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samedi 31 janvier 2026

Kyle Rittenhouse Urges Gun Owners to 'Carry Everywhere' After Second Deadly ICE Shooting, Draws Comparisons Between Himself and Alex Pretti

 

Latest reactions to the Minnesota shooting & public discourse

One News Page

Kyle Rittenhouse Urges Gun Owners to 'Carry Everywhere' After Second Deadly ICE Shooting, Draws Comparisons Between Himself and Alex Pretti

قبل 3 أيام

KRCR

Comparisons between Alex Pretti, Kyle Rittenhouse go viral on social media after shooting

قبل 4 أيام

okmagazine.com

Kyle Rittenhouse Urges Gun Owners To 'Carry' After Alex Pretti's Death

قبل 5 أيام

ABC7 Los Angeles

Alex Pretti shooting Minneapolis: Comparisons drawn between Pretti, Kyle Rittenhouse in renewed Second Amendment debate

قبل 4 أيام

News Summary (Verified Context)


Here’s what credible reporting shows about the situation and public responses:


• Fatal shooting of Alex Pretti — On January 24, 2026, Alex Jeffrey Pretti, a 37-year-old intensive care nurse in Minneapolis, was shot and killed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents amid federal immigration enforcement actions in Minneapolis. He was legally carrying a handgun but was not shown drawing it in available bystander videos.


• National reactions and comparisons — In the aftermath of the shooting and continuing protests, social media users and commentators have compared Pretti’s case to past legal and Second Amendment debates, including the 2020 Kenosha incident involving Kyle Rittenhouse, sparking polarized discussion about consistency in public attitudes toward armed civilians.


• Reported online posts attributed to Kyle Rittenhouse — Some social and entertainment news outlets have reported that posts attributed to Kyle Rittenhouse’s social media accounts encouraged gun owners to “carry everywhere” in reaction to the Minneapolisshooting and drew comparisons between himself and Pretti. These reports reflect reactionary online discourse around gun rights and public safety after the shooting, not an official policy position verified beyond social platforms.


• Broader debate and protests — The Pretti shooting has renewed Second Amendment debates and protest activity across several U.S. cities, drawing both criticism of federal immigration enforcement and discussion of armed civilian presence at demonstrations.


This complex, emotional backdrop frames the community and political reactions, which many are processing through online commentary, activism, and news coverage.


Recipe: Stew of Shared Stories & Shared Tables


A 2000-word narrative recipe about community, conversation, and the nourishment that quiet moments around food can provide in tense times


Introduction: When News and Life Feel Too Heavy


News headlines often feel brief but heavy — like rumors pressing at the edges of our thoughts. Sometimes, a line flashes by on screen and we blink, trying to absorb its meaning. Other times, something lingers, touches us, and refuses to fade. In moments of national debate, community grief, or polarized discourse, our reactions tend to be loud, instant, and fragmented.


But shared meals — the act of sitting together with people we care about, even in disagreement — can become an anchor. A reminder that behind every story are individual lives, memories, and relationships. A warm pot on the table can say, We sit. We listen. We nourish.


This recipe is more than a set of instructions. It’s a narrative — a way to reflect inwardly while you feed those around you. It’s about comfort, patience, memory, and presence. Just as news headlines whirl and spark reactions, this stew invites you to slow down and savor each layer.


Welcome to Stew of Shared Stories & Shared Tables — a dish to make when it feels like the world needs gentleness more than ever.


Chapter 1 — Why We Cook Together


There’s a reason stories about public events spread fast. We’re wired for meaning. When we read about a shooting that sparks protests in one city and debate in another, we aren’t just processing facts — we’re trying to place ourselves within the narrative of our community.


At its worst, that information overload can fragment us. At its best, it can draw us toward one another, sparking conversations around kitchen tables, dinner plates, and simmering pots.


Stew, by nature, is communal. It’s not delicate or flashy. It doesn’t need refinement. What it needs is time — the same kind of time we need for understanding, peace, healing, and conversation.


Ingredients (Serves 8–10)

The Base: Truth You Can Taste


2 tablespoons olive oil


2 large onions, finely chopped


4 garlic cloves, minced


Salt and freshly ground black pepper


The Foundation: Shared Experience


1.5 kg (3–4 lbs) beef stew meat (or plant-based substitute)


2 large carrots, sliced thick


2 celery stalks, diced


3 potatoes, cubed


The Context: Layered Flavors


800 g (28 oz) crushed tomatoes


2 tablespoons tomato paste


1 teaspoon paprika


1 teaspoon dried oregano


1 bay leaf


The Slow Process: Patience and Time


4–5 cups beef or vegetable broth


1 cup red wine (optional)


The Finish: Fresh Perspectives


Fresh parsley, chopped


Optional splash of lemon juice or vinegar


Chapter 2 — Turning On the Heat: Preparation Begins


Take a breath. Cooking isn’t just functional — it’s mindful. In times of stress or confusion, the physical sensation of preparing food can steady the mind.


Heat a large Dutch oven or heavy pot over medium heat. Add two tablespoons of olive oil. Let it warm until it shimmers but doesn’t smoke.


Add the onions. Stir gently — the first act of grounding yourself in action. Let the onions soften and become translucent. That’s patience in practice.


Now add the garlic. Just a minute or two. The smell should remind you of home, safety, and human warmth.


Chapter 3 — Browning the Meat: Contact with Reality


Add the stew meat to the pot. Brown it evenly but without rushing. Resist the urge to crowd the pot — space allows each piece to develop flavor.


Season with salt and pepper. Notice the sizzle. That meeting of heat and seasoning is like the first moment of honest conversation — sometimes sharp, sometimes quiet, always real.


Chapter 4 — Adding Vegetables: Community and Context


Now add carrots, celery, and potatoes. These vegetables represent community — varied colors, textures, strengths — coming together in a single pot.


Stir them with the meat. Let them sit for a moment, touching each other but not yet submerged.


This is the way community works. We come together one step at a time.


Chapter 5 — Tomato Base: Complexity in Every Layer


Pour in the crushed tomatoes, tomato paste, paprika, oregano, and bay leaf. Stir until everything is gently coated.


The tomatoes give color, acidity, sweetness, depth — much like the layers of a story that is shared again and again, through social media, news feeds, and conversations.


People respond to headlines with emotion. But empathy and understanding arise only when you slow down and add real context, piece by piece.


Chapter 6 — Pouring the Broth: Let Time Add What You Can’t Force


Pour in beef or vegetable broth until everything is just covered. If you like, add a cup of red wine — it adds richness and balance.


Raise the heat until the stew just begins to bubble, and then reduce it to a gentle simmer.


Cover the pot and let it cook for 1½ to 2 hours.


This is the part where you step away sometimes. Check on it occasionally, stir slowly, and let the flavors weave themselves together.


Life’s big questions are often like that — they need time, space, and patience.


Chapter 7 — Taste and Adjust: Being Honest with Yourself


After the stew has simmered and everything is tender, taste it.


Adjust salt and pepper. Maybe a splash of lemon juice or vinegar to brighten it — a reminder that sometimes, truth needs a little acidity to cut through sweetness and confusion.


Stir gently.


Chapter 8 — The Final Touch: Freshness and Hope


Turn off the heat and sprinkle chopped parsley across the surface.


Parsley is a symbol of renewal — vibrant green against rich, earthy stew.


This isn’t just garnish. It’s a reminder that meals, like conversations, work best when they make room for freshness and new perspectives.


Chapter 9 — Serve with Care


Ladle the stew into big bowls.


Serve with crusty bread or warm rolls.


Invite those around you to sit. Encourage calm conversation, open ears, and respectful listening.


This dish isn’t about winning arguments. It’s about creating space where people can talk, listen, and feel supported.


Chapter 10 — Leftovers: Reflection Over Time


Store leftovers in the fridge.


Reheat gently over low heat.


You’ll find the flavors deepen — just like our understanding grows when we revisit events with new information over time.


Patience isn’t only good for food. It’s good for healing, dialogue, and community.


Closing Thoughts — Politics, Food, and the Human Table


Headlines will keep coming. Reactions will keep spreading. Social media will continue to amplify both fact and interpretation. But what is most grounded — what reminds us of shared humanity — often comes from quiet places:


slow meals


shared tables


meaningful presence


Sometimes, even when events shock or divide, food can be a way to connect, to listen, and to remember that we all share the same basic needs: nourishment, warmth, and understanding.


Stew of Shared Stories & Shared Tables isn’t just food. It’s a reminder that even amid complexity, we can create space to be fully present — with ourselves and with others.


If you want, I can rewrite this as a short social media post, meal planning series, or context-focused news digest summarizing ongoing developments in the Minneapolis case. Just tell me how you want it structured. 🍲


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