About a week ago, Donald Trump delivered remarks in which he boasted about the positive feedback he’d received about deploying National Guard troops to Memphis, Tennessee. “Sir, thank you so much,” the president said, quoting locals he’d purportedly heard from. “I live in Memphis, it’s so beautiful. There’s so many people outside. Everybody’s cheering the soldiers, they’re cheering. Thank you so much, sir.”
There was, of course, one small problem: The deployments in Memphis hadn’t happened yet. The quotes Trump shared were apparently concocted in his imagination, and he presented them as real.
But as ridiculous as this was, much of the public was left to wonder which city might be next on the White House’s target list. We apparently didn’t have to wait too long to find out. NBC News reported:
President Donald Trump said Saturday that he was directing Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth to ‘provide all necessary Troops’ to Portland, Oregon. In a post on Truth Social, the president wrote that the troops would ‘protect War ravaged Portland’ and protect Immigration and Customs Enforcement facilities that he claimed are ‘under siege from attack by Antifa and other domestic terrorists.’
As part of the same online missive, the Republican said he’s “authorizing Full Force, if necessary.” What did that mean, exactly? I’m not altogether sure, though it sounded as if the American president was authorizing the use of military force against Americans on American soil.
It wasn’t the only area of uncertainty: There were also questions as to whether the president was sending National Guard or active-duty troops (or perhaps both), when this might happen, and whatever became of JD Vance’s recent assurances that Trump would never deploy troops to an American city without an invitation from state and local officials.
For that matter, we don’t even know for sure whether there will be deployments: Trump claimed on Saturday that he was issuing a directive to the Pentagon, but it’s an open question as to whether he was just making this up.
What’s more, one day after the presidential announcement, the state of Oregon and the city of Portland sued the administration in the hopes of derailing the deployments, and given the relevant details, the case stands a decent chance of success.
But as important as these angles are, there’s a related question hanging overhead: Why Portland?
The official line from Trump is that the city is “war ravaged” and “under siege,” making it necessary to use troops to protect local ICE facilities. The official line, however, is obvious nonsense.
Taken just a few minutes ago outside the ICE facility in Portland that Trump claims is under siege. My message to Donald Trump is this: we don’t need you here. Stay the hell out of our city.








