Minneapolis ICE Shooting Explained
Play Stupid Games, Get Deadly Consequences
There’s a reason I don’t let the media narrate reality for me. They lie by omission. They soften facts. They flip victim and aggressor when it fits the narrative.
What happened in Minneapolis wasn’t a “peaceful protest gone wrong.” It wasn’t a tragic misunderstanding. It was a deliberate, violent act against law enforcement that ended exactly how common sense says it would.
An ICE agent shot a woman who tried to run him over with a car. Period.
This Was Not Protest. This Was Violence.
Let’s be clear.
Blocking traffic with your body is illegal.
Blocking traffic with your car is illegal.
Using your car as a weapon is criminal.
ICE agents were executing lawful arrests. Not random sweeps. Not racial profiling. Arrests backed by warrants for people accused or convicted of violent crimes.
The woman chose to block the roadway. She was told to move. She refused. Then she drove forward and struck an ICE agent.
That is assault with a deadly weapon.
When law enforcement reasonably fears for their life, they are trained to respond. That response saved lives. Including the lives of other officers and people nearby.
This isn’t complicated.
The Video Tells The Truth
You can slow it down.
You can zoom in.
You can watch it frame by frame.
The car moves forward.
The agent is struck.
Shots are fired.
The vehicle crashes.
End of story.
But instead of telling the truth plainly, city leaders danced around it.
The Wussification Of Leadership
The Minneapolis police chief gave a press conference that conveniently skipped the most important fact. The suspect hit an officer with her vehicle.
Why leave that out?
Because modern leadership is allergic to accountability. They would rather appease activists than protect officers doing their jobs.
If I were mayor, I would say this clearly:
Do not interfere with federal law enforcement.
Protest from the sidewalk.
Stay out of the road.
Stay out of the operation.
If you don’t, you may get hurt or killed.
That honesty saves lives.
Instead, city leadership chose vague language and emotional appeasement, which only emboldens more reckless behavior.
DHS Got It Right
The Department of Homeland Security didn’t mince words. They called this what it was. An act of domestic terrorism.
The woman attempted to kill officers using her vehicle. The agent fired defensive shots to protect himself and others.
That is the truth.
Even the President watched the footage and said exactly what anyone with eyes could see. This was self-defense.
The Professional Agitator Machine
Within hours, the usual suspects mobilized.
Socialist groups.
Climate activists.
Pro-Palestinian organizations.
Democrat-aligned nonprofits.
Same language.
Same graphics.
Same calls to “hit the streets now.”
This isn’t organic outrage. This is an industry. A grievance machine that thrives on chaos, not justice.
And notice something else.
The people ICE is supposedly “oppressing” weren’t out there protesting.
The crowd was almost entirely white, progressive activists playing revolutionary dress-up. They don’t live there. They don’t face the crime. They don’t bury the victims. But they feel entitled to interfere anyway.
Actions Have Consequences
I’m not celebrating death. I’m stating reality.
When you drive a car into a law enforcement officer, you are choosing an outcome. When you interfere with armed federal agents in the middle of an operation, you are gambling with your life.
This is not a video game.
This is not social media theater.
This is the real world.
The saddest part is this. She accomplished nothing.
The arrests continued.
The criminals went to jail.
The only life lost was her own.
The Moral Takeaway
You have a constitutional right to protest. You do not have a right to endanger lives.
Leadership means telling people hard truths before tragedy strikes, not after.
Until city officials stop validating reckless behavior, this will keep happening.
Two plus two is still four.
And reality does not care about your hashtags.

I always look forward to your commentary because you are pragmatic. You are honest. You are authentic. You speak the truth. And I actually believe there is something called truth. Thank you.
“And reality does not care about your hashtags.” Brilliant. Honesty serves people best, not prevarication.