Josh Hammer - Conservative Trends

Josh Hammer is senior editor-at-large at Newsweek, a syndicated columnist through Creators and the host of "The Josh Hammer Show," a Newsweek podcast and syndicated radio show. A frequent pundit and essayist on political, legal and cultural issues, Josh is also a research fellow with the Edmund Burke Foundation, a fellow with the Palm Beach Freedom Institute, and counsel and policy advisor for the Internet Accountability Project.

An outspoken conservative, Josh opines on conservative intellectual trends, contemporary domestic and foreign policy debates, constitutional and legal issues, and the intersection of law, politics and culture.

He has been published by many leading outlets, including: the Los Angeles Times, the New York Post, the New York Sun, the Daily Mail, Newsweek, RealClearPolitics, National Affairs, American Affairs, The New Criterion, The National Interest, National Review, City Journal, First Things, Public Discourse, Law & Liberty, Tablet Magazine, Compact Magazine, Deseret Magazine, The Spectator World, The American Spectator, The American Conservative, The European Conservative, The Federalist, The American Mind, American Greatness, American Compass, Chronicles Magazine, Anchoring Truths, Newsmax, Townhall, The Epoch Times, The Daily Signal, The Daily Wire, The Daily Caller, The Western Journal, CNSNews, Fortune, Fox Business, The Boston Herald, The Jackson Hole Daily, Pairagraph, The Jerusalem Post, The Times of Israel, The Forward, Jewish Telegraphic Agency and the Jewish Journal.

He has had formal legal scholarship published by the Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy and the University of St. Thomas Law Journal. Josh is a college campus speaker through Intercollegiate Studies Institute and Young America's Foundation, as well as a law school campus speaker through the Federalist Society.

Prior to Newsweek and The Daily Wire, where he was an editor, Josh worked at a large law firm and clerked for a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit. Josh has also served as a John Marshall Fellow with the Claremont Institute and a Fellow with the James Wilson Institute.

Josh graduated from Duke University, where he majored in economics, and from the University of Chicago Law School. He lives in Florida, but remains an active member of the State Bar of Texas.

Tags: good | frey | lincoln
OPINION

Activist Left Leads Us Down Road to Death, Despair, and Mobocracy

city of lakes in the land of ten thousand lakes state of the united states anarchy

Demonstrators protest outside of the Bishop Henry Whipple Federal Building on Jan. 9, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Protests continued in the city after a federal agent fatally shot Renee Good in her car during an incident in south Minneapolis on Wednesday. (Scott Olson/Getty Images) 

Josh Hammer By Friday, 09 January 2026 04:45 PM EST Current | Bio | Archive

In Springfield, Illinois, in 1838, a young Abraham Lincoln delivered a powerful speech decrying the "ravages of mob law" throughout the land.

Lincoln warned, in eerily prescient fashion, that the spread of a then-ascendant "mobocratic spirit" threatened to sever the "attachment of the People" to their fellow countrymen and their nation.

Lincoln's opposition to anarchy of any kind was absolute and clarion: "There is no grievance that is a fit object of redress by mob law."

Unfortunately, it seems that every few years, Americans must be reminded anew of Lincoln's wisdom.

This week's lethal Immigration and Customs Enforcement standoff in the Twin Cities is but the latest instance of a yearslong baleful trend.

On Wednesday, 37-year-old "queer activist" Renee Nicole Good was fatally shot by an ICE agent in Minneapolis.

Good, who had barricaded her vehicle in an attempt to obstruct an active law enforcement operation, ignored agents' requests to exit the vehicle and instead directed her car at one of the agents.

Good actually then hit the agent, who was briefly hospitalized for his injuries. But before she could do even more damage, the agent shot and killed Good. The federal government has called Good's encounter "an act of domestic terrorism" and said the agent shot in self-defense.

Suffice it to say Minnesota's Democratic establishment doesn't see it this way.

Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey responded to the deployment of 2,000 immigration agents in the area and the deadly encounter by telling ICE to "get the f**k out of Minneapolis," while Gov. Tim Walz, D-Minn., called the shooting "totally predictable" and "totally avoidable."

Frey, who was also mayor during the George Floyd-inspired mayhem of 2020, has lent succor to the anti-ICE provocateurs, seemingly encouraging them to make Good a Floyd-like martyr and riot accordingly.

As for Walz, he's right that this tragedy was eminently "avoidable" --- but not for the reasons he thinks.

If the Biden-Harris administration hadn't let in untold millions of unvetted illegal immigrants, and if Walz's administration hadn't conveniently overlooked hundreds of Minnesotans  of mixed immigration status  defrauding taxpayers to the tune of billions of dollars, ICE never would have embarked on this particular operation.

National Democrats took the rage even further.

Following the fateful shooting, the Democratic Party's official (Twitter)/X feed promptly tweeted, without any morsel of nuance, that "ICE shot and killed a woman on camera."

This sort of reckless fear-mongering may have already inspired a crazed activist to shoot three detainees at an ICE facility in Dallas last September while targeting officers; similar  dehumanizing rhetoric about the National Guard perhaps also played a role in November's lethal shooting of a soldier in Washington, D.C.

Liberals and open-border activists play with fire when they so casually compare ICE, as Walz previously has, to a "modern-day Gestapo."

The fact is, ICE is not the Gestapo, President Donald Trump is not Hitler, and Charlie Kirk was not a goose-stepping brownshirt. To pretend otherwise is to deprive words of meaning and to live in the theater of the absurd.

But as dangerous as this rhetoric is for officers and agents, it is the moral blackmail and "mobocratic spirit" of it all that is even more harmful to the rule of law.

The implicit threat of all so-called sanctuary jurisdictions, whose resistance to the federal government smacks of John C. Calhoun-style antebellum "nullification," is to tell the feds not to operate and enforce federal law in a certain area  or else.

The result is crass lawlessness, Mafia-esque shakedown artistry and a fetid neo-confederate stench combined in one dystopian package.

The truth is that swaths of the activist left now engage in these sorts of threats as a matter of course. In 2020, their monthslong rioting following the death of George Floyd led to upward of $2 billion in insurance claims.

In 2021, they threatened the same rioting unless Derek Chauvin, the cop from the fateful Floyd traffic stop, was found guilty of murder.

In 2022, following the unprecedented (and still unsolved) leak of the draft majority opinion in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization Supreme Court case, pro-abortion-rights activists protested outside many of the right-leaning justices' homes, hoping to induce them to change their minds and flip their votes.

And now, ICE agents all throughout the country face threats of violence  egged on by local Democratic leaders  simply for enforcing federal law.

In "The Godfather," Don Corleone referred to this sort of thuggery as making someone an offer that he can't refuse.

We might also think of it as Lincoln's dreaded "ravages of mob law."

Regardless, a free republic cannot long endure like this. The rule of law cannot be held hostage to the histrionic temper tantrums of a radical ideological flank.

The law must be enforced solemnly, without fear or favor.

There can be no overarching blackmail lurking in the background  no Sword of Damocles hovering over the heads of a free people, ready to crash down on us all if a certain select few do not get their way.

The proper recourse for changing immigration policy  or any federal law  is to lobby Congress to do so, or to make a case in federal court.

The ginned-up martyrdom complex that leads some to take matters into their own hands is a recipe for personal and national ruination.

There is nothing good down that road  only death, despair and mobocracy.

Josh Hammer is the Senior Editor-at-Large of Newsweek, and is host of "The Josh Hammer Show" podcast. He also authors the weekly newsletter, "The Josh Hammer Report." Josh is also a syndicated columnist through Creators Syndicate, and a research fellow at the Edmund Burke Foundation.​ Read Josh Hammer's Reports — Here.

© 2026 Newsmax. All rights reserved.


JoshHammer
The left now engage in threats as a matter of course. In 2020, their monthslong rioting following the death of George Floyd led to upward of $2 billion in insurance claims. They threatened rioting unless Derek Chauvin, the officer from the Floyd traffic stop, was found guilty.
good, frey, lincoln
944
2026-45-09
Friday, 09 January 2026 04:45 PM
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