“SHE WAS FEARLESS… AND IT COST HER EVERYTHING.” — THE MOMENT RENEE NICOLE GOOD WAS SHOT BY AN ICE AGENT HAS THE NATION IN UPROAR A 37‑year‑old mother of three, Renee Nicole Good was killed by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis during an encounter that has shattered the calm of a quiet morning and ignited fierce debate nationwide. Good, remembered by loved ones as a compassionate, creative spirit, was fatally wounded after federal agents confronted her vehicle on January 7, 2026 — an incident that quickly drew protests, legal scrutiny, and urgent questions about law enforcement tactics. Officials have offered differing accounts of what happened in those final moments, and videos circulating online have fueled controversy over the use of force and whether the shooting was justified. Read the full story — and discover the details driving national outrage and calls for accountability

I am cold.
I should be hot with rage. And I am hot with rage.
But I am shivering with cold, and all the covers I’ve piled on top of me make no difference. Nor our new heat pump, warming the room I’m in.
This is an inside cold, the kind of cold I’ve seen in the aged, saw in my mother in the months before she died. The kind of cold I imagine one feels the instant before death, the kind of cold I keep imagining Renee Nicole Good felt as the masked ICE agent’s gun came out, just before his bullet tore through her face. Maybe even as it was tearing through her face, just before it ended her life.
I am cold now, with a cold rage, a cold fear, a cold sickness. I am afflicted with that weakness of Western civilization known — according to Elon Musk — as empathy. I am cold as a snowflake, cold as ice.
My biggest fear right now is that I will warm up, and that in warming up I will forget, and in forgetting I will move on, turn to my affairs, rejoin the host of Good Americans, staying safe with my head down and hoping someone else will take this war on their shoulders, find a way to repel these invaders and occupiers and restore the America that was struggling its way toward the light.
My biggest fear right now is that I will warm up, and that in warming up I will forget, and in forgetting I will move on, turn to my affairs, rejoin the host of Good Americans, staying safe with my head down and hoping someone else will take this war on their shoulders, find a way to repel these invaders and occupiers and restore the America that was struggling its way toward the light.
I don’t mean forget entirely — I doubt I will ever forget entirely. I mean lose the edge, lose the hard edge of ice, see my rage gradually melt into a useless puddle of sadness and grief.

There will be time for grief. Now is time for action. For me, a writer, action begins with words. These words — describing a horror in a way that moves you to action, fills you with a determination born of cold rage, frozen fury.
Death comes, of course, for all of us. I am reminded of a line from one of my favorite films, Breaker Morant: “Every life ends in a terrible execution, George.”
Most of us will die naturally, nonviolently. Some will die violently — in war, by accident, natural disaster, domestic murder, random killing, in the line of duty, while committing a crime, or perhaps just by being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
We’ve seen plenty of ugly in our lifetimes — from the firehoses of Bull Connor and the gnashing teeth of his dogs, to the heavy knee of Derek Chauvin on George Floyd’s neck, to the gratuitous violence of Trump’s masked ICE and CBP thugs — but this one feels different.
Nobody, I submit, has been snuffed out — as Renee Nicole Good was, having spoken as her last recorded words “Dude, I’m not mad at you” — and immediately smeared by their own government as a “domestic terrorist”; falsely accused by their own president of a crime they could not possibly have committed — not by any conceivable interpretation of the visual evidence.
At least not in America, land of the free, where Renee Good’s killing was promptly exploited by the true terrorists, the Trump regime, as a warning to everyone else of the mortal risk of not instantly bowing to its power.
We’ve seen plenty of ugly in our lifetimes — from the firehoses of Bull Connor and the gnashing teeth of his dogs, to the heavy knee of Derek Chauvin on George Floyd’s neck, to the gratuitous violence of Trump’s masked ICE and CBP thugs — but this one feels different.
Perhaps, in part, it’s the video, the suddenness of death, the splash.
Perhaps it’s because this killing seems to usher in a time where armed goons feel free to shoot someone if they simply don’t like what they conclude that person believes or stands for.

And perhaps, in part, it feels different to me because Renee Good was a woman, a writer, a mother, with a dog and toys in her car. We carry our preferences and prejudices and sympathies, not always lightly, and that needs to be acknowledged.
Some commentators have identified Renee Good’s whiteness as a distinguishing feature. The murder of George Floyd stirred long-smoldering outrage over police brutality and systemic racism, and led, understandably, to a convulsive response. The murder of Renee Good reeks of the even more pervasive stench of a budding dictatorship, a coordinated assault on rights and liberties long taken for granted by the privileged majority.
Renee Good’s killing has much in common with the tragic fate of others. It is hard to put a finger precisely on the difference — perhaps in time I will come to better understand why this one feels different.
Such incidents become visceral and enraging in proportion to the degree to which we identify with the victim. So it was with MAGA and Ashli Babbitt — with the crucial difference that she was part of a violent mob attacking the Capitol and she was actively attempting to break through a door behind which the police officer who shot her (once) was defending hunted and endangered members of Congress.
And so it is with Renee Good. I am hardly the first to say that if Renee Good is a “domestic terrorist” then I am a domestic terrorist. And all of us who see Donald Trump as the mad dictator that he is are domestic terrorists.
Nor am I the first to say that this murder was inevitable and, in a very chilling sense, strategic. That reality, if there was any doubt, was made clear by the way Team Trump and MAGA instantly swung into action in its immediate aftermath.
Behold the speed and shamelessness with which DHS Secretary Kristi Noem et al. aggressively politicized the incident with lies so brazen as to be a parody of lying. Imagine if, as in the other shooting by Border Patrol agents in Portland, the videos didn’t exist and hadn’t come immediately to light. And even with the videos, that despicably false narrative — the opposite of truth on nearly every point — seems to have gaslighted millions of MAGAs.
Frankly, as gut-wrenching as I found it to watch the videos, I felt just as sick, if not more so, listening to Noem premeditatedly bullshit her way through this morning’s interview with Jake Tapper on CNN’s State of the Union.
It took Tucker Carlson, of all people, to suggest that something very sick was going on, from Trump on down through the ranks. Noting first that he likely didn’t share Renee Good’s views on immigration, Carlson added: “But that shouldn’t matter. Her death is a tragedy, regardless of her partisan affiliations, ideological beliefs, or who pulled the trigger. A woman got shot in the face.”
Carlson had it almost right. I say “almost” because there is every reason to “politicize” the killing of Renee Good based on the revolting facts of that sickening moment (a woman got shot in the face, through her face, three times — twice after no argument could possibly be made that she posed any conceivable threat — and instantly killed, liquidated, and then called a “fucking bitch” for good measure) and the context in which it all happened.
There is every reason to ask just what the hell ICE was doing in Minneapolis (fighting fraud in body armor?) and on that street.
To ask why they’re (still) all wearing masks — which just scare the shit out of innocent people and can make them make what an ICE agent, two days after Good was killed, told another Minneapolis motorist would be a “bad decision.” Or, as Clint Eastwood once put it, “Do [you] feel lucky?”
To ask what the overall plan is behind pumping $75 billion into this Gestapo-adjacent paramilitary if it is not to provoke more resistance and escalate conflict to the point of full martial law and the end of democracy.
We win, democracy wins, sanity wins only if we find the narrow way between — the kinds of action, the kinds of resistance that don’t play straight into their hands. By now we should know better than to expect this to be easy, or fondly hope that some deus ex machina will do it for us.
And hence the paradox: The Trumps, Noems, Vances, Millers — they want us enraged, they need us enraged. They need our hot rage to boil over into violence, so they can turn the game from popularity to power, from democracy to deadly force. They’re fishing for a pretext to terrify us, cow us, subjugate us indefinitely.
Or if not enraged, they want us numb, hopeless — they want their depravity, their cruelty, their terrorism normalized, accepted. Yawn, shrug — as the water temperature rises to 212 degrees Fahrenheit.
Rioting, forgetting: Either way, they win.
We win, democracy wins, sanity wins only if we find the narrow way between — the kinds of action, the kinds of resistance that don’t play straight into their hands. By now we should know better than to expect this to be easy, or fondly hope that some deus ex machina will do it for us.
I have written at length about what I’ve called the “Dictator’s Doom Loop,” the dynamic of seemingly inexorable escalation of conflict launched by one driven by an insatiable lust for power. America is on that path and the murder of Renee Good (among other killings, abuses, and deliberate provocations) is a significant step along the way.
There is a great danger that it too — like so much of the evil and destruction Trump and his entourage have perpetrated — will become normalized, drowned in the shit in which the zone continues to be strategically flooded. Pushed off the page, forgotten, as we move on to the next depravity, the next threat — Greenland, Iran, Mexico, the next targeted city, the latest ICE atrocity.
It’s on us to make sure that doesn’t happen.https://saveamericamovement.substack.com/p/recording-steve-schmidt-and-ken-harbaughThe good, angry people of the Twin Cities are off to a good start. They’re not rioting; rather, they are assembling peacefully in the cold in massive numbers. If we listen, we can hear their voices — and the echoes all across the country.
All I can do is add my own voice in my own way and hope that you add yours in your way. If there is any warmth to be had, it is in the knowledge and the company of each other.
News
“Two sisters married two men with the same name… and both stories ended in tragedy.” People close to the Mai family say it now feels less like coincidence… and more like a nightmare that kept repeating itself until there was almost nobody left standing. Before the headlines, before the River Oaks mansion became a crime scene, Ly Mai and her younger sister Thy Mitchell were known as the inseparable daughters of a hardworking Vietnamese immigrant family trying to build a life in America. They grew up sharing everything. The same tiny bedroom. The same dreams. The same promise that no matter where life took them, they would never abandon each other. Family friends still remember the sisters laughing about one strange coincidence that followed them into adulthood: Both women fell in love with men named Matthew.
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“Two sisters married two men named Matthew… and both stories ended in heartbreak.” People close to the Mai family say the tragedy surrounding Ly Mai and her younger sister Thy Mitchell feels almost impossible to believe. The sisters grew up together in a hardworking Vietnamese immigrant family, sharing the same room, the same dreams, and promising they would always protect each other no matter what happened in life. Then came the strange coincidence nobody thought much about at the time: Both sisters fell in love with men named Matthew. Years later, Ly Mai lost her husband Matthew Lum Chun after a devastating illness. Family says Thy became her sister’s emotional lifeline, calling constantly and helping her survive the grief.
Texas Father Killed His Wife, 2 Kids Before Dying by Suicide: ‘Truly No Words’ The victim’s sister, Ly Mai, confirmed that Thy Mitchell and her two children died in a Facebook post on Tuesday, May 5 Thy Mitchell and Matthew Mitchell and their kids Maya and Max Credit: Thy Mitchell/Instagram NEED TO KNOW A family […]
🚨 Hailey Dempsey, 28 years old, her 4 year old daughter, Belle, and 4 month of daughter, Kelsey, along with Hailey’s mother, Valerie Deboe, 55 years old, were all fatally shot🚨 Florida-( msn) “A mother and her two young children were gunned down in the street while the father – who was initially detained nearby by police – has vanished after being released due to lack of evidence. Hailey Dempsey, 28, ran half a mile with her daughter, 4, and four-month-old baby after fleeing her house after her mother, Valerie Deboe, 55, was shot dead. Residents on West Tever Street in Plant City – near Tampa – heard gunshots about 7am on Sunday and found the family in the bushes next door. Hailey was still alive when paramedics arrived, but died in hospital. A third child was rescued at the scene unharmed, police said. Plant City Police later raided the family home on North Burton Street and found the body of Deboe, who had suffered a single gunshot wound. Hailey’s husband Jay Dempsey, 27, was detained nearby and his arrest photographed by nearby residents. However, neighbors said he was released due to lack of evidence. Police confirmed no one was in custody in relation to the murders. A neighbor, John Czarniak, who lives next to the family’s house where Deboe was found, said the Dempsey and his wife got into a heated argument on Friday. Hailey called police who arrived at the home but left soon after. Then he spotted Dempsey putting on a bulletproof vest and loading a large duffel bag into his car on Saturday night. After Dempsey was released from custody, he left town and later deleted his social media pages. ‘He came walking out of the woods at 3am (on Monday), got in his dead wife’s car and drove off,’ Czarniak said. Hailey was mourned by friends who said she was a great mother and she and Dempsey were recently discussing their daughter’s birthday party. Dempsey is an avid shooter with numerous photos of him firing guns and posing with rifles on his now-deleted Facebook page. The father-of-three was one half of local company 2 College Brother Moving & Storage and heavily involved in F3 Nation – a network of free, peer-led workouts for men. Police called for anyone with surveillance or doorbell camera footage of North Burton Street, West Tever Street, or the surrounding area between 5.30am and 7am on Sunday to contact them. ‘The Plant City Police Department knows of no credible threats that leads to a belief that there is a threat to the public at this time,’ police said. ‘The investigation is very active, searching for leads and clues that allow for forward progress and proper resolution in this case.” #florida #children #mother #wife #crime #news #home
Records confirm identity of Plant City mother, grandmother killed in quadruple homicide Hailey Dempsey, 28, was killed Sunday along with two of her children and her mother, Valerie DeBoe, records show. Hailey Dempsey, left, and her husband, Jay Dempsey, are seen in a screenshot of a public Facebook post from February 2025. Hailey Dempsey, two […]
ANTI-HALAL RESTAURANT CONTROVERSY ERUPTS IN THE UK AFTER OWNER REFUSES TO BACK DOWN
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Always graceful and endlessly warm, Usha Vance is quickly becoming the kind of Second Lady people can’t help but admire. Usha Vance showcased her baby bump at a Mother’s Day event at the White House this week. Usha Vance appeared beside JD Vance wearing a black dress accented with a large pink floral design. But it’s incredible to see how radiant Usha looks. It truly seems like the pregnancy has given her a special glow, as she continues to shine during public appearances. Second Lady Usha Vance shows off baby bump in a ‘lovely’ $395 dress for the Mother’s Day event. You will love this — check the comments, the photos are there 👇
Elegant Usha Vance shows off baby bump in a beautiful dress at White House Mother’s Day event Elegant Usha Vance shows off baby bump in a beautiful dress at White House Mother’s Day event 2 mins Usha Vance appeared alongside JD Vance during a White House event this week honoring military mothers ahead of Mother’s […]
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