History doesn’t usually announce itself.
It gives warnings first. Subtle ones. The kind people dismiss because they’re inconvenient.
Minnesota is ignoring them.
And folks here in the Hudson Valley shouldn’t pretend that makes it someone else’s problem.
What’s happening out there isn’t some distant policy fight or cable-news food fight. It’s about whether the rule of law still means what it’s supposed to mean — and whether local leaders get to decide which laws count.
Before Fort Sumter, nothing looked like a civil war. States pushed back against federal authority. Local officials reassured their neighbors that this was just politics, just posturing, just principle. Everyone thought they were in control.
Until nobody was.
When state and local leaders decide they won’t cooperate with federal law enforcement because they don’t like the law, that’s not activism — it’s defiance. When officials signal that federal agents are the problem, not criminals, they aren’t calming tensions. They’re daring them to grow.
And that matters here.
Because the same arguments being made in Minnesota get repeated in New York. In county legislatures. In press releases. In carefully worded statements about “standing in solidarity” — always vague, always safe, always avoiding the hard question: Do the laws still apply, even when they’re unpopular?
The Hudson Valley is not immune to this thinking. We’ve seen it in debates over cooperation with federal authorities, in elected officials choosing slogans over public safety, in silence when clarity is required. We like to tell ourselves we’re reasonable, practical, above the chaos.
History doesn’t care.
This isn’t about immigration as an abstract issue. Reasonable people disagree on immigration. This is about something more basic: either laws apply everywhere, or they apply nowhere. You don’t get to enforce the laws you like and ignore the ones that make you uncomfortable.
Once leaders start teaching people that federal authority is illegitimate, the damage is already done. Trust erodes. Lines harden. Every encounter feels like a test of wills instead of a routine act of governance.
That’s how systems crack — not all at once, but locally first.
Nobody in the Hudson Valley wants to be part of some grim chapter in a future history book. But pretending the warning signs are “somewhere else” doesn’t make us wiser. It just makes us later.
History doesn’t shout at first.
It clears its throat.
And that sound?
You can hear it — even from here.

