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Fighting Words. What got me steamed up this week
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Fighting Words. What got me steamed up this week

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ICE just launched a "wartime recruitment" campaign and seeks agents who want to "defend" their "culture." There will be more Renee Goods.

On January 3, four days before the horrific killing of Renee Nicole Good, the Department of Homeland Security put out a press release. The headline bragged: "ICE Announces Historic 120% Manpower Increase, Thanks to Recruitment Campaign That Brought in 12,000 Officers and Agents."

 

The statement went on to boast (bolded language in the original): "After receiving more than 220,000 applications to join ICE from patriotic Americans, ICE blew past its original hiring target of 10,000 new officers and agents within a year. In fact, we have more than doubled our officers and agents from 10,000 to 22,000. With these new patriots on the team, we will be able to accomplish what many say was impossible and fulfill President Trump’s promise to make America safe again."

 

It appears that Good’s executioner—and it’s hard to think of a more apt word for someone who fires three point-blank shots at the head of an obviously unarmed civilian who is trying to drive away—was not one of these "new patriots." The incident his defenders have taken to invoking, in which he was dragged by a car and ended up with 33 stitches, reportedly happened last June, before the hiring spree. But even that raises the obvious question: If he was injured, if he was "traumatized" by that event, as Vice President JD Vance said Thursday, what in the world was he doing still out in the field?

We’re All "Domestic Terrorists" Now

The killing of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, and Donald Trump’s and Kristi Noem’s despicable lies about it, show that we’re all living at the whim of the administration’s masked, trigger-happy goons.

By Ross Rosenfeld

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An investigation may answer that question (or, since it’s going to be led by Kash Patel’s FBI, maybe it won’t). But our common sense, and what we have learned in the last year about these people, tells us that he was still in the field for the same reason that ICE has hired 12,000 people in six months, recruiting specifically for people with an enthusiasm for guns and the military. The Trump administration wants to force showdowns that lead inevitably to what happened in Minneapolis Wednesday.

 

Take a look at the recruitment social media post that DHS placed on X last August: "Serve your country! Defend your culture! No undergraduate degree required!"

 

Let’s break that down. "Serve your country." OK, nothing objectionable about that. But then we take a very Trumpian-Millerian turn: "Defend your culture." Who is that aimed at? What set of emotional reactions is that command supposed to fire, and in whom? What "culture," precisely, is it referring to? And finally, the reassurance that the job is open to practically anyone.

 

Well, anyone of a certain mindset, that is. On New Year’s Eve, ICE announced that it was initiating a new $100 million recruitment campaign that it referred to as a "wartime recruitment" strategy. The campaign, as The Washington Post put it, will target people "who have attended UFC fights, listened to patriotic podcasts, or shown an interest in guns and tactical gear."

 

Any organization that goes from 10,000 to 22,000 in six months has hired some very unqualified people. If that organization is, say, the Candy Stripers, that might not be much of an issue. But if the organization is one that gives its employees badges and masks and riot gear and SIG Sauer P320 semiautomatic pistols (or maybe a Glock 19, to which the agency began transitioning last year), you’ve got a problem.

 

That’s exactly what Donald Trump, Stephen Miller, Kristi Noem, and Corey Lewandowski (whose exact role at DHS is the focus of many questions) have done. The so-called Big Beautiful Bill passed last July, you might recall, tripled ICE’s budget, from around $10 billion a year to close to $30 billion. All told, as Margy O’Herron of the Brennan Center pointed out last year, the bill "allocates more than $170 billion over four years for border and interior enforcement, with a stated goal of deporting one million immigrants each year. That is more than the yearly budget for all local and state law enforcement agencies combined across the entire United States." She added that "the largest percentage increase goes to finding, arresting, detaining, and deporting immigrants already living in the U.S., most of whom have not committed a crime and many of whom have had lawful status."

 

It’s clear what all this adds up to. There will be more Renee Goods. And they will all be smeared and trashed by Trump and his followers. Vance said Thursday, as have any number of MAGA-ites on social media, that she was driving right at the shooting officer. Proof of this, they say, lies in the fact that first bullet hole went through her windshield.

 

Yes, it did. But look at where it went through the windshield. It’s all the way over to the right, just a couple of inches from the driver’s-side pillar. If she was driving right at him, wouldn’t that bullet hole be closer to the center of the windshield? The video shows clearly that she was turning the car to the right. But even if there is ambiguity about the first shot, there is no ambiguity whatsoever about the second and third.

 

Good was executed. And now her reputation and life and values are being killed. Perhaps taking cues from Noem, who accused Good of an act of "domestic terrorism," Vance referred to the victim as part of a left-wing conspiracy. A reporter asked him to amplify on that, and he couldn’t. He also said Good represented a "lunatic fringe."

 

No, Mr. Vice President. Renee Good represents tens of millions of honest, decent, and patriotic Americans. Tens of millions of us who want to live in a humane and compassionate multiracial democracy where citizens, even if they are trying to obstruct a law enforcement action they object to (there is still some question whether Good was doing this), are subjected to the legal process and given their rights and not shot point-blank, where people who aren’t citizens but are otherwise law-abiding don’t have to live in fear, and where the "culture" we "defend" is a culture based not on blood and soil but the rule of law.

 

The real lunatic fringe in this country is the one that sanctions the execution of a citizen and then spends days smearing her and that imagines itself to be at war with its own people and precipitates these kinds of confrontations in the first place. That fringe is doubling down, and hiring and hiring and hiring. This is going to get much worse.

 

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Quiz time!

Last week’s quiz: Cheese Louise: A quiz about cheese, occasioned by RFK Jr.’s new dietary guidelines. I really hate writing this sentence, but I more or less agree with him on this. Protein (cheese included) and fresh vegetables and fruits are the secret to life. And bitter herbal Italian liqueur, on which I happily part company with him (along with whole milk, which is a ridiculous thing for an adult to be drinking). 

1. If you’re a cheese person, you undoubtedly are familiar with the word rennet—the substance that causes milk to curdle and, thus, gives us cheese. What exactly is rennet?

A. A chemical found in the skin of freshwater fish

B. A liquid extruded from the bark of palm trees

C. A set of enzymes produced in the stomachs of ruminant (hooved herbivores, basically) mammals

D. A protein found in beef tallow

2. According to existing records, which is likely the oldest of these cheeses?

A. Feta

B. Pecorino Romano

C. Brie

D. Labneh

3. Match the cheese to its country of origin.

Sulguni

Sakura

Limburger

Quark

Japan

Germany

Georgia

Belgium

4. Where and when was the cheeseburger probably invented?

A. Philadelphia, 1912

B. New York, 1916

C. Kansas City, 1920

D. Pasadena, 1924

5. In the race to give America a pasteurized processed cheese-like product, Joseph Kraft invented American cheese and Emil Frey invented Velveeta, both in the same decade. But which came first?

6. According to a 2023 survey from InsiderMonkey.com, what is the most consumed cheese in America?

A. Swiss

B. Cream cheese

C. Cheddar

D. Mozzarella

The answer to 6 is obvious, if you think about it. Answers next week. Feedback to fightingwords@tnr.com.

 

—Michael Tomasky, editor 

 

Trump Shooting Fiasco Worsens as Dems Find Fresh Line of Attack on ICE

As the Minneapolis killing gets darker for Trump, Representatives Eric Swalwell and Dan Goldman talk to us about their plan to rein in ICE—and about Trumpworld’s broader plunge into violence and lawlessness.

The Daily Blast With Greg Sargent

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