Two masked men could be seen behind the tinted windows of the SUV. The vehicle, parked on a small residential street in Minneapolis-Saint Paul on Friday, January 16, belonged to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the federal immigration police known by its acronym ICE. Then the commotion began: despite the bitter cold and heavy, falling snow, neighbors came out of their homes, pointed the vehicle out to passersby, and shouted at the officers inside: "Get the hell out of here, you bunch of Nazis." A woman parked her car across the street to block their exit for several minutes. "They're targeting a family that lives in the neighborhood," another neighbor said.
Word spread through the many messaging groups dedicated to monitoring the activities of ICE that have sprung up across Minnesota in recent days. More residents arrived, armed with whistles. Inside one of the vehicles, an agent took photos of those present. Another made an obscene gesture with his canister of tear gas. The standoff lasted two hours. The agents eventually left.
Such has been everyday life in Minneapolis and neighboring Saint Paul since December 2025, when the Twin Cities began living under Operation Metro Surge, the deployment of 2,000 federal immigration officers. Since the death of Renee Nicole Good, a 37-year-old mother shot dead at the wheel of her car by ICE officer Jonathan Ross on January 7, something new has been taking shape in the frozen air of Minnesota. Residents have been organizing, protesting, tracking the officers and resisting with whistles. Reporters from media across the country are there, driving around the streets, on the lookout for ongoing operations.
The video of Good's death, which more than 80% of Americans have seen, proved to be a turning point. The public has not been convinced by the administration's attempt to portray the mother as a "domestic terrorist" who allegedly tried to run over the officer with her car: 53% of people surveyed by YouGov believed the shooting was not justified, compared to 28% who approved of it.
I'm pretty sure the problem started long before capitalism. As soon as we developed agriculture to feed more people with less effort - which is to say, as soon as survival stopped becoming a moment-to-moment problem in constant need of solving - we outpaced evolution.
You mean as soon as wealth accumulation became a governing societal paradigm.
I get what you're saying and I agree that the basic concept can be generalized thus, but capitalism by name wasn't invented until the 16th century AD.
Obviously there were occasional problems before capitalism. That doesn't negate what I said.
https://mindpsychiatrist.com/sociopath-vs-psychopath-born-or-made/
https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-biology-of-human-nature/202309/how-capitalism-is-making-us-sick
https://youtu.be/VhI5tEGc7to
For sure some of what this woman is saying is problematic, but the point stands.
Occasional problems? The entirety of human history up to the 16th century, just had occasional problems? Come on, now. All the popsci essays in the world aren't going to make me buy that take.
That's your prerogative. It isn't popsci, it's well-documented, so I will work with those who acknowledge the issues and are willing to fix them.
For everyone else, here's an article I just read:
https://archive.ph/JVPib
Sorry , what I mean to say is you're making a ridiculous claim that's untrue on its face, and for me to believe something like that I'd need to see some actual scientific research, not essay articles made for consumption in "popular media". I'm anti-capitalist, but capitalism is a symptom of a problem that has existed since civilization began.