Republicans are all worked up about Minnesota child care fraud, all because of a YouTube spot by a malicious young punk named Nick Shirley. A guy on Twitter who goes by the handle of "Caring Guy" has written a bunch of excellent tweets on a wide range of subjects responding to MAGA attacks; here are three concerning the Minnesota "scandal" (lightly edited by me):
1. Nick Shirley was not some brave independent investigator. He was a front man working with the GOP while being presented as neutral. That alone matters when his claims were used to accuse entire communities and political opponents.
And his “evidence” completely collapsed on camera. He pointed to daycare doors being locked, which is not suspicious; it is literally what the law requires to protect children. When asked to back up his fraud numbers, he admitted he could not cite where they came from. Not an audit, not a charging document, not a court filing, nothing.
The daycare has since produced video showing how his footage was selectively edited and misrepresented. He did not expose anything new. He repackaged investigations that had already been underway for years and added made up numbers for outrage.
Blame Democrats? Democrats were the ones auditing, investigating, charging, and convicting people in Minnesota for more than two years. Over 100 people charged and dozens convicted does not happen when people are looking the other way.
The real irony is watching people cheer “accountability” from an administration led by the convicted felon, a man with 34 felony fraud convictions, a fake university that paid $25 million for fraud, a business found liable for fraud in New York, and a charity scheme so fraudulent his family was barred from running charities.
So what is this terrible revelation? A GOP coordinated influencer, no real evidence, locked doors passed off as scandal, numbers pulled from thin air, and a narrative that collapsed the moment anyone asked basic questions.
2. The fraud you are talking about was identified, audited, investigated, charged, and prosecuted over multiple years, with more than 100 people charged and dozens convicted. That did not happen by accident and it did not happen because Republicans suddenly showed up. It happened because state and federal investigators did their jobs.
There was no pause, no cover up, and no fear of telling the public. The cases were public, the charges were public, the convictions were public, and the investigations have been ongoing for years. Enforcement was already happening long before Republicans decided to turn it into a talking point.
What Republicans actually did was coordinate with a YouTuber, present him as an independent investigator when he was not, and try to repackage years-old investigations as breaking news. When pressed for evidence of anything new, his answer was that daycare front doors were locked, which is a legal requirement, and he cited dollar figures he could not source or explain.
Fraud should be prosecuted, and people should go to jail. Great. That has already been happening. If you think that Democrats ignored billions in fraud while Republicans heroically rode in to save the day, that is nonsense. It's political theater layered on top of work that was already being done.
3. Minnesota law requires daycare doors to be locked during operating hours. That is not suspicious behavior, it is a safety requirement to prevent unauthorized access to children. Walking up to a locked daycare door with a phone camera does not show fraud, it shows compliance.
The GOP’s self admitted front man in this stunt, nick shirley, filmed outside facilities at arbitrary times and then implied emptiness meant no children existed. That implication collapses the moment you add context. Security footage released by the centers shows children being dropped off and picked up before and after his visit. Parents, kids, staff, all on camera. That directly contradicts the narrative he tried to sell.
Reporters did what viral outrage merchants refuse to do, they verified. Journalists from the Star Tribune and local TV stations physically went inside the same daycare centers shown in the video and observed children and staff present during normal hours. That is not “don’t believe your eyes,” that is “don’t let a selectively edited clip replace basic verification.”
This also was not newly discovered fraud. Issues with childcare and nonprofit fraud in Minnesota were identified, audited, and referred for prosecution years ago under Tim Walz’s administration, with federal authorities involved. Pretending a YouTuber uncovered some hidden conspiracy is revisionist nonsense.
What people are actually being asked to believe is that locked doors required by law somehow prove a crime, while documented security footage, active licenses, inspections, and on site reporting should be ignored. That is not skepticism, that is confirmation bias.
After Shirley posted another video, Caring Guy replied:
4. GOP-backed Nick, you cut the video precisely where the facts stop helping your narrative.
The Minnesota commissioner did not say the center was permanently shut down for fraud. She was describing a temporary licensing or status change, which happens routinely during compliance reviews, corrective action periods, or administrative transitions. You edited the clip to imply a final closure, when that is not what she said. That is not investigative journalism, it is omission by design.
Receiving $1.9 million in a fiscal year is not proof of fraud. Child care assistance payments are volume based, spread across multiple funding streams, tied to enrollment, attendance, and subsidy eligibility. A center licensed for around 90 children can reach that dollar amount over a year without anything illegal occurring, especially when serving subsidized families. Big numbers sound shocking only when you refuse to explain how the program actually works.
Locked doors, controlled entry, and sign in procedures are required by Minnesota child care law. You keep filming locked doors as if they are evidence of a crime. They are evidence of compliance. Every licensed daycare in the state is supposed to restrict access for child safety. This has already been explained to you repeatedly.
You also misrepresented the federal action. The Department of Health and Human Services did not declare that Minnesota daycares committed fraud and then freeze funds as punishment. HHS imposed additional verification and documentation requirements while audits continue, which is a procedural step, not a finding of guilt. Payments resume when documentation is provided, because that is how audits work. Freezing verification pending review is not the same thing as proving fraud.
Most importantly, this was not some hidden scandal you uncovered. Minnesota identified child care and nonprofit fraud years ago, audited it, referred cases for prosecution, and involved federal authorities long before your YouTube channel showed up. Pretending you exposed something new is revisionist nonsense.
5. (In reply to Tom Emmer, GOP majority whip, who objected to a video from Minnesota Governor Walz:
Tommy boy, you really think the American people care about your lies?
You mean another week of you falsely accusing Governor Tim Walz of scamming Minnesota, when the documented record shows the opposite. The fraud you keep referencing was uncovered by state agencies under his administration, referred to law enforcement, and prosecuted in coordination with federal authorities. That is not complicity; that is detection and enforcement.
The Feeding Our Future scheme was identified by the Minnesota Department of Education starting in 2020 and escalated in 2021 after irregular meal claims were flagged. The state froze payments, referred the matter to prosecutors, and cooperated with a federal investigation that led to one of the largest pandemic fraud cases in the country. That investigation did not originate with outside influencers or partisan outrage posts, it came from auditors and state officials doing their jobs.
As of the last two years alone, more than 70 individuals have been convicted or pleaded guilty in the case, with dozens more charged and awaiting trial. Federal prosecutors have already recovered hundreds of millions of dollars through forfeitures, restitution orders, and asset seizures, with more still pending. Several defendants received lengthy prison sentences, and additional indictments are ongoing. That is what accountability looks like, not a coverup.
The idea that Walz or his administration “scammed” Minnesota requires believing that state agencies simultaneously uncovered fraud, shut off funding, referred cases to law enforcement, cooperated with federal prosecutors, testified in court, and somehow were secretly running the scheme themselves. That is not a serious claim; it is a talking point that collapses the moment you apply basic causation.
Under Walz, Minnesota identified the fraud, stopped the payments, brought in the feds, and prosecuted the criminals. The people who stole the money are being sentenced. The state that uncovered the crime is not the criminal.
If you are looking for someone to be mad at, try the people who committed the fraud, not the administration that exposed it.