Sunday, February 08, 2026

A co-founder of the CBDLF sides with anarchists in Minnesota

The Comics Journal did a very biased interview with Greg Ketter, the owner of a specialty store in Minnesota who was a co-founder of the CBDLF years ago, and what's told here is a very disturbing example of how leftist the magazine and their interviewee are, in how they view divisive issues like illegal immigration, and rioting. They also distort specific facts about 2 antagonists:
In the now-famous protest photo of Greg Ketter by Theia Chatelle, Ketter is poised, tree-like, in mid-stride, his body clouded in mists of tear gas. Moments earlier, he had given the quote to the TV cameras that wrote itself into a part of cultural and political history: “I’m 70 years old, and I’m fucking angry.”

Ketter had come out on that Saturday not to protest, exactly, but to be a part of the Minneapolis community confronting ICE and CPB. He had been drawn out, initially, by the killing of Renée Nicole Good earlier in the month, and when ICU nurse Alex Pretti became the second Minneapolis resident killed by federal authorities in the space of three weeks, Ketter felt compelled to stand with others at the site of the murder. "I got there about an hour after the murder and went right up to the intersection that ICE had taped off and stood guard. There were perhaps 50-100 of them and several hundred observers/protesters milling around. Some were right up front yelling and swearing. I became one of them," Ketter wrote on his Facebook page.

Ketter is a comic shop owner, and a notable one: his shop DreamHaven Books, founded in 1977, is the oldest continuously operating comic shop in Minneapolis, and among the oldest in the United States. And while the extent of national attention has been somewhat new to Ketter – he spent the three days following his appearance on the news fielding interviews with national and local press – it is not the first time he has stepped into the media spotlight. In 1987, he became one of the founders of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, and remained on the board of that organization for the next two decades. In 2020, his shop was damaged during the unrest that followed the murder of George Floyd, prompting Ketter to reluctantly open a GoFundMe to support the store’s recovery.
This is easily one of the worst articles I've ever read coming from TCJ, and compounds the far-left vision they appear to go by. From what's been reported, this Good tried to ram an ICE agent with her car, all for the sake of a petty political position. And the agent she attacked had previously been struck by an illegal immigrant who was a child rapist. And Mr. Ketter's taking the side of the anarchists? This is a most embarrassing moment for comicdom and its marketing division. Also notice how the magazine and interviewee also obscure Floyd's disturbing criminal background. And they expect everybody to view them as a serious news source for comicdom? Why, how does being foul-mouthed make one a better person? Here's more from the interview itself, and it's such a groaner:
For people who aren't in Minneapolis, can you try to describe what it's been like, and what it’s like now?

Well, I guess in Minneapolis, we really do care about community. We care about each other, and people have been tremendous about the whole thing. And we like immigrants, overall. I mean, unfortunately there's been news about the fraud and everything else, which was a very tiny percentage of people and a smaller percentage of immigrants, but they happen to be involved and that's a shame. But overall, people are just very pleased that we have the immigrant populations that we have.

How did you kind of get involved in...it feels wrong to call it a protest. But how would you describe what you were doing out there?

I was there for several reasons. For some reason, I wanted to be present. When they killed Renée Good, I went to the memorial that evening, and that was just thousands of people getting together to show respect. And there was a lot of “Fuck ICE,” and everything else going on, but really I think it was just to show support. And Saturday, I went down there because I felt I should be there and I hadn't actually witnessed ICE at all. Amazingly, I hadn't seen any of the things going on. I'd been to other gatherings. I'd been to strategy meetings and things like that, but I hadn't seen ICE itself in the flesh. So I went to watch, to see what was going on.

Had you been involved with any political activism in the past?

A bit. I mean, I was a co-founder of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, which we started in response to prosecution of [the Illinois comic shop] Friendly Frank’s back then. And Denis Kitchen called me, and right away, and we started fundraising, and then we started the permanent CBLDF. I was on the board for the first 20 years, and then I moved on. I've always been a free speech advocate. That's been my main thing.
And what if it turns out that Mr. Ketter vehemently refused to give Mike Baron any backing on his part when the veteran writer of Nexus had to file a lawsuit over a left-wing news site's incitement against him for publishing an indie comic titled Private American? Some "free speech advocate" Mr. Ketter is then. It's clear the CBDLF's operated almost entirely according to their political standings, and that doesn't help at all. Let's also recall the same outfit was also once managed by Charles Brownstein, who was accused of sexual misconduct in the past 2 decades, so it's not like they were ever clean as a whistle even on those particular matters. And then, look how Ketter downplays the Somali Muslim community fraud scandal that was discovered in Minnesota, and no mention made how widespread it's been said to be, with a number of arrests already made. And again, how does repellent profanity make one a better person, or reflect well upon the mob Ketter joined? Based on this, no sane person, in comics or out, should seek the services of the CBDLF with people like him in charge. Mr. Ketter also brought up more of his MO, political or otherwise, and this too is telling:
It’s a bookstore market versus a periodical or a collector’s market.

Right. I try not to cater just to the collector market. I do have collectors comics; I have back issues of certain things. I buy some of them, and we have a decent selection of some older comics, but I don't go out of my way for that. I've been doing underground comics. I've always been into underground comics, and we have the best selection around here, certainly in the Midwest. And I like unusual things.

So do you sell mostly comics these days, or mostly sci-fi prose books?

It's a pretty good mix. LGBTQ+ comics and graphic novels are huge. We're selling everything in that realm. I was just a guest of honor at Gaylaxicon that was put on here: it's a traveling convention for gay science fiction and comics fans. And I'm straight, I've been married for 40 years to a woman, but they made me a guest because I've always been very supportive of the community. But those books are our bestsellers. We're selling lots and lots of good graphic novels.
It wouldn't be shocking if the underground comics he's written have been viciously political too. What are the chances that, in contrast to LGBT causes, he's never been supportive of the Jewish community Stan Lee, Jerry Siegel, Joe Shuster and Jack Kirby came from? Or even the Armenian community? And where's the sales figures for the LGBT comics he speaks of, or even the GNs? Interestingly, he also says:
Because you sell graphic novels and books, you probably weren't affected by the bankruptcy of Diamond quite as much as other shops.

Not in the same sense. I mean, I never did open up accounts with Lunar or any of those. I would still order DC comics or a few Marvels, and I just gave them up. I just said, "After all this time, I can't order one or two comics from them." I didn't have the volume to order from them, so I didn't bother. And I get almost all my stuff from Ingram now. It used to be Baker and Taylor, but now I get it from Ingram, and I've actually just started buying a few things direct from various publishers. So I guess I have to go back to that. I mean, I've been at this long enough that I used to do that a lot.
Does he mean he hasn't had any luck selling modern DC/Marvel comics? Well at least we know how and why LGBT stories he speaks of eclipsed sales he had of those, in a way. But based on how leftism seems to be his motivation, that's why I can't give him credit for allegedly not relying only on the speculator market. Nor can I really appreciate when he brings up the following:
What do you think made you dial back your involvement with the business as a whole?

Some of it's the disillusionment, like I said: the commodification of some of the comics. I hate multiple covers, and all the variants, and all that kind of stuff. People didn't seem like they were necessarily reading them anymore. They were just accumulating them. I like to have people read.

We're kind of in a residential area. And the neighborhood just loves me, because I have children's books, children's graphic novels. I've been expanding that section all the time.
But does the neighborhood think it's a healthy example to be selling LGBT propaganda in the same store, considering some of it was pushed into school libraries? What if he wants children to read the propaganda, including anything as political as he's taken part in? As for variant covers, hey, I find it hugely dismaying too, how they've become such a norm in marketing, with the worst part being how any company that's specialized in them could be doing it in hopes it'll distract from political propaganda they're turning out. But Mr. Ketter, in all his leftist biases, doesn't seem to dwell on whether that's one of the problems, and that's why his argument rings hollow.
What are the big sellers in that area?

Amulet, the graphic novel series, Phoebe and the Unicorn. Amazingly, Calvin and Hobbes is still one of our bestsellers after all these years. 10 year old boys can't get enough of Calvin and Hobbe. We still sell a lot of Bone. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles has picked up again quite a bit for us. I kind of missed the beginning of the trend, but they're doing well now.

You were one of the shops that first sold Eastman and Laird’s initial issue, weren’t you? You got in early on independent comic publishers.

Oh yeah. Oh yeah. [And] I had Dave Sim in a couple of times, and he was always supportive. He wanted me to open up a Cerebus-only shop. He insisted that that would work really well: it'd be all Cerebus all the time. And I was like, "I don't think so.” I was there very early on with Elfquest. At the time, I was selling the collections that they were doing, and I had sold more than the entire B. Dalton's chain had sold at the time.
What's that? The same Dave Sim who was mostly shunned by the turn of the century because his work was considered misogynist? Gee, that sure is some "show of responsibility" right there. I thought some of the material I'd found in past years from Cerebus and such by Sim was embarrassingly bad, including an early "parody" of Red Sonja, and if that's the kind of "underground" fare Ketter considers okay, something's terribly wrong here indeed.

With this, the Comics Journal has really clarified what kind of left-wing news source they really are. I wouldn't buy at Mr. Ketter's store even if he offered tons of paperbacks and hardcovers for free if this is the kind of political advocacy he's going to uphold. And all the while, people like him turn their backs on the horror story in Iran, proving just how disrespectful they really are of the messages of the Marvel/DC comics of yesteryear. I don't know about the citizenry of Minnesota, but I will not buy at a specialty store run by somebody like Mr. Ketter. He's only giving the sales segment of comicdom a bad name, and making a case for why specialty stores may be outmoded at this point. What he's espousing is exactly what specialty store managers need to avoid if they don't want to tarnish the reputation of comic stores. And no sensible person should waste money on the CBDLF either.

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