New York Post

FIRES BURN BLUE IN MINN.

From Gov. . Tiim Wallz down to the mayors of Miinneapol­liis and St. . Paull , , iineffecti­ive Democratii cl leaders have wreaked as much havoc on the state as the riioters

- WILLIS L. KRUMHOLZ Willis L. Krumholz writes for The Federalist and for Alpha News in Minnesota. This piece was first published by City Journal.

In 2014, shortly after his release from a Texas prison, George Floyd moved to Minnesota for a fresh start. In Minneapoli­s, he worked as a truck driver and as a security guard at the Conga Latin Bistro, where he was known as “Big Floyd.” A few months ago, he was laid off due to the strict stay-at-home order imposed by the state’s Democratic governor, Tim Walz. Floyd looked for work; it’s unclear if he was eligible for coronaviru­s-related unemployed benefits.

Bad habits crept back in. Earlier this week, Floyd, apparently under the influence of an intoxicant, attempted to buy a package of cigarettes from a small shop in south Minneapoli­s with a counterfei­t $20 bill. The store’s owner, Mahmod Abumayaleh, called the police. Recorded footage of the arrest showed Minneapoli­s Police Officer Derek Chauvin with his knee placed squarely on Floyd’s neck, while Floyd begged for mercy. Floyd, who didn’t resist arrest, died soon after.

Chauvin, who was subsequent­ly fired, had 18 prior complaints filed against him with the police department’s internalaf­fairs division. In a bizarre twist, it appears that Chauvin and Floyd were also once co-workers: they worked security at the same nightclub, and possibly knew each other.

The protests that followed were, initially, peaceful. Thousands packed the streets on Wednesday with signs and calls for Chauvin’s arrest. By that night, however, things turned ugly.

“The most shocking thing to me when I was on the ground is realizing just how quickly the emphasis of justice for George Floyd was lost,” observed a reporter for The Daily Caller. “As the evening wore on into the early morning hours, the original crowd of people that was there holding protest signs, doing chants, quickly deteriorat­ed.”

Cars sped around wildly, knowing the police wouldn’t respond. People drank alcohol and smoked marijuana in the streets.

Then rioters began looting and burning buildings, starting in south Minneapoli­s but quickly moving to the moreupscal­e Uptown neighborho­od. Rows of businesses and shops on Uptown’s Lake Street were looted and torched. Emergency call logs recorded dozens of “fire events” and responders were attacked with rocks and other projectile­s.

A $30 million affordable-housing project was burnt, as was a Cub Foods grocery store. A man looting a pawn shop was shot by the store owner, who was quickly arrested.

Thursday night was even worse. The looting continued in Uptown, where thugs broke into the Apple Store. In a plea to be left alone, store owners posted signs saying that the store was minorityow­ned. Windows were smashed and stores looted in the Downtown business district. Looting and rioting spread to St. Paul; between Minneapoli­s and St. Paul, well over 170 stores and shops were looted and destroyed. There were also reports of looting or attempted looting at malls across the Twin Cities.

Most shockingly, rioters took over the Minneapoli­s Police Third Precinct building and set it ablaze. The police — under orders — retreated from their own headquarte­rs, turning it over to the mob, which attempted to blow it up and burn down the neighborho­od.

Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said that the official inaction was motivated by concern for the safety of his officers, the looters and the protesters. After the night of mayhem, a woman was found dead in a car near the riot areas, with signs of trauma — the second person to die as the result of the rioting and looting as of Friday morning.

After making initial comments Wednesday, before the looting started, Gov. Tim Walz hid from the press for almost a day, refusing even to issue a statement. He said that he had mobilized

the National Guard but didn’t formulate a plan until after the second night of looting had begun. In a press conference Friday morning, where Walz announced that he had taken control from local officials, it became apparent that he didn’t even give the order for the National Guard to act until Friday.

Walz blamed his inaction on Minneapoli­s Mayor Jacob Frey. Frey — a Democrat who let left-wing rioters run amok when President Trump came to town — shrugged off responsibi­lity and minimized the damage. Clearly the source of the police stand-down order that allowed his city to burn, Frey kept repeating that the destructio­n was “just brick and mortar.” After he was informed that Walz’s office was taking over, a reporter asked “What’s the plan here? What are we doing?” Frey responded, looking dazed: “With regard to?”

For what it’s worth, every public official responsibl­e for the mayhem is a Democrat — the governor, the mayors of Minneapoli­s and St. Paul, and even Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman, who finally had Chauvin arrested on Friday. And it was current Democrat Sen. Amy Klobuchar, the former county attorney, who failed to prosecute Chauvin for misdeeds in the past.

Democrats collective­ly run a state that has one of the widest racial disparitie­s in the country in terms of education and income.

Of course, the looters and arsonists aren’t indicative of Democrats, or black Americans, or young people, or any other group. They are a small minority of radicals seemingly licensed to terrorize the rest of us. In the affected communitie­s, both white and black Americans took to the street the next morning to clean up.

Aside from the looters, the people who look the worst are Frey, Walz, and their progressiv­e supporters. At the end of the day, they don’t have any skin in the game. Residents of the neighborho­ods being wrecked cowered in fear, with no police in sight. Apartment windows were smashed, and people worried that their homes would be burned. Yet Walz and Frey could afford not to act, because it wasn’t politicall­y convenient and because it wasn’t their businesses, homes and neighborho­ods getting torched. The same goes for many of those from elsewhere who took to Facebook, Twitter, MSNBC, CNN and the blogospher­e to defend or justify the looting. They would think differentl­y if their neighborho­ods and livelihood­s were on the line.

 ??  ?? Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (near right) has deflected blame for failing to stop fiery Minneapoli­s protests onto Mayor Jacob Frey.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz (near right) has deflected blame for failing to stop fiery Minneapoli­s protests onto Mayor Jacob Frey.
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