Renee Good, ICE, and the Politics of Selective Outrage
Renee Good has become a Rorschach test.
Like the rest of the country, I have strong opinions about what happened this past week. And like everyone else, I am finding that expressing those opinions does very little beyond confirming existing biases or costing people readers and friends.
We tend to see what we want to see. All of us. We are deeply vulnerable to the temptation to believe we alone have a monopoly on objectivity and clear-headedness. And we are almost always wrong about that.
For many of my feminist friends, Renee Good is a martyr. A victim of femicide. A woman trying to make a difference in her community who paid the ultimate price when a hot-headed man with a gun decided to punish her for defying him.
For many of my MAGA friends, she is a cautionary tale about the woke mind virus. A woman so poisoned by hysterical ideology that she felt justified obstructing law enforcement and endangering the lives of the men tasked with removing criminal sex offenders from her community. “She tried to kill a law enforcement officer,” they say. “It is sad, but she brought it on herself.”
I fall somewhere center right on this, not that it ultimately matters. For what it is worth, I do not think Renee Good woke up that day intending to kill a law enforcement officer. I think she made bad choices, tried to flee, and made a catastrophic decision that cost her her life. When someone is in the middle of committing multiple felonies, the likelihood of something going terribly wrong increases dramatically. Wisdom encourages de-escalation and risk mitigation, not escalation.
Reality does not unfold in freeze-frame or from the calm vantage point of hindsight. In the real world, if a 4,000-pound piece of metal is being driven toward your body, you have a split second to decide how to respond. Self-defense is not murder.
But armchair litigating this single tragic incident is not especially useful. Mostly, it just hardens existing camps. And it misses the larger point.
There is a strong correlation between where people land on the Renee Good case and what they already believe about who should not have been on that street in the first place. If you believe ICE had no business operating there at all, you are likely to side with Renee. If you believe Renee had no business obstructing a law enforcement operation, you are likely to side with the shooter. That divide is doing most of the work here.
Which brings us to the real issue: the way we talk about immigration, enforcement, and ICE itself.
Republicans, frankly, do not help themselves with the way they often talk about immigrants. Sloppy rhetoric that treats immigrants as a monolith, or treats migrants themselves as the problem, makes serious policy discussion nearly impossible. It also allows us to scapegoat isolated groups while avoiding harder conversations about failures within our own systems.
Border chaos is real. Drug trafficking is real. Human smuggling is real. But it is foolish to pretend these problems would magically disappear the moment Trump’s long-promised wall finally materialized. Cartels do not vanish because of concrete. They adapt, reroute, and exploit weaknesses elsewhere, including within our own institutions.
At the same time, the histrionics coming from the other direction are not helping anything either. If this were really about policy, the public reaction to enforcement would look very different than it does.
When Barack Obama deported over five million people (more than any president in modern history), he earned the nickname “Deporter in Chief” from activists on his own side. The numbers were staggering. The policies were firm and unapologetic. And yet there were no mass protests clogging the streets. No viral Christmas threads about Jesus being an illegal immigrant. No insistence that enforcing borders was inherently white supremacist or fascist. The left mostly shrugged.
Then Trump ran on strong borders and enforcing existing law, prioritizing criminal removals. Suddenly it was a moral apocalypse. Families torn apart. Children in cages ( cages that, ironically, were built under Obama.) It becomes very difficult to believe the outrage is really about the policy. Very often, it appears to be about the messenger.
If robust enforcement was tolerable when the man in charge was calm, polished, and had a (D) next to his name, why does the same principle become evil now? Has the border crisis vanished? Have the laws stopped mattering? Or have we trained ourselves to only see cruelty when it is wearing a MAGA hat?
Some of this is clearly about messaging and trust. Democrats trusted Obama’s motives. He was articulate and careful in his communication. They did not think he was racist, so they assumed his actions were motivated by reason. Trump is loud and unpolished, and widely perceived as malicious, so his motives are distrusted by default. His trademark impulsivity and brashness do not foster trust.
But that explanation only goes so far.
You will often hear people say that at least under Obama, ICE was not randomly picking people up off the street or dodging due process. That distinction does not hold up. Under Obama, ICE conducted workplace raids, home arrests, traffic stop detentions, and collateral arrests of non-targets. Administrative warrants were used extensively across administrations, despite courts long holding they are insufficient for home entry without consent. Claims that racial profiling or constitutionally dubious practices are “new” phenomena simply are not borne out by the record.
None of this is to say that criticism is illegitimate. Conversations about due process, constitutionality, training, oversight, and consistency are important. We should be having them. But we are not going to have them productively in an environment saturated with moral panic.
I have people on my timeline comparing ICE to ISIS. That is not just wrong. It is dangerous. ICE officers are not abstract villains. They are human beings tasked, often imperfectly, with removing convicted rapists, child predators, murderers, and gang members from American communities. Demonizing them as Nazis or terrorists does not protect anyone. It emboldens violence, puts families at risk, and turns public servants into acceptable targets.
Inflammatory comparisons to Nazis, Gestapo, or terrorists have fueled real consequences. DHS reports show assaults on ICE officers skyrocketing (over 1,000–1,300% increases in some periods), death threats exploding (up to 8,000% in reported spikes), vehicular attacks, doxxing, and harassment against agents and their families.
The Renee Good case did not happen in a vacuum. It is being filtered through a culture already warped by selective outrage and ideological escalation. We will not get clarity by pretending one side is uniquely virtuous and the other uniquely evil.
We can name real problems without lying about their causes. We can criticize policy without demonizing people. And if we’re actually serious about saving lives (instead of just scoring points), it’s past time to grow the hell up. Quit the moral spectacles, quit turning public servants into targets with Nazi/ISIS smears, and start debating immigration and enforcement like grown adults who value truth over tribal rage.
I’m working to treat my writing like a job, so if you appreciate my writing, I would be so grateful if you would consider investing in a paid subscription. I try to keep my costs low, but my family thanks you for every dollar you invest in my writing. Thanks so much for your support!


The sane, reasonable and measured piece on Renee Good’s tragic death we need right now! Thank you, Kaeley! The political polarized response to her death is typical of the Balkanized society the United States has become. Here is my opinion on what happened. I have a more nuanced point of view than most. Renee Good was part of ICE Watch, a radical leftist group dedicated to driving ICE out of Minneapolis by any means necessary. She was up to no good the day she pulled out to the scene of the arrest and started interfering. She tried to block the ICE officers from doing their jobs, didn’t listen to the officer’s commands and accelerated and tried to flee the scene. Did she intend to run over that ICE agent? We don’t know and we never will know for sure.
That being said, the ICE agent Jonathan Ross was in the wrong as well. Agent Ross didn’t need to shoot her to stop the car. He also didn’t follow DHS procedures and put himself in a bad position by standing in front of the car. He could’ve shot our her tires, gave chase and arrested her further down the road or blocked her in so she couldn’t escape but he choose to go to the extreme of shooting her. Was the shooting justified? Yes. Was killing her justified? No, absolutely not. Her death was totally unnecessary and preventable. Also, I’m disgusted by all those on the right who are celebrating her death. She leaves behind a widow and three children let us not forget. I pray for the Good family and extend my condolences to them! I also pray that all ICE agents and their families in Minneapolis will stay safe. I call on President Trump to send in the Minnesota National Guard and the U.S. Marshals to keep order and repress violent leftist groups like Antifa as well.
ICE as an organization needs to be reformed and needs to change how they do operations. They need to take accountability for things that agents do wrong and admit their failures instead of ignoring them. I watched two interviews with Tom Homan, Trump’s Border Czar on Dr. Phil’s YT channel and CBS News and while he made some good points, he also made my jaw drop by claiming he’s never heard of ANY cases of misconduct by ICE agents and that he’s never heard ANY bad rhetoric from the Trump administration towards immigrants. He also dismissed the idea any illegal immigrants deserved amnesty or a pathway to citizenship.
The left has these blind spots as well. They won’t condemn any of these leftist radicals attacking ICE or acknowledge the humanity of ICE agents and their families nor will they admit that they are doing a job that needs to be done. Let’s be clear here, Donald Trump and J.D. Vance sometimes are too negative and fear monger about immigrants. The right in general most certainly does this. They treat the illegal population as a monolith. They don’t think about things like, is this person who has conducted themselves in a moral and lawful way since they arrived in America? Do they pay their taxes, work and contribute to society? What if their a kid born in America and this is the only life they’ve ever known? What if their a veteran or a dreamer? Why is it we can’t have border security and enforce the laws of the land while also giving amnesty and put on track for U.S. citizenship illegal immigrants who are of good character? Why can’t we make a compromise on this issue?
Why are you blaming the men and women of ICE who don’t write the laws but just enforce them? Why don’t you blame the people who are actually responsible for this mess? That being the United States Congress and the two major parties. Also, while folks on the right are blind to the realities of the immigration system and how broken and hard to navigate it is, folks on the left refuse to talk about the very real problems with immigration and why it would be a bad idea to encourage illegal immigration. Furthermore, where were you all when Barack Obama was doing the exact same thing? Nowhere to be found, because you are blinded by partisan politics. When ICE was doing all this stuff under Obama you guys didn’t say a peep nor when they happened under Joe Biden.
Would you agree that a calm and reasonable voice from the top explaining the need for enforcement of immigration policy would help? I don't think our politicians are doing ICE agents or the greater public any favors with their rhetoric.