As expected, Americans are not taking the murder of Renee Nicole Good lying down. Over 1,000 protests are scheduled this weekend to protest the unnecessary violence which claimed the life of the mother of three. Good’s last words on this earth were, “I’m not mad at you, Dude,” before she was shot three times in the face and her car careened down the road — with her beloved dog in the back seat and stuffed animals belonging to her youngest child in the front seat. You’ve read J.D. Vance’s insane justification already. Americans aren’t buying it and here’s what they’re saying.
Minnesota resident: “I’m a huge patriot. I love America. I have a son in the army. I’m proud of our country. I'm ashamed of what’s happening right now…I’m ashamed of ICE. I think it's extremely un-American."
pic.twitter.com/SRw1gu6Bck— Republicans against Trump (@RpsAgainstTrump) January 10, 2026
“This weekend, people all over are coming together not just to mourn the lives lost to ICE violence, but to confront a pattern of harm that has torn families apart and terrorized our communities,” said Leah Greenberg, co-executive director of Indivisible, an organizer of “ICE Out for Good Weekend of Action”.
The action comes as tensions escalate in communities where ICE and federal agents have been deployed to crack down on undocumented immigrants, often resulting in threats, attacks and arrests of community members. On 7 January, Minneapolis resident and US citizen Renee Nicole Good was killed by an ICE agent during an immigration sweep. Footage of the shooting taken by community members attempting to disrupt ICE operations – more than 2,000 agents had recently been deployed to the Twin Cities – quickly spread across the internet. By the evening of Good’s death, thousands of people had gathered at the site of the shooting, some Democrats had threatened to withhold funding to the Department of Homeland Security and the Minneapolis mayor, Jacob Frey, had told ICE to “get the fuck out” of the city. From New York to Oakland to Kansas City, thousands more took to the streets.
The following day in Portland, Oregon, ICE agents shot Venezuelan immigrants Yorlenys Betzabeth Zambrano-Contreras and Luis David Nico Moncada outside a hospital. Protests across the country continued to swell – and so did pushback, with six protesters arrested in Portland.
For the ICE Out for Good weekend of action, events are planned in every corner of every state, from Honolulu, Hawaiʻi, to Machias in eastern Maine. Indivisible, one of the groups behind last year’s No Kings protests, is continuously updating its online tracker to note every vigil, rally and protest. Other coordinating groups include the American Civil Liberties Union, the National Day Laborer Organizing Network and the 50501 movement.
“We demand justice for Renee, ICE out of our communities and action from our elected leaders,” said Greenberg. “Enough is enough.”
As you just read, the shooting of Good was not an isolated incident. ICE has shot nine people since September. This is the new normal.






















The appalling killing of Ms Good moves ICE into a different category; it’s moved from killing immigrants identified by dark skin color to killing citizens identified by white skin color. That’s important because if it gets away with this one, then it has carte blanche (no pun intended) to kill anyone of any status, any ethnicity, any identity. It becomes a government death squad, just like the ones in all those dictatorial hellholes.
The comments on the FUX news website under articles about this atrocity are utterly unhinged and truly scary: “It’s her fault, what was she doing on that street?”
I’ll bet the ICE goons are sitting there scratching their hairless shaved heads wondering why nobody likes them. See…widdle Stevie Miller.