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There was a time when suburban women organized bake sales, book clubs, and carpools. Now they are chasing federal agents, blocking vehicles, screaming into their phones, and calling it resistance.  What is happening?

It does make you wonder whether these women ever had stable, normal social lives at all. Because people who do are not usually this easy to recruit into chaos.

Attention Seeking

Two recent pieces, one from the New York Post and another from Townhall, describe the same phenomenon from different angles: a growing number of women inserting themselves into ICE operations, filming confrontations, interfering with arrests, and behaving like extras in a low-budget dystopian film they wrote in their own heads.

The other day, our very own Lisa wrote about how these women are being recruited to go out and put themselves in harm’s way to confront ICE agents. Never mind about these hysterical women not knowing why they are doing this, and let alone in doing so, they are actually attempting to protect the worst of criminals. Do they know? Who knows.

Do these women think they are being brave? Or heroic. Maybe they believe they are changing the world. I doubt it. They just want attention and to be a star in their own viral video moment. Ask Renee Good how that ended up for her.

Being Used

These women are being used. Let’s start with the basics. Obviously, these women do not understand immigration law. They don’t understand federal jurisdiction. Nor do they understand warrants, detainers, or enforcement priorities. That, or they just don’t give a damn.

But what they do understand is vibes, slogans, and the intoxicating rush of feeling morally superior on camera.

One of the most grotesque parts of this trend is how performative it is. You have to wonder, would these same women be out there if we didn’t have cell phones and social media these days? Everything is framed as if the camera is more important than reality.

They women chase ICE vehicles like paparazzi. They crowdfund their activism  and collect followers while pretending they are martyrs. Just Google organizations who pay for ICE protestors and see what you get.

Privileged

Then, there is the delusion of safety. Many of these women sincerely believe they are protected from consequences. They joke about privilege as if it were a magical shield. They assume the world will bend around them because they think it has always done so.

The death of Renee Good should have been a wake-up call. Instead, it has been treated as fuel. Instead of pausing, reflecting, or rethinking, the movement has doubled down.

These women get suckered in to these organizations because the crave belonging. So these confrontations are not organic. These women are recruited, radicalized, and trained to perform outrage.

The Whole Dishonesty Of It All

There is something deeply dishonest about the bravery narrative here. These women don’t confront violent criminals, drug traffickers. And they shouldn’t. Instead, thy target uniformed agents bound by rules, cameras, and restraint.

What we are watching is not civic engagement. It’s emotional meltdown. These women’s lives are empty and unseen. They feel unimportant. So they go out and think they are resisting tyranny. And they make themselves some main character in their own fantasy.

If these women actually wanted to help immigrants, they would be doing the boring, unglamorous work that real help requires. Legal aid. Housing assistance. Community support. Job placement. But that does not come with applause, cameras, or dopamine. So they skip it. That makes one thing clear. These protests are not about immigrants. They are about themselves.

These emotional militants aren’t saving anyone. They are being manipulated by activists groups that need bodies, chaos, and spectacle. They are not heroes, they are props. And they’ve volunteered to be used. And when all of this goes away, who are they going to be?

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