January 26, 2026

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ICE in Minneapolis Is Disgraceful — This Isn’t the America I Remember

Minneapolis – is becoming the front line of a national immigration crackdown that has spiraled into something far darker than “law enforcement.”

What’s unfolding in Minnesota right now doesn’t look like order. It looks like chaos.

It looks like a nation where a mother of three can be shot to death by an ICE agent, and instead of accountability, the public gets spin. It looks like a place where federal agents can snatch up a preschooler in broad daylight — and the government’s defense is basically: “What else were we supposed to do?”

And it looks like the kind of political rage and scapegoating America claims it once grew out of.

“Even Reagan gave immigrants amnesty.”

Let’s say the quiet part loud: this isn’t conservatism — this is cruelty.

Ronald Reagan, the icon modern Republicans worship, signed an amnesty deal in 1986 that legalized millions of undocumented immigrants. George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush treated immigration like a human issue, not a bloodsport.

Today’s Trump-era immigration enforcement doesn’t resemble any of that.

It resembles state intimidation.


The Breaking Point: Death, Detentions, and a City in Revolt

Renee Good: A mother of three killed by ICE

The death of Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother of three, has become a rallying cry across Minnesota.

Good was shot and killed on January 7 in Minneapolis by an ICE agent. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner has ruled her death a homicide caused by multiple gunshot wounds by a law enforcement officer. (People.com)

The Trump administration claims she posed a threat using her vehicle — but local officials and Good’s family have disputed that version of events, and public outrage has only intensified. (People.com)

People aren’t just asking what happened.

They’re asking: Why did ICE agents have the power to kill an American citizen in the street — and keep moving like nothing happened?


FBI agent resigns amid shooting investigation turmoil

Now the situation is escalating further.

According to CNN-linked reporting circulating in the “live updates,” the FBI agent who initially began assisting with the investigation into Good’s death has resigned, raising new questions about whether political pressure interfered with accountability. (Facebook)

Local officials are now openly suggesting the resignation may point to political reasons for slowing or stopping a meaningful probe.

That implication is explosive — because if political interference is shaping investigations into federal killings, we are no longer talking about immigration.

We’re talking about unchecked power.


The Preschooler Taken by ICE: “This is the part people can’t unsee.”

A 5-year-old boy — Liam Conejo Ramos — was detained along with his father outside their Minnesota home after returning from preschool.

Their lawyer says the family was pursuing an asylum claim through legal channels. (AP News)

The case has triggered national outrage because of the core question:

Why was a child taken at all?

School officials and neighbors claim ICE agents used the child as “bait,” refused to release him to nearby adults offering to care for him, and escalated the situation unnecessarily. Federal officials dispute that account, claiming the father fled and “abandoned” the child. (AP News)

Vice President JD Vance defended ICE publicly, acknowledging trauma but insisting enforcement must continue. (People.com)

But the public response has been blunt:

Kids aren’t collateral damage.
And when federal agents treat them like tools, the moral legitimacy of the entire operation collapses.


Church Protest Fallout: Federal arrests trigger backlash

Immigration enforcement has now collided directly with activism inside religious spaces.

A protest inside a St. Paul church — where an ICE official reportedly serves as pastor — led to arrests that the White House celebrated and Minneapolis leaders condemned. (CBS News)

Two arrested protesters have since been released from custody, but the chilling message remains:

Denounce ICE too loudly and you may be treated like the criminal.


The Response: Minnesota Businesses Close as Protests Explode

This week, frustration in Minnesota reached a boiling point.

A major rally in Minneapolis has prompted a massive wave of solidarity — with hundreds of Minnesota businesses encouraged to close for the day, as thousands march and protest ICE’s increased presence in the Twin Cities. (CBS News)

This isn’t symbolic.

This is a direct economic and civic revolt against federal enforcement tactics.


This Isn’t Immigration Enforcement — It’s a National Moral Crisis

What people are reacting to in Minneapolis isn’t just policy.

It’s the feeling that the country is crossing a line:

  • A mother dead
  • A preschooler detained
  • Protesters arrested
  • Investigators resigning
  • Cities forced into mass demonstrations to be heard

You don’t have to be an immigrant to recognize what this resembles.

You just have to be American.

And for many Minnesotans, this moment feels like something out of history books: the kind of hatred Irish immigrants once faced, the kind of scapegoating Jewish families endured, the kind of paranoia-driven targeting America claims it regrets.

Only now it’s happening in real time — with badges and federal backing.


Bottom Line

Minneapolis is sending a message the country cannot ignore:

This crackdown is not creating safety. It’s creating fear.

And when a government’s “security” depends on traumatizing children, silencing protest, and killing civilians — that is not strength.

That is disgrace.


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