Stephen Miller's Murder Machine
Murder and Lies in Minneapolis.
Look at the images, if you have the stomach for it.
Look at the maroon Honda Pilot, a suburban relic of soccer games and grocery runs, now a rolling tomb. Look at the airbag, white, nylon, and soaked in the bright, arterial spray of a woman whose only crime was being in the way of the Machine.
Renee Nicole Good is dead. She was a mother. A poet. A U.S. citizen. She wasn’t a “target.” She wasn’t a “terrorist.” She was a neighbor who dropped her six-year-old at school and then encountered the hooded, nameless goons of Stephen Miller’s American SS.
And then the lying started. It didn’t start slow; it erupted with the practiced, oily precision of a regime that views the truth as a soft target. It was a volcanic, confident, blisteringly mendacious explosion of the MAGA narrative of “hero cops vs. domestic terrorists.”
Trump’s ludicrous social media posts and Stephen Miller’s instant trolling of the dead and mockery of the shock and horror Americans and the citizens of Minneapolis felt, set the tone for the Big Lie of Renee Nichole Good’s murder.
Kristi Noem, the lesser meat puppet of this dystopian play, took to the microphones to weave a fantasy. She talked about “domestic terrorism.” She talked about a truck “stuck in the snow” being swarmed. She spoke of an agent “dragged and rammed.”
It is all a lie.
It was a lie born in the fever swamps of the MAGA fever-brain and polished by the hacks at DHS. The video shows the truth: the agent was clear. The car was moving away. The shots were an execution, not an act of self-defense.



