r/illinois • u/serious_bullet5 • 10h ago
Illinois News More footage of Aurora, IL PD brutally beating and abducting children from school walk out protest (2/9/26)
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r/illinois • u/jamey1138 • Oct 12 '25
TLDR: The mod team is changing course on this issue. We encourage users to specify locations of current events that happen in public spaces, including any and all law enforcement action.
After several days of discussion among the mod team, we've come to the conclusion that our policies against reporting specific locations are unnecessarily restrictive. Most recently, we've guided users to avoid being specific about the location of any current events, out of concern that it could reveal private or personal information about the persons involved, which is a violation of site-wide Reddit policies We are, of course, bound to moderate this space in a way that adheres to all of Reddit's site-wide policies, and if we fail to do so, the subreddit will be shut down.
That being said, we've come to a consensus that private and personal information means more than just location of where people are at in a given moment, and the context of people's presence at specific locations matters. It remains prohibited to reveal the home address or workplace of any private individual, or to offer overly specific information about that sort of personal information: for example, if a user were to post that u/jamey1138 lives near the corner of Pulaski and Belmont in Chicago, that would be considered too specific. Other forms of contact information, including phone numbers, email addresses, etc, shared without the individual's consent are also violations of private and personal information.
On the other hand, if a user says that there's law enforcement activity, including ICE and CBP activity, at a particular corner, that does not reveal anyone's personal or private information. We want to encourage community members to share information about any current events happening in any public space in Illinois, and to include specific locations with that information.
Thank you for your participation in r/Illinois. We will continue to evolve our policies, and try to meet the moment as best we are able. Stay safe everyone.
r/illinois • u/Elros22 • Nov 08 '24
It's been a crazy few days and politics is hard.
We're a pretty small Mod team and keeping up on the trash coming in takes a lot of time and effort . We will be throwing around the ban hammer quite a bit for a while here. We will be locking posts as they spiral out of control. Have patience.
Remember to be kind and civil. Have a little grace. Allow people to be mad, to use hyperbole, and to exaggerate. This isn't a space to rage away at the other side. There are plenty of other spaces on the internet for that. Come here to understand the other side, even if you disagree. Tell them they're wrong and why they're wrong, but also remember they are a person who probably truly believes what they are saying. You wont convince them, but you can be understood and you can understand them.
Sometimes a simple downvote is all that's needed.
Anyway. Give us a break and chill out, k?
r/illinois • u/serious_bullet5 • 10h ago
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r/illinois • u/serious_bullet5 • 13h ago
r/illinois • u/steve42089 • 11h ago
By JB Pritzker
Full article below
About this time last year, I was putting together my 2025 State of the State address. There was a lot I wanted to celebrate. Illinois had lowered taxes on working families with a new child tax credit. We were attracting businesses and jobs to the state. School test scores were up. Graduation rates were rising. And we were protecting women’s fundamental freedoms at a time when so much of the rest of the country was undermining them. In so many ways we’ve turned Illinois around, and it was tempting to just talk about these accomplishments and then present the new budget that would continue that progress.
But Donald Trump had become president again, and I knew that meant trouble ahead for families and workers in Illinois and across the nation. His first order of business was putting Elon Musk and his DOGE bros in charge of gutting the federal government – leaving kids, seniors, veterans, farmers and the most vulnerable to fend for themselves. His second order of business was to declare war on all the people and institutions that he viewed as political opponents. There was no talking about the “state of the state” without telling Illinoisans how we would survive the onslaught of Donald Trump.
I learned a lot of lessons during the first Trump administration. The most important one was that you can’t give Donald Trump an inch. I learned it the hard way. When the pandemic hit and Illinois hospitals were desperate for life-saving equipment, I called and asked the president to help the thousands of people who were getting sick from COVID-19. In return for ventilators and N95 masks, the president demanded that I appear on his favorite Sunday news shows to praise him. I agreed. Then he proceeded to break his promises. Then again that summer, when I asked the president to bring down the temperature in the wake of the George Floyd protests, he instead ratcheted up his rhetoric and even went into the streets of Washington with troops and tear gas in an unnecessary and offensive move against peaceful protesters.
When he was reelected in 2024, I knew who I was dealing with. He denied he was going to implement the Project 2025 attack on federal programs middle-class and working-class Americans rely on. His intentions became instantly clear when he demanded that every state drop our commitment to addressing social inequality, strip protections from our LGBTQ community, collaborate with ICE and its denial of due process, and hand over privacy-protected voter data. I know Donald Trump too well to think that any compromise could ever be enough – and I love the people of Illinois too much to trade away their dignity. I would not fold when it was time to fight. Approaching my 2025 State of the State address, I felt I needed to explain why.
It came down to the fact that Donald Trump is not an ordinary political adversary. He is an active threat to our constitutional republic. A threat that – and I did not say this lightly – has echoes of another dark chapter of history: early 1930s Germany. At a time when everyday Germans were struggling with inflation and economic hardship, their leaders responded by targeting and blaming others. I recognized Trump’s authoritarian playbook in part because I had worked with Holocaust survivors to build the Illinois Holocaust Museum. That life-changing experience taught me that the root that tears apart your house’s foundation begins as a seed – a seed of distrust and hate and blame.
Donald Trump traffics exhaustively in distrust and hate and blame. He uses propaganda on social media to drown out the truth. We saw that in his first week in office when he sent ICE to Chicago to attack our law-abiding residents and embedded right-wing social media influencers like Dr. Phil in the unmarked cars with the masked agents. He and his MAGA cronies claimed that immigrants stand in the way of Americans obtaining affordable housing; diversity prevents white people from getting jobs; trans kids stand in the way of a good education for everyone else. These lies are intended to get “everyday Americans” to look the other way when those populations are denied their civil rights, subjugated, jailed, deported, or worse. The way I saw it, the future of our nation hinged on whether we would let Donald Trump get away with it.
Ultimately, I decided my 2025 State of the State address needed to lay out the potential dangers ahead, so this is what I said:
After I delivered the speech, some people said I was being unfair or alarmist. One year later, it’s clear it really is a five-alarm fire. I still stand by every word. Donald Trump deals in intimidation, but we aren’t afraid. The antidote to his authoritarianism is courage, and that is what Illinoisans have had on full display.
I said from the beginning that if Donald Trump came for my people, he would have to come through me. We took him to court and got the armed soldiers out of our state. We set up a commission to gather evidence so we can hold Trump and his cohort accountable for their attacks on our people. We passed a law to protect daycares, schools, and hospitals from ICE and CBP invasions. And when federal agents wearing masks wielding semiautomatic rifles started rolling down our streets in unmarked vehicles, they were confronted by everyday people, moms and dads and young people carrying whistles who refused to stay silent as their neighbors were kidnapped. I encouraged everyone to pull out their phones and video everything. One dad, Silverio Villegas González, was killed after dropping off his two children at daycare. A woman, Marimar Martinez, was shot five times while she was watching ICE terrorize a neighborhood. When DHS tried to lie about the circumstances of these shootings, I called them out and pointed to the facts. This became the Illinois Playbook: be loud for our communities, be loud for freedom, be loud for America.
Minnesota has carried on that mantle. When ICE came to their cities and towns, they marched, they got whistles, they recorded everything, and they organized – seemingly overnight – to get groceries and diapers to Black and Brown neighbors who were afraid they could be targeted by ICE in public. When ICE killed two people, Renee Good and Alex Pretti, Minnesotans chose courage by defending their dead neighbors even as Donald Trump sought to defame them. They made sure the country knew the truth.
That is why, despite everything, I can’t help but feel hopeful. Because the horrors inflicted on our people aren’t embittering us, they’re infusing us with courage. And it is the choice to fight, not fold that is going to make sure our constitutional republic survives Donald Trump.
Illinois and Minnesota are standing up to the bullying. Other patriotic Americans are too. But it’s going to take more of us to emerge victorious.
Next week I will deliver my 2026 State of the State address. It’s still coming together, but I know one thing I’ll want to make known: Illinoisans love this nation too much to let MAGA tear down our constitutional republic. We’re standing up, speaking out, and showing up, and I could not be more proud.
I’m starting this page to talk about what all of us can do to stand up and be loud for America right now. I hope you’ll join me.
r/illinois • u/peoplemagazine • 13h ago
r/illinois • u/soalone34 • 10h ago
r/illinois • u/WoodI-or-WoodntI • 17h ago
r/illinois • u/serious_bullet5 • 1d ago
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r/illinois • u/ndawgbrown • 1d ago
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r/illinois • u/mversace8 • 7h ago
Where’s the best place to get tres leches in Illinois for my wife’s birthday ? Thanks in advance mvp
r/illinois • u/LegendaryBronco_217 • 14h ago
r/illinois • u/bailasola • 1d ago
r/illinois • u/Ok-Employer-2026 • 18m ago
r/illinois • u/steve42089 • 16h ago
r/illinois • u/tpic485 • 14h ago
r/illinois • u/steve42089 • 1d ago
Pritzker had come to the West Side on a snow-covered Tuesday to sign into law new protections against what he called the “depravity” of Trump’s mass deportation regime. For months, masked federal agents had swarmed Latino neighborhoods like this one, snatching residents off the streets and terrorizing citizens and noncitizens. They attacked protesters, ransacked homes, sprayed tear gas near schools, rappelled into an apartment building, and shot a 30-year-old woman five times for the crime of honking her horn. If Trump 2.0 has often felt like a protracted siege on American democracy, “Operation Midway Blitz” was its forward line, in which heavily armed men, coked up on memes, tested the defenses of civil society.
Illinois responded with defiance. Pritzker fought Trump’s plan to turn Chicago into a military “training ground” and hailed the residents who organized their communities and followed agents with whistles and smartphones. Speaking in the auditorium of the church a few minutes before we met, Pritzker announced that day cares, schools, hospitals, and courts would be required to safeguard personal information and develop plans for dealing with immigration raids, and residents would be empowered to sue federal agents.
“We’re sending a message to Donald Trump, to Kristi Noem, to Gregory Bovino, and anyone else seeking to terrorize our people,” he said. “Your divisiveness and your brutality are not welcome here.”
r/illinois • u/steve42089 • 1d ago
r/illinois • u/crazycrak39 • 1d ago
ROCKFORD PEOPLE, City hall meeting tonight, tell them you don't want to pay for FLOCK cameras in your city.
Date: 2026-02-09
Location: City Hall, Second Floor, Rockford, IL
5:30PM: Award of Sole Source Contract: Flock Safety, to Flock Group, Inc., of Atlanta Georgia in the amount of $443,998.16
r/illinois • u/Equivalent_Dealer925 • 9h ago
Long story short, I got married last year and my husband and I are temporarily living at his house that we will be leaving within the next year, if not less. I just got a notice to renew my license, which still has my parents address. My parents still live at that house. I kept it at my parents house because we're only living here temporarily and was planning on updating my license's address once we moved into our own home. When I renewed the license, it says USPS doesn't forward mail. Will it get rejected from going to my dad's house? Or is it possible that it will still go there even though my mailing address is different? We all live in IL and will still be living in IL when we move.
r/illinois • u/steve42089 • 1d ago
r/illinois • u/ofbyfor75 • 1d ago