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Priorities And Loyalties

AP Photo/Alex Brandon

This past Monday was Memorial Day - the day when most of America honors those who died fighting to secure and defend our democracy and our liberty.  

One problem:  it fell on May 25.  And just as all history seems to have begun and ended on January 6 for national Democrats, May 25 is also the highest of holy days for Minnesota Democrats - the anniversary of the death of George Floyd.  

It's a day when we've come to expect the usual performative displays from Minnesota Democrat politicians - in this case, Minneapolis's mayor, Jacob Frey...:

Frey says there are lessons to be learned:

It forced Minneapolis to confront painful truths about race, policing, inequity, and trust — and demanded hard conversations and accountability.

Since Floyd’s murder, our city has been challenged not just to say we’ve changed, but to prove it.

One lesson we learned was that Frey missed his true career - he performs like a community theater performer or soccer player:

Although he was hardly alone during those unmoored days after the riots that swept America's cities, most notably Minneapolis:

Of course, Frey is the mayor of one of the most "progressive"-sodden cities in the country.  He has to do a certain amount of play-acting to keep the crazies from defecting to the even crazier Democrat Socialists of America candidates waiting in the wings.  

But remember - it was Memorial Day.   Now, we expect the National Democrats to be squishy on people who died defending a country and experiment many of them just don't believe in anymore.  

But one might have thought Tim Walz was a little different.  He governs a very purple state, his party is facing an election this fall, and he was originally elected by wrapping himself in his 20+ years of service in the National Guard.   Which is, itself, subject to some controversy, which might tend to make one think he wouldn't do too much to cheese off veterans on behalf of his party. 

One might think wrong.  

Sure enough, the Governor was scheduled to appear at Fort Snelling - Minnesota's primary national military cemetery - for the customary appearance. 

But other events apparently took priority:

Now, it's not like Fort Snelling and George Floyd Square are that far apart; maybe 3-4 miles separate Minnesota's primary resting place for our service people, and Minnesota progressivism's highest holy shrine.  

But he made his choice.  

And for those of you who thought Walz's prancing and jazz hands during his 2024 campaign stint with Kamala Harris was a humiliation for the entire state - well, strap in:

But what about the ceremony at Fort Snelling?

Minnesota's Senators Klobuchar and Smith spoke; the ceremony appeared to be completely Walz-free:

I'll be looking for thoughts from veterans on the air this weekend.  

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