This week on This Ain't It, we devote the episode to ICE—how it was created, what it has become, and why its current tactics are creating fear rather than safety. Following the killing of Renee Nicole Good in Minneapolis, we step back to look at the agency's origins after 9/11, its rapidly expanding budget, and the escalation of raids far beyond their legal scope.
We talk about warrantless arrests, conflicting orders during raids, the surge of heavily armed federal agents into American cities, and the lack of oversight surrounding ICE recruitment and training. We also examine how fear is being used as a political tool—how intimidation replaces enforcement, and why terrorizing communities is not the same as protecting the public.
Drawing on history, journalism, faith, and political theory, we wrestle with hard questions: what law and order actually mean, who the Constitution protects, whether ICE can be reformed or must be dismantled, and what responsibility ordinary people have when the state abandons its own limits.
This is a heavy conversation, but a necessary one—about power, fear, and what happens when violence is justified in the name of security.