Hollywood just showed America exactly where they stand on law enforcement.
And they did it on live television for millions to see.
Mark Ruffalo, Wanda Sykes, and other celebrities wore "Be Good" pins at the Golden Globes — honoring a woman who tried to run over an ICE agent.
Hollywood's Latest Virtue Signal Targets ICE Agents
The Golden Globes red carpet turned into a protest against Immigration and Customs Enforcement on Sunday night.
Mark Ruffalo strutted past cameras wearing a "Be Good" pin plastered on his tuxedo.
Comedian Wanda Sykes wore one too.
So did actresses Natasha Lyonne and Jean Smart.
The pins weren't supporting cancer research or Ukraine refugees.
They were honoring Renee Good — the 37-year-old Minnesota woman who accelerated her vehicle directly at an ICE agent last week before getting shot.
Good rammed the agent with her car during an enforcement operation in Minneapolis on January 7th.
The agent stood in front of her vehicle trying to stop her.
She hit the gas.
She struck him with the car and he fired at the windshield to stop the attack.
Good died at the scene.
Now Hollywood's treating her like a martyr instead of someone who attacked a federal law enforcement officer.
Wanda Sykes Calls Trump Administration a "Rogue Government"
Sykes didn't stop at wearing the pin.
She went on the attack against ICE and the Trump administration on the red carpet.
"We need to speak up and shut this rogue government down," Sykes told reporters. "It's awful what they are doing to people."
The "rogue government" she's talking about?
The democratically elected Trump administration enforcing immigration laws that Congress passed.
ICE agents are doing their jobs — removing illegal aliens who shouldn't be in the country.
But according to Sykes, that makes them rogues who need to be "shut down."
Jean Smart posed in the press room clutching her Best Actress award for "Hacks" with the "Be Good" pin clearly visible on her gown.
The message wasn't subtle.
Hollywood wants Americans to believe that ICE agents are the villains — not the people attacking them.
The Shooting That Hollywood Refuses to Understand
ICE agents were conducting an operation targeting illegal aliens with criminal records in Minneapolis.
Good was in a vehicle that agents attempted to stop.
Instead of complying, she accelerated toward an agent positioned in front of her car.
The Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension is investigating the shooting.
But Hollywood didn't wait for facts.
They turned Good into a symbol of supposed ICE brutality before the investigation even started.
The Left's War on Law Enforcement Reaches New Low
This stunt reveals everything you need to know about Hollywood's priorities.
An ICE agent was doing his job trying to apprehend an illegal alien.
A woman tried to run him over with her vehicle.
He defended himself.
And now celebrities are wearing pins on national television suggesting he's the bad guy.
Since Trump took office three weeks ago, ICE has ramped up enforcement operations across the country.
Agents are arresting illegal aliens with criminal records, gang members, and people who've already been ordered deported.
The Charlie Kirk assassination on September 10th intensified Trump's focus on restoring law and order.
ICE operations in Minneapolis have been particularly aggressive because the city became a magnet for illegal immigration under Biden.
Minnesota welcomed thousands of refugees and illegal aliens through Biden's catch-and-release programs.
Now Trump's cleaning up the mess — and Hollywood's furious about it.
The "Be Good" pins send a clear message to ICE agents across America: celebrities think you're the problem, not the people breaking our laws.
Hollywood Has Always Hated Trump's Immigration Enforcement
This isn't the first time celebrities have used awards shows to attack immigration enforcement.
During Trump's first term, actors wore orange ACLU ribbons to protest his border policies.
They gave speeches attacking ICE and calling for the agency to be abolished.
Now they're back at it — but this time they're literally memorializing someone who attacked a federal agent.
The hypocrisy is staggering.
These same celebrities live behind gates and walls in their Beverly Hills mansions.
They don't deal with the crime that illegal immigration brings to working-class neighborhoods.
They don't compete with illegal aliens for jobs.
Their kids don't go to overcrowded schools filled with non-English speakers.
But they'll lecture Americans about compassion while wearing designer gowns that cost more than most people make in a year.
Trump won a landslide victory in November partly because Americans are sick of being lectured by coastal elites about immigration.
Voters wanted secure borders and aggressive enforcement.
They got it.
And now Hollywood's throwing a tantrum on live television because ICE agents are actually doing their jobs.
The "Be Good" pins aren't about compassion.
They're about undermining law enforcement and signaling to their fellow elites that they're on the "right side" of the issue.
Americans see right through it.
Sources:
- Breitbart News, "Golden Globes: Mark Ruffalo, Wanda Sykes Among Hollywood Celebrities Wearing Anti-ICE 'Be Good' Pin Supporting Renee Good," January 11, 2026.
- Fox News, "ICE agent shoots woman during enforcement operation in Minneapolis," January 7, 2026.
- Star Tribune, "Woman killed by ICE agent in Minneapolis identified," January 8, 2026.










