesota’s Power Class Should Be Held To Account Now

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The Comfortable Lie At The Top

For years, Americans have been told that “insurrection” is a word reserved for unruly crowds and fringe actors. That lie collapses the moment you read the law. Insurrection against the United States is a federal crime under 18 U.S.C. § 2383. It doesn’t require face paint or pitchforks. It requires action—inciting, assisting, or engaging in rebellion against federal authority. When state and local officials openly defy federal law, obstruct its enforcement, and dare Washington to stop them, that’s not protest. That’s power abusing power.

When Leadership Becomes A Shield

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, Lt. Governor Peggy Flanagan, Attorney General Keith Ellison, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, and Police Chief Brian O’Hara are not activists with megaphones. They are the de facto leadership of Minnesota. Their oaths bind them to the Constitution, not to ideology, not to political theater, and not to selective obedience. When officials coordinate policies that actively hinder federal law enforcement, refuse cooperation as a matter of doctrine, and normalize resistance to U.S. authority, they are not “governing differently.” They are daring the federal government to blink.

Insurrection Doesn’t Require Chaos—Just Coordination

The law is blunt. A conspiracy to commit insurrection, often charged as seditious conspiracy under 18 U.S.C. § 2384, exists when two or more people plot to oppose or hinder the U.S. government by force or obstruction. Force is not only physical. Systematic obstruction, deliberate noncompliance, and coordinated defiance count when wielded by officials with institutional power. This is not about policy disagreements. It’s about organized resistance by those entrusted to uphold the law.

Federal Judges Are Not Untouchable Oracles

Judicial review is not judicial immunity. Federal judges are not high priests whose decrees exist beyond criticism. When courts issue orders that effectively reward obstruction or paralyze enforcement of federal law, they deserve public scrutiny and aggressive challenge. Calling out judicial overreach is not an attack on the Constitution—it’s part of maintaining it. Blind obedience to bad rulings is how precedent metastasizes into permanent dysfunction.

Stop Reaching For The Insurrection Act

Invoking the Insurrection Act is the lazy, dangerous option. It militarizes a political failure and punishes citizens for the sins of leadership. The smarter move is surgical accountability. Investigate. Indict if warranted. Arrest if the evidence supports it. The law already provides tools to deal with officials who conspire to obstruct federal authority. Use them. The Constitution was not written to be optional for governors, attorneys general, mayors, or police chiefs.

The Cost Of Letting This Slide

Every time federal authority backs down in the face of state-level defiance, the message is clear: power protects itself. That erosion doesn’t stay contained. It spreads. Today it’s Minnesota. Tomorrow it’s everywhere. The republic cannot survive a patchwork of semi-sovereign fiefdoms run by officials who decide which laws count and which don’t.

Bottom Line

This isn’t about left versus right. It’s about law versus lawlessness in tailored suits. If insurrection means coordinated defiance of U.S. authority, then titles do not confer innocence. Accountability must climb upward, not trickle down. Arrest the leaders if the facts justify it. Challenge judicial overreach aggressively and publicly. Enforce the law without fear or favoritism. Anything less is surrender disguised as restraint.

This is about the supremacy of the federal government over state governments, and any federal judge who fails to respect and uphold the Constitution should be impeached.

We are so screwed.

— Steve

Thank you for visiting with us today. — Steve 

 

“The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” — Marcus Aurelius

“Nullius in verba”– take nobody’s word for it!
“Acta non verba” — actions not words

A smiling man wearing sunglasses, a cap, and casual outdoor clothing outdoors in front of trees, representing citizen journalism and free speech advocacy.

About Me

I have over 40 years of experience in management consulting, spanning finance, technology, media, education, and political data processing. 

From sole proprietorships to Fortune 500 companies, I have turned around companies and managed their decline. All of which gives me a unique perspective on screwing and getting screwed.

Feel free to e-mail me at steve@onecitizenspeaking.com

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