Didja hear? Omigod. Minnesota’s Tim Walz, everyone’s favorite Failed Vice Presidential Candidate and sympathizer with the Chinese Communist Party, is not running for reelection — he no longer seeks to serve as one of the top three worst governors ever.
In his whiny announcement, Governor Walz verged on apoplexy. “Those bumbling Somali fraudsters screwed everything up! The optics have gone to @#$%&!; citizen journalist, my [insert alternative grawlix here]! And Trump is mean!” Look, if you don’t believe me, I’ll fax you the transcript.
OK. I may be paraphrasing.
But I’m close. Associated Press reports his bitter comments on why the jig is up. Walz is waltzing out of the campaign because he can’t give it “my all” because of the “extraordinarily difficult year for our state” because of the latest revelations of how crappily and dishonestly he functioned as governor.
Walz said: “Donald Trump and his allies — in Washington, in St. Paul, and online — want to make our state a colder, meaner place.” These baddies “want to poison our people against each other by attacking our neighbors … want to take away much of what makes Minnesota the best place in America to raise a family.”
All very elusively allusive. What could Senor Real Man possibly be talking about? Why would any Minnesotan — say, an honest taxpayer — want to attack another Minnesotan — say, someone living high off the hog on the taxpayer dime, effectively taking money from the mouths of babes? Or a dishonest politician cooperating with and benefiting from just such massive taxpayer-funded fraud?
Don’t run, Walz. Don’t run. Stay right where you are.
Man’s concern is not with government; he should look on government as no more than a very secondary thing — we might almost say a very minor thing. His goal is industry, labour and the production of everything needed for his happiness. In a well-ordered state, the government must only be an adjunct of production, an agency charged by the producers, who pay for it, with protecting their persons and their goods while they work. In a well-ordered state, the largest number of persons must work, and the smallest number must govern. The work of perfection would be reached if all the world worked and no one governed.
Charles Dunoyer, De la liberté du travail (1845), David M. Hart, translator.
On January 6, 1907, Maria Montessori opened her first school and daycare center for working class children in Rome, Italy.
In 1912 on this date New Mexico became the 47th state of America’s United States.
On this date in 1941, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt delivered his “Four Freedoms” State of the Union speech, emphasizing vague “freedoms” that enabled government to usurp definable freedoms.
On January 6, 2021, lame duck President Donald John Trump gave a speech in Washington, D.C., aiming to rouse his supporters to pressure the U.S. Senate not to certify some states’ Electoral College votes in Election 2020, to address “election fraud.” Before his speech ended, some of his supporters (along with false flag agents) broke into the Capitol to set off one of the great political controversies of our time.
The U.S. military captured Venezuela’s dictator, Nicolás Maduro, and his wife, Cilia Flores, on Saturday; a lot of people who hate Donald Trump are complaining about the president’s decision to “arrest” the foreign head of state.
Sure, it’s an act of war.
Authorized by Congress? Not really, but that’s hardly unusual.
There is that 2020 indictment, unsealed by the U.S. Department of Justice during Trump’s first term, accusing Maduro and senior Venezuelan officials of conspiring with Colombian guerrilla groups (like the FARC) to traffic massive quantities of cocaine into the United States. This was updated in a superseding indictment unsealed over the weekend, which added Maduro’s wife, son, and others as defendants.
Specifically, the charges are:
Narco-terrorism conspiracy.
Conspiracy to import cocaine.
Possession of machine guns and destructive devices.
Conspiracy to possess machine guns and destructive devices.
Considering that Venezuela is a sovereign state and can have whatever drug policies or gun laws it wants, all this might seem a tad … ridiculous.
Most people, however, will likely be moved by two very different lines of thinking:
Maduro was an evil tyrant, and it’s good that his murderous regime has been (sorta) toppled; and
The operation was skillfully done, demonstrating U.S. military strength.
Is the effort coherent and compatible with other international military stances of the United States? Debatable.
How does it affect, say, the U.S. position on Taiwan? Will this encourage or discourage the People’s [sic] Republic [sic] of China?
One could argue both ways. As a successful demonstration of military might, it will likely dissuade the Chinazis. But if it turns world opinion against the U.S., the opposite will likely prove true.
Still, isn’t it hard to side with a dictator? I mean Maduro.
The Minnesota fraud story did not just emerge in the last few weeks or months. It appears that before it became a predominantly Somali story it was dominated by one white woman.
Concerns about fraud in the federal child nutrition programs (tied to Feeding Our Future, a nonprofit sponsoring meal reimbursements for daycares and other sites) began emerging in late 2020, with formal flags and audits in early 2021. It became public knowledge through FBI raids in January 2022.
Aimee Bock, founder and executive director of Feeding Our Future, was indicted in September 2022; her trial occurred in early 2025, resulting in a guilty verdict on March 19. She’s awaiting sentencing as of January 2026, with recent asset forfeitures approved in December 2025.
(Notice that this was what civil asset forfeiture was originslly designed for: to confiscate goods used in crimes from convicted criminals. Not grabbing property from people not convicted of anything, as has been happening in these United States for far too long.)
Ms. Bock’s fraud scheme, often called the Minnesota daycare scandal due to involvement of daycares and child nutrition funds misused during COVID-19 (totaling about $250 million in fraud as counted up from court judgments). It’s described as one of the largest pandemic-era fraud cases in the U.S., involving fake meal claims, shell companies, and kickbacks. Over 90 people have been charged across related schemes, with dozens convicted.
Here is a timeline of developments in the story:
2015 – 2016: Aimee Bock and Kara Lomen form Partners in Quality Care (later Partners in Nutrition) and Feeding Our Future as nonprofits to distribute federal Child Nutrition Program funds (administered by the USDA via states) to smaller organizations, daycares, and programs feeding underprivileged children.
2018: Bock and Lomen part ways amid disputes; Bock takes full control of Feeding Our Future, expanding it as a sponsor for meal reimbursements.
March 2020: COVID-19 pandemic leads to USDA relaxing rules for child nutrition funds, allowing easier reimbursements without on-site verifications. Feeding Our Future’s vendors (including daycares and restaurants) rapidly increase, claiming millions in federal aid distributed through the Minnesota Department of Education (MDE).
July 2020: MDE expresses concerns to Feeding Our Future about its explosive growth in vendors and meal claims (e.g., Safari Restaurant claiming 5,000 meals/day).
October 2020: Lomen (now at Partners in Nutrition) sends a letter to MDE alleging a “fraud ring” involving child care centers and sponsors. MDE escalates concerns to USDA.
November 2020: Feeding Our Future sues MDE for delaying vendor applications, claiming discrimination against sites serving children of color.
December 2020: MDE denies several Feeding Our Future vendor applications amid fraud suspicions. By year’s end, Feeding Our Future receives $43 million in federal funds.
March 2021: Feeding Our Future reports extreme meal counts (e.g., Safari Restaurant claiming 185,903 meals for March, netting $1 million). MDE pauses funding to 26 associated nonprofits, citing “serious deficiencies” by Bock and board president Benjamin Stayberg.
April 2021: A state judge rules MDE acted too hastily; funding resumes. MDE, still suspecting fraud, refers the case to the FBI.
May 2021: FBI officially begins its investigation into potential fraud in the programs.
December 2021: Feeding Our Future receives $198 million in federal funds for the year amid ongoing concerns.
January 2022: FBI raids 15+ properties, including Feeding Our Future’s office and Bock’s home. Search warrants allege misuse of funds for luxury items and properties. The case goes public.
February 2022: Feeding Our Future begins dissolving as an organization. Political figures return donations from implicated individuals.
April – May 2022: First arrests occur (e.g., for passport fraud to flee). State Senate hearings probe MDE’s oversight.
September 2022: Federal prosecutors indict 48 suspects, including Aimee Bock, in a $250 million fraud scheme involving fake attendance rosters, shell companies, and laundered funds. Bock is charged with wire fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering.
2023 – 2024: Multiple trials and pleas for co-defendants are held, with over 60 convictions or guilty pleas across the scheme. Bock’s case proceeds to trial amid delays.
March 19, 2025: After a five-week trial, a federal jury convicts Aimee Bock on all seven counts (including wire fraud and conspiracy). Co-defendant Salim Said is also convicted. Bock is jailed pending sentencing, cited as a flight risk.
December 30, 2025: A federal judge approves preliminary forfeiture of $5.2 million in assets from Bock (including $3.7 million in cash/banks, a Porsche, and luxury items), with final order at sentencing.
January 2026 (Ongoing): Broader Minnesota fraud probes continue, with 92 charged and 62 convicted across related schemes. Bock’s sentencing is pending; no date set.
To check up on all this, consult The Sahan Journaltimeline for pre-2022 details.
So who is Aimee Bock? A 2022 Star Tribune article noting that Bock filed for bankruptcy with her ex-husband in 2013 suggests she was previously married and divorced before the Feeding Our Future scandal emerged. Her ex’s name is not mentioned in any reports.
Ms. Bock is described as white/Caucasian in appearance and background. Reporting on the scandal frequently contrasts her with the majority of co-defendants, who were members of Minnesota’s Somali-American community (many first- or second-generation immigrants). Bock herself accused state agencies of discrimination against Somali-owned sites in pre-indictment statements.
Aimee Bock earned a Bachelor of Science in elementary education from the University of Minnesota Duluth in 2003. Public records and biographies list her residences in various Minnesota locations, including Duluth, Rochester, Burnsville, Cottage Grove, Rosemount, and Apple Valley.
She built her entire professional career in Minnesota, starting in early childhood education roles (e.g., daycare instructor, center director) and founding Feeding Our Future there in 2016.
As of 2025 reports she is 44- or 45-years old is consistently described as Minnesota-based, with at least 20 – 25 years of residence in the state.
Man’s concern is not with government; he should look on government as no more than a very secondary thing — we might almost say a very minor thing. His goal is industry, labour and the production of everything needed for his happiness. In a well-ordered state, the government must only be an adjunct of production, an agency charged by the producers, who pay for it, with protecting their persons and their goods while they work. In a well-ordered state, the largest number of persons must work, and the smallest number must govern. The work of perfection would be reached if all the world worked and no one governed.
Charles Dunoyer, De la liberté du travail (1845), David M. Hart, translator.
On Jan. 4, 1642, King Charles I of England sent soldiers to arrest members of Parliament, beginning England’s slide into civil war.
On Jan. 4, 1649, the English “Rump Parliament,” having purged those members willing to restore Charles I to the throne, voted to put Charles I on trial for high treason. Before the month was over, the king had been executed.
Revelations of subsidized daycare fraud in Minnesota have come in waves. The latest, biggest came with the Nick Shirley video, covered here on Wednesday. Reactions to it have been all over the map.
Tarl E. Warwick, aka Styxhexenhammer666, declared the revelations just “the tip of the iceberg” and demonstrated as accounting fact, not fancy, while hordes of daycare workers on TikTok said the reporting by the “untrained” “mama’s boy” Mr. Shirley was completely without merit. Reinforcing anti-Shirley reaction, X user @slimebeasts expressed scorn with some actual back-up:
For those with short attention spans or little time to sit down and watch something — I went ahead and ended Nick Shirley’s credibility in under 10 minutes, showing dishonesty in his Minnesota Somali Fraud video.
The memes attacking Mr. Shirley run the gamut, but this is a good example:
Overall, the “mama’s boy” label seems tied to his mother’s role in his videos (she appears in some and is a right-wing influencer herself). Criticisms of him being “untrained” focus on his background in pranks and satire rather than journalism, and claims he got the story wrong emphasize that state inspections found no fraud in many centers.
Meanwhile, the story expands beyond Minnesota borders. Peter St. Onge (@stonge) synopsizes the scope, saying that for every three Somalians in the country there is one day care center. A flurry of posting about Somalian activity in Washington State uncovered quite a colorful mess of apparent fraud, one claim showing how two Somalian sisters set up day care centers in each of their homes — their daycare being confined to servicing each other’s children! The number of taxpayer-funded Somalian daycare centers in Washington State surprised many Washingtonians:
This sort of thing is not limited to just a few states, apparently. And in one case in Arizona, a “Learing Center” echo was identified:
Amidst many accusations and counter-accusations, the most astounding was made against Somalia’s ambassador to the UN, Abukar Dahir Osman, saying he is also a daycare administrator in Ohio. That is not true. Technically. Osman lived and worked in Ohio for many years before returning to a Somali diplomatic role. His pre-diplomatic career included a position as managing director/statutory agent for Progressive Health Care Services Inc., a Cincinnati-based home healthcare company, which overlapped with the start of his UN role in 2019. He also worked as a supervisor in the Adult Medicaid Unit at the Franklin County Department of Job and Family Services (2007 – 2012).
In case you are wondering, it is not uncommon for foreign countries to tap their diaspora members to high diplomatic posts, including UN roles. For smaller or developing nations, it’s a practical way, the rationale runs, to staff missions with skilled professionals who might not be available domestically.
But it is also worth mentioning that home health care, which Abukar Dahir Osman was associated with, while distinct from daycare, has also been implicated in the scams that have so far focused on subsidized daycare.
If this is all legit, it appears that America has been importing a whole lot of social workers from Somalia!
And wherever this story eventually ends up at, it will remain the case that the U.S. brought in people from a distant land who went on various forms of welfare and who have then found work (most are unemployed) in those government and contracting agencies providing various forms of “welfare” services.
The legal framework under which they arrived was the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP), established by the Refugee Act of 1980. The Somalians are not, on the whole, illegal aliens. Though they started as a trickle in the 1980s and ’90s, under the Bush and Obama Administrations of the aughts and teens it ballooned. You might say. But caution: this was part of broader increases in overall refugee ceilings (from ~70,000 – 80,000 annually early on, to 85,000 in FY2016 and planned 110,000 for FY2017) due to global crises. Peaks occurred in later years (e.g., ~9,000 in 2016), but this built on prior decades’ flows — not a sudden new initiative from, say, the Obama Administration.
While the migrant story goes way back, this fraud story itself goes back, too; it’s not just a recent phenomenon. But more on that later.