TLDR: In this Minneapolis address delivered 48 hours before activist Alex Pretti's murder, Valarie Kaur articulates a vision of "revolutionary love" as an organizing principle for resistance to state brutality against immigrants and communities of color. Rather than abstract idealism, she describes how ordinary Minnesotans have built functioning underground civil societies—teaching children in hidden classrooms, delivering groceries to families in hiding, providing midwifery outside hospitals—forging deep relationships across lines of difference. Kaur frames this movement not as mere resistance but as the active practice of an alternate world where no one is a stranger and collective care transcends the threat of state violence.
What Does Revolutionary Love Actually Mean?
Kaur defines revolutionary love with precision: "the choice to see no stranger, to leave no one outside of our circle of care, to risk ourselves for one another, to show up with whistles when they have guns" (2:00). This is not sentiment or spiritual bypassing. It is a tactical and relational stance toward power. Revolutionary love operates simultaneously as both an ethical framework and an organizing strategy. It rejects the logic that those who harm us are enemies to be defeated in kind, instead insisting that all people—even ICE agents—remain within a circle of moral consideration.
What makes Kaur's framing distinctive is its grounding in the lived networks already operating in Minneapolis. She does not present revolutionary love as a future aspiration but as something people are actively practicing in the space between them. When she tells ICE agents "you have a choice" and extends "one hand blocking your actions and the other with hope," she is not denying the reality of state violence—she witnessed it firsthand—but refusing to let that violence define the limits of what is possible (3:40).
How Are Communities Building Underground Care Networks?
Kaur's observations of Minneapolis reveal a functioning alternative infrastructure erected in response to state failure and violence. She lists concrete examples: "teaching children in hybrid underground classrooms because schools are not safe; delivering groceries and clothes for families and hiding because stores are not safe; providing midwifery to mamas and babies because hospitals are not safe" (0:49–1:00). These are not metaphorical acts. They represent the practical organization of survival outside and against state institutions.
One moment captures the scale and intimacy of this care work: "This morning, we heard that an attendee was late because they were delivering breast milk to a three-month-old whose mother was abducted" (1:03). In a single sentence, Kaur shows how networks of care operate with both urgency and tenderness, linking the emotional bonds between strangers to the material conditions of survival.
What enabled this rapid organization was not spontaneous goodwill but relationship. Kaur emphasizes that "you could do it because your relationships were already deep, forged in the wake of the murders of Jamar Clark and Philando Castile and George Floyd. Forged in the fight for queer rights and equality, forged in protecting our earth and climate. Forged in solidarity with the Dakota peoples who survive genocide on this soil" (1:23–1:40). The infrastructure of care is built on years of collective struggle across distinct movements. Relationship is the prerequisite; community care is the practice.
Why Does Kaur Say "Our Dream Is More Powerful Than Your Nightmare"?
This statement functions as both a declaration and a strategic insight. Kaur argues that the movement's power lies not in matching the force of the state but in the coherence and scale of an alternate vision: "We are practicing the world we want in the space between us. We are living into the dream of a world that is green and whole, safe and free" (2:32–2:43). In other words, the movement's power is not primarily in what it opposes but in what it actively creates.
The "dream" and "nightmare" are not abstract opposites; they describe competing versions of social reality. The nightmare is domination, the brief satisfaction of control through violence. The dream is a world in which "I see your child as mine and you see mine as yours" (2:48)—a reordering of kinship and obligation that cuts across all existing boundaries. Which vision is more powerful? Kaur's argument, tested by decades of social movements, is that the dream—precisely because it is generative, inclusive, and grounded in material care—has more staying power than the nightmare, which requires constant coercion.
What Does It Mean to Say "The More You Come After Us, the More We Will Grow"?
Kaur invokes a logic of movement growth that contradicts the state's apparent strategy of intimidation through violence. She states directly: "The more you come after us, the more we will grow" (2:25). This is not hope expressed against evidence; it is an observable pattern from history. Repression can scatter movements, but it can also clarify their purpose and draw new people into relationship and resistance.
Kaur roots this persistence in something deeper than individual commitment: we are "part of a song of love that began long ago with our ancestors and will only get louder" (2:18–2:22). This frames the movement as embedded in continuity—not as a new invention but as a continuation of resistance across generations. Ancestors are not metaphor here; they represent the long lineage of those who have already carried impossible burdens and lived to pass them on.
How Does Revolutionary Love Address Those Enacting State Violence?
Kaur does not exclude ICE agents or other state functionaries from moral consideration. She addresses them: "To ICE agents everywhere, you have a choice. Revolutionary love means blocking your actions with one hand and extending the other with a hope that you will one day take it or your children will take it" (3:40–3:50). This is radical in a precise sense: she maintains that even those currently enacting harm are not locked outside the circle of care.
Her reasoning is stark: "For the brief high of domination is nothing compared to the infinite love and joy of true community" (3:57–4:01). She is not flattering compliance; she is making a wager about what humans actually want. The high of domination is temporary and corrosive. Community is infinite and sustaining. The offer of choice is real: join the movement toward care, or cede space to the next generation who will.
What Role Does Witness Play in This Vision?
Throughout the address, Kaur returns to the language of seeing and being seen. "Minnesota, we see you"; "To immigrant families, we see you. We love you." This is not passive observation. In the context of state invisibility—people hiding to access groceries and hospitals—to be seen by a movement is to be affirmed as part of the community worth protecting. Witness becomes a spiritual and political act, a refusal to treat anyone as disposable.
Kaur's own witnessing—her declaration "What I have seen here in Minneapolis this week has brought me to my knees"—models the vulnerability required of movement participants. She does not present herself as a distant commentator but as someone moved by what she has witnessed, whose tears and awe are evidence of the stakes.
Where to Go From Here
Kaur's vision of revolutionary love invites several next steps. First, it calls for local relationship-building across existing divides of identity, ideology, and practice. The depth of relationship she describes in Minneapolis did not emerge overnight but from years of struggle and shared witness. Second, it requires moving beyond defensive resistance to actively practicing and prefiguring the world you want to build. This means asking: what institutions of care, education, safety, and joy are you creating now? Third, it demands holding the tension of revolutionary love—blocking unjust actions while remaining open to the humanity and redemption of those currently causing harm. This is not naive; it is strategic and spiritually grounded. Finally, it calls for centering the leadership and wisdom of those most impacted by state violence, and for movements elsewhere to learn from and amplify the blueprints already being tested in Minneapolis and beyond.



