In the aftermath of the shooting of Renee Nicole Good, thereβs been a noticeable shift in attitudes among Americans.
The New York Times published an op-ed titled βThe Resistance Libs Were Right.β Even voices like Joe Rogan, Theo Vonn and Andrew Schulz β widely credited as podcasting ambassadors who helped usher in the second Trump administration β have recently stepped back more vocal support for certain actions by the president, culminating in Rogan asking, βAre we really going to be the Gestapo?β earlier this month.
This comes alongside a new Quinnipiac University poll that found that the majority of voters (53%) thought the shooting was βunjustifiedβ and 57% of voters disapprove of βthe way U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, known as ICE, is enforcing immigration laws.β
Advertisement
Getty Images/Huffpost Amid the killing of Renee Nicole Good and the increased presence of ICE in Minnesota, a lot of the people who said those "resisting" were "overreacting" are changing their tune.
Itβs a weird time for the individuals who have been vocally raising alarms since the previous Trump administration β and labelled βderangedβ for it β who have the uncomfortable reality of being as unsurprised as they are horrified.
When it sure seems like your worst political anxieties came true ...
βWhen people ring alarm bells about the danger they see and others dismiss those fears, it can lead to increased feelings of despair, hopelessness and loneliness,β Melissa S. Tihinen, a licensed clinical social worker and therapist in New Jersey, told HuffPost.
Advertisement
The feeling that you βpredictedβ things getting this tumultuous is highly isolating, especially if your community and circle includes people who are less politically engag
Continue Reading on HuffPost
This preview shows approximately 15% of the article. Read the full story on the publisher's website to support quality journalism.