Irish rock band U2 invoked Renee Nicole Good – the anti-ICE agitator gunned down by federal agents in Minnesota last month – in their new song “American Obituary,” while calling for a “rise against the people of the lie.”
The Grammy award-winning band’s controversial jam is the first track on their EP “Days of Ash,” published Wednesday, honoring the Minneapolis mother of three who was killed while impeding immigration officials.
“Renee Good born to die freeAmerican mother of threeSeventh day JanuaryA bullet for еach child, you see”
The song states the time, 9:30 a.m., as the approximate time Good was shot three times on a Minneapolis street.
“The color of her eyе930 MinneapolisTo desecrate domestic blissThree bullet blasts, three babies kissedRenee the domestic terrorist”
Trump administration officials, including Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, described Good as a “domestic terrorist” after the shooting.
The “anti-ICE warrior” had been accused of “stalking and harassing” ICE agents earlier in the day before she was caught on video blocking a street for several minutes before federal agents pulled up the road.
One of the officials got out and ordered Good to move her car. She refused orders before the agent walked around the car.
Graphic footage from the scene captured the moment Good appeared to plow into the officer just seconds before multiple shots were fired through her window.
Four shots were fired at good including three that struck her in the chest, arm, and head. The fourth bullet grazed her.
“What you can’t kill can’t dieAmerica will riseAgainst the people of the lieI love you moreThan hate loves warI love you moreThan hate loves war”
In the song, the band claims immigration operations allegedly targeted places of worship, schools and streets where children were around.
“In the streets with children playingIn the churches where they’re prayingSchool teachers are explainingAmerica, AmericaThe power of the people!”
“Days of Ash” was a surprise project from the band was released on Ash Wednesday, the first day of the Lenten season for Christianity, marked by fasting, prayer and ashes placed on the foreheads of worshippers in the shape of a cross.
The released by the legendary group – consisting of Bono, the Edge, Adam Clayton, and Larry Mullen Jr. – joined dozens of other musicians in releasing songs protesting the Trump administration’s illegal immigration crackdown, including the operation in Minnesota.
Bruce Springsteen, Billie Eilish, Bad Bunny and the Dropkick Murphys have all been vocal against Trump and federal immigration officials.
Springsteen’s new song “Streets of Minneapolis” depicts how “a city aflame fought fire and ice ’neath an occupier’s boots,” which Springsteen calls “King Trump’s private army.”
The Boss says he wrote the song a day after Alex Pretti, another anti-ICE protester, was fatally shot by US Customs and Border Agents in Minneapolis on Jan. 24.
“It’s dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renee Good,” he wrote, naming the two victims.
Billie Eilish shouted “F–k ICE” and claimed “no one is illegal on stolen land” during her acceptance speech for Song of the Year at the 68th annual Grammy Awards.