Vikings picks: A second chance for Max Brosmer

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Pioneer Press staffers who cover the Vikings take a stab at predicting the outcome of tonight’s game against the Lions at U.S. Bank Stadium.

Dane Mizutani

Lions 31, Vikings 27: Max Brosmer will look much better than he did in the first start of his career. It won’t be enough to overcome an opponent fighting for its playoff life.

Jace Frederick

Vikings 27, Lions 24: The Lions just suffered a devastating defeat that likely ended their playoff hopes. Recovering from that on a short week is no easy feat.

John Shipley

Lions 19, Vikings 13: Max Brosmer got the Vikings past the Giants last weekend, but the Lions are still playing for something, albeit unlikely, and Detroit will do everything it can to rattle the rookie QB.

Charley Walters

Lions 21, Vikings 10: So, the Vikings’ season comes down to two nondescript games against the Lions and Packers. Sad, really.

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Vikings vs. Lions: What to know ahead of Week 17 matchup

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What to know when the Vikings host the Detroit Lions on Thursday afternoon:

Vikings vs. Lions
When: 3:30 p.m. Thursday
Where: U.S. Bank Stadium
TV: Netflix / WCCO-Channel 4
Radio: KFAN
Line: Lions -7.5
Over/Under: 43.5

Keys for the Vikings

— The fact that rookie quarterback Max Brosmer is starting for the Vikings should dictate the game plan. There will more than likely be a heavy emphasis on establishing the run to help set up the pass. That said, Brosmer will have to play at a high level if the Vikings want to upset the Lions, especially if the game turns into a shootout. There should be ample opportunity for Brosmer to make plays against a depleted secondary on the other side. He has to be able to take advantage, whether that means attacking the middle with star receiver Justin Jefferson, pushing the ball deepto receiver Jordan Addison, or checking down and moving to the next step, Brosmer has to affect the game with his arm if the Vikings are going to have a chance.

Keys for the Lions

— As effective as the Lions have been running the ball this season, they rushed for a mere 15 yards in their recent loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers. That lack of success on the ground made everything else extremely challenging for the offense, and can’t happen again if the Lions want to take care of business today. They need to control of the line of scrimmage with running back Jahmyr Gibbs first and foremost. Not only will that open up the playbook for veteran quarterback Jared Goff, it will also help the Lions stymie the Vikings’ interior pass rush. The biggest issue for Gibbs will be pass protection. If he’s unable to pick up blitzes with regularity, he will likely cede reps to fellow running back David Montgomery, which could impact the Lions’ ability to run the ball.

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West St. Paul man arrested, accused of following ICE agents and pointing gun

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A 63-year-old man was accused Wednesday of pointing a gun at ICE agents in West St. Paul this week.

The West St. Paul City Attorney’s Office charged him with obstructing legal process with force, a gross misdemeanor, and four counts of misdemeanor fifth-degree assault, saying he caused fear of bodily harm.

West St. Paul police responded Monday to a report from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that a man “just pulled a gun,” according to the criminal complaint.

Two Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents told police they were parked in the lot at Home Depot, conducting surveillance, when the man started following them in his vehicle. They tried to lose him, but he followed them for several minutes and had a firearm in his hand at one point, the complaint said.

Two other ICE agents told police they were driving a vehicle marked with “Police” and “ICE” when the man pulled next to them and “made a motion as if he was pulling a firearm from his waistband,” the complaint said. One of the agents pulled his service weapon, prompting the man to throw his firearm onto his own vehicle’s dashboard.

Attorney Claire Glenn, who is representing the West St. Paul resident, said they dispute the charges.

“ICE is essentially deputizing people that are kidnapping our neighbors and our community members,” Glenn said, adding that her client “was entirely within his rights to observe and document what people were doing. And in retaliation, this charge was brought, even though it was the ICE agents that pointed their weapons at him.”

The man is a decorated Navy veteran who worked for the U.S. Postal Service for decades and “is a concerned community member who cares about his neighbors,” Glenn said.

The man was arrested Monday and held in the Dakota County jail until Wednesday, when he posted $6,000 bond.

The incident came a day after a federal agent fired a service weapon in St. Paul. No one was struck. A DHS spokesperson said it happened when ICE officers identified a man illegally in the U.S. from Cuba. He drove off, struck two ICE officers and multiple vehicles before he was arrested, according to DHS.

ICE has stepped up its efforts in the Twin Cities with Operation Metro Surge beginning Dec. 1, and DHS said Friday that more than 670 people had been arrested. ICE operations ordered as part of the Trump administration’s crackdown on both legal and illegal immigration have drawn observers and protesters.

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Joe Palaggi: The season to remember we’re still one nation

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Every year around this time, the noise starts to drop. The pace eases a bit. Families gather, neighbors reconnect, and people who disagree on just about everything still manage to pass plates across the same table.

Something about late November into December nudges us toward reflection. Whatever you call it — holiday spirit, cultural memory, or just a pause in the chaos — it’s real. And in a country this divided, it might be the reminder we need most.

Because the truth is simple: America has never thrived by choosing one ideology over another. It has thrived because our competing visions push, restrain, and refine each other. We forget that at our own risk.

I grew up in a time when political conversations were part of life, not a reason to exile someone from it. You could disagree without severing the relationship. The center wasn’t seen as a weakness. It was maturity — the space where people with different temperaments and values tried to make something workable.

Today, we act as if our country must pick a single path and purge the rest. But that’s not how the United States was designed. It wasn’t intended as a pure libertarian project or a pure social democracy. It’s a deliberate blend — a push-and-pull system with enough room for Hamilton’s national strength, Jefferson’s local skepticism, Roosevelt’s compassion, and Reagan’s correction.

The very friction we complain about is the mechanism that keeps us balanced.

And you can even see that balance in our books. Wealthier, urban, blue-leaning states indeed tend to generate more federal revenue than they receive. But those same states depend just as heavily on the energy, agriculture, manufacturing, and natural resources that come from the rural, older, red-leaning states that receive more federal spending.

That’s not ideology — that’s geography, demographics, and economic interdependence. Neither side is self-sufficient, and neither thrives without the other. The numbers simply reveal how tightly woven the country really is.

Some Americans daydream about a national split — two countries, one red and one blue — each free to express pure ideology without interference. It’s a tempting fantasy until you follow the math. A “blue nation” might be wealthy on paper, but it would be burdened by the cost of living, bureaucracy, and a shortage of land-based industries. A “red nation” might feel culturally unified, but would immediately face fiscal strain, aging demographics, and the challenge of replacing the federal inflows that currently stabilize its budgets.

Cut the country in half ideologically, and each half becomes a weaker version of itself.

Together, they make the thing work.

This time of year has a way of softening the edges, even if only for a few weeks. It reminds us that the people who frustrate us most are often the same people we share a meal with, raise kids around, or bump into at the grocery store. We don’t disappear from each other in December. We draw a little closer, whether we like it or not. That closeness is a quiet lesson in what the country needs year-round.

The center isn’t a compromise of conviction. It’s the only place 330 million people with wildly different values can coexist without tearing the nation apart. It’s the adult table — the one where no single worldview gets everything it wants, but everybody gets enough stability to keep moving.

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As this season unfolds, I find myself hoping we rediscover that center. We don’t have to agree on every policy or election. But we do need to stop pretending one side can run the country alone. America’s strength has always come from its opposites — from the tension between compassion and discipline, progress and caution, liberty and responsibility.

That tension isn’t a flaw. It’s the American design.

Maybe this quieter stretch of the year gives us the breathing room to remember it. And maybe that’s enough to soften the tone, steady the hand, and remind us that disagreement is not the end of the relationship — it’s the beginning of the conversation.

Joe Palaggi is a writer and historian whose work sits at the crossroads of theology, politics, and American civic culture. He writes about the moral and historical forces that shape our national identity and the challenges of a polarized age. He wrote this column for The Fulcrum, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news platform covering efforts to fix our governing systems.