January 12, 2026

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Renee Good and the Rage that Fuels State Violence ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/01/12/renee-good-and-the-rage-that-fuels-state-violence/
 )
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Ruth Fowler ( https://www.counterpunch.org/author/ruth-fowler/ )

Facebook ( https://www.counterpunch.org/#facebook ) Twitter ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/#twitter ) Reddit ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/#reddit ) Bluesky ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/#bluesky ) Email ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/#email ) ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/2026/01/12/renee-good-and-the-rage-that-fuels-state-violence/print/
 )

Youtube screenshot.

We are at JFK, waiting for the ground staff to retrieve our stroller. The baby 
is crying. He holds his arms out and looks at me, wailing and hot.

Please give him to me, I say quietly.

He’s fine, my husband snaps, and refuses to meet my eye. The baby cries harder.

He’s not fine. He wants me. He wants his mum.

He’s fine.

He’s not. Please, just give him to me. Give him to me?

I’ve started crying now too. Hot milk prickles at my breasts.

No.

Just give him to me! My voice is high and panicked. My baby cries harder. 
Husband looks at me now, his eyes cold, blue and furious. His voice is low, 
controlled, a malevolent, vicious undertone. He speaks slow as if there’s a 
period after every word. Will you stop you psychotic – fucking – bitch.

There are many of us who recognize this word, “bitch,” and the hot, scorching 
punch of it in this kind of context. After the shots are fired in the footage 
of Renee Good’s death, a voice can be heard calling her warm, dead body leaking 
hot blood over children’s stuffies, a “fucking bitch.”

The agonizing moment-by-moment breakdowns, the analysis of angles, the legal 
justifications, the endless videos which will continue to surface as neighbors 
trawl through their RING cameras – none of this mattered in that moment. That 
“fucking bitch,” to those of us who have been victimized by coercive control, 
was a conviction.

In Civil Protection Orders, the most common gender insult was ‘bitch.’ There 
are so many studies which track the way verbal dehumanization starts to pave 
the way for eventual violence, from studies with women surviving near fatal 
attacks, to social worker reports, to beyond. It’s a detail defenders want us 
to ignore — a slip of the tongue in a stressful moment. But language matters. 
Slurs emerge when professionalism collapses and something more primal takes 
over. They reveal how the speaker understands the person in front of them: not 
as a citizen, not as a human being, but as an object of contempt. The “Get the 
fuck out of Minneapolis” matters, because it is a sign that common decency will 
not suffice at a time, at a moment like this, when the breakdown is so acute.

“Fucking bitch” is not a phrase uttered in desperation, in pain, or in terror, 
but in anger. In retaliation. It is a sign of verbal dehumanization that 
signals contempt, not panic. Fury, not fear. How dare you refuse to acknowledge 
my power. You are worthless.

That contempt is the emotional precondition for violence.

Even before the personal footage believed to belong to Jonathan Ross, the ICE 
agent who shot Renee surfaced this morning, the rage of that ‘fucking bitch’ 
slapped me in the face and took me back to a time when the person I trusted 
most in the world was subjecting both myself and my baby to unrestrained rage 
on a daily basis. America as an abused spouse is a trope that has been oft 
repeated throughout Trump’s centuries long regime of terror, which has 
apparently only been about a year long. Domestic violence is not a shorthand 
for politics, but rather that the current regime incorporates coercive control 
as a political technology.

Renee sounds and looks calm in the footage we have. She’s in her car. I imagine 
the heat blasting, probably a thermos of joe in the cupholder next to the 
stuffies crammed into the glove compartment. Her hot breath frosts in the 
frigid Minneapolis morning. Her wife walking outside the car, throwing smart 
comments out, is pissed. But she’s not out of control. She’s not threatening.  
Being annoying, and annoyed, is not grounds for murder. Throwing smart ass 
comments out to law enforcement is a First Amendment Right. Renee herself is 
not threatening. She’s de-escalating.

But then that furious hot spat of anger, the anger which rises out of nowhere, 
the anger which erupts and destroys in seconds, the anger which pops out three 
bullets because those queer bitches are pissing you off and getting in your way 
at 9:30am on a Tuesday morning, the anger which leaves the victims reeling and 
screaming on the side of the road saying it’s my fault it was my fault I made 
her do it while the perpetrator of that rage puts their gun back in their 
holster and calmly walks around for several minutes showing no visible signs of 
either injury, distress, fear or sorrow. Just satisfaction.

He looks satisfied.

Rage is not incidental to state violence. Rage is the fuel for state violence. 
And as every person in a coercive controlling relationship knows, the victim 
will be blamed and the “fucking bitch” will be manipauletd, until that was 
never rage at being disobeyed and disrespected, but always fear and desperation 
and pity. Fear can be perfectly retrofitted onto rage. Panic can be rehearsed 
after violent consequences have been meted. And they will be accepted by the 
system because violence is an acceptable corrective when the victim has 
committed the crime of being black, being queer, being a woman, being an other, 
or being obviously opposed to the regime.

Domestic violence is always about control. It is about one person’s impossible 
need to control every single aspect of another person’s life, and the rage 
emerges from the futility of this exercise. It’s often triggered by something 
inconsequential: a refusal, a delay, a tone of voice, a choice of words. 
Looking happy, looking sad, looking queer, looking straight. Control perceives 
this inconsequential slight as vast humiliation, and responds with excessive 
punishment.

What we see in the Good footage follows this script with chilling precision. 
Orders are barked. Compliance is demanded instantly. There is no meaningful 
attempt to de-escalate, no pause, no retreat. When the situation slips even 
slightly out of the officer’s control, the response is lethal.

Authoritarian power borrows the same emotional logic as domestic violence.

The tools are familiar: intimidation, humiliation, unpredictability, and the 
promise of consequences if you don’t comply fast enough, perfectly enough, 
gratefully enough.

Trump did not invent this logic — but he has normalized it. For Trump and his 
cronies, violence is not a last resort. It is a corrective, and it is the first 
instinct.

ICE, in particular, has become a perfect vessel for this ideology with its 
masked agents, minimal oversight and constant posture of threat. It has 
instilled an institutional culture that treats civilians as potential enemies 
and disagreement as provocation. In this context, Ross’s rage is not an 
aberration. It is how Trump’s America will continue to enforce itself.

What chills me is not whether a jury will find Ross legally justified. It’s 
that the system seems uninterested in whether rage itself should disqualify 
someone from holding lethal authority. The state has taught its agents that 
they should defend reflexively. They have taught law enforcement for years that 
civilian death, particularly of young black civilian lives, will be litigated 
as a PR problem rather than a moral one. Over a decade ago, I quoted Malcolm X 
in an article I wrote about Christopher Dorner, the LAPD cop who went rogue and 
started killing his colleagues. I was not scared of Dorner, I said. Or no more 
scared of him than any other cop with a gun in the United States of America. 
“The chickens come home to roost”. ( 
https://www.counterpunch.org/2013/02/11/lapd-chickens-come-home-to-roost/ )

The foundation for Trump’s America has been laid in the fabric of American 
society decades before Tuesday’s horrors. It is no rurpsie that all it took was 
one vile idiot to build a Trump Tower on top of it and transform the tragedy of 
American policing into the humanitarian hell that it has become. Renee Good’s 
death is being processed by the right as an isolated incident, and by the left 
as a symbol of the horrors of Trump’s America. It isn’t. It’s part of a 
decades-long continuum in which state violence has increasingly come to 
resemble the dynamics survivors recognize from private life: domination framed 
as protection, punishment framed as necessity, rage framed as fear. Trump could 
only achieve this because America was already rotten before he arrived.

*Ruth Fowler* was born in Wales and lives between Los Angeles and London. You 
can find out more about her RuthIorio.com ( https://www.ruthiorio.com/ ) and 
Venmo @ruthiorio

+ Donald the Destroyer
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