Noem Comments on ICE Incident

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Let’s start with the obvious: when an ICE agent shoots someone, the media and the left lose their minds. But when American citizens are terrorized by criminals in sanctuary cities? Crickets. Silence. Maybe a tweet about “systemic inequality” if we’re lucky.

So, here we are again. Another confrontation between law enforcement and someone who decided the rules didn’t apply to them. Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old U.S. citizen, spent an entire day reportedly stalking and obstructing ICE agents in Minneapolis. Let’s say that again for the folks in the back: stalking and obstructing federal law enforcement. According to DHS Secretary Kristi Noem, Good refused multiple commands to exit her vehicle. Instead of complying, she reversed her car in what DHS described as an attempt to weaponize the vehicle and run over an officer. That’s not just “getting out of the way,” that’s aggressive, dangerous, and unlawful behavior. But of course, the progressive outrage machine is already spinning this into another Netflix documentary about “domestic oppression.”

Enter Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey and Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, rushing to the podium to declare the shooting “propaganda” and “bulls—,” while videos circulating show a clear escalation by Good herself. Frey and Walz, who’ve presided over a city that still hasn’t fully recovered from 2020’s fiery summer of love, are suddenly experts in federal use-of-force protocols. Where was this energy when neighborhoods were burning?

And let’s not forget the far-left’s crown princess, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, who wasted no time labeling the incident a “cold-blooded murder” and demanding ICE be reined in — because, in her mind, detaining gang members and deporting violent offenders is somehow the real threat to American values. You have to admire the consistency of her logic: criminals good, law enforcement bad.

The reaction from the left is not only predictable, it’s dangerous. They’ve created a climate where every act of law enforcement is immediately cast as racist, fascist, or “domestic terrorism,” while the actual threats to law and order are downplayed or outright ignored. A woman actively blocking federal agents, refusing orders, and then attempting to flee with her car in reverse toward those same agents? That used to be called resisting arrest, and if it escalated, well… actions have consequences.

Of course, none of this matters to the virtue-signaling Twitter brigade. Because to them, ICE isn’t out arresting violent criminals and deporting illegal repeat offenders. Nope. They’re just roaming around suburban neighborhoods looking for innocent people to assassinate — if you believe AOC and her friends.

What’s really going on here is a broader, more toxic game. The left wants to delegitimize any agency that enforces immigration law. It doesn’t matter what actually happened — the narrative is what counts. If they can paint ICE as rogue, unaccountable jackboots, then it’s easier to gut their funding, restrict their power, and eventually dissolve them entirely. The end goal? Open borders, endless amnesty, and full voter registration for anyone who can cross the Rio Grande.

Meanwhile, Vice President JD Vance made it crystal clear: the Trump administration stands behind ICE and the rule of law. Period. No apologies. No backpedaling. That’s called leadership — something sorely missing in Minneapolis and the governor’s mansion.

So while the left continues to howl about “accountability” and spin up another round of anti-ICE hysteria, Americans who care about law and order should be asking a different question: what happens when law enforcement is too afraid to act? We’ve seen that movie before. And it doesn’t end well.

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