Watching Elizabeth Warren turn two tragic, confusing deaths into a one?note political attack was disgraceful, and Megyn Kelly was exactly right to call it out. Warren raced to the Senate floor to paint Alex Pretti and Renee Good as martyrs in a narrative that conveniently absolves the people who rushed in to create chaos, while ignoring the messy on?the?ground facts still under review.
The facts we know so far are grim and unsettling: Renee Good was shot during an ICE operation while dropping off her child, and Alex Pretti was killed days later amid a heated street confrontation — both deaths have produced competing official accounts and bystander video that raise real questions. Federal officials say agents faced dangerous encounters and that force was used as they believed necessary, while witnesses and released footage have contradicted parts of the government’s early narrative. This is not the time for partisan theater; it is the time for sober investigation and facts.
Yet Warren and other Democrats immediately seized the moments to stoke outrage and rehearse a familiar script: demonize enforcement, glorify disorder, and cash in politically. Warren’s speech amplified the emotional angle and assumed the worst about the officers before key evidence has been publicly vetted, proving again that for many on the left, political gain comes before truth or the safety of law?abiding citizens. That kind of reflexive grandstanding does real damage to public trust in institutions that are already on a knife edge.
Meanwhile, conservative voices and independent journalists who question the anti?ICE mob narrative are being smeared as callous or worse, as if protecting the rule of law made them complicit in tragedy. Megyn Kelly has consistently pointed out that the left’s rush to narrative encourages confrontations that put ordinary people — and law enforcement — in harm’s way, and she’s demanded accountability for the activists who block and bait officers into dangerous standoffs. America shouldn’t reward reckless provocation with political martyrdom.
It’s also telling that Democrats and allied groups turned these incidents into instant fundraising copy, weaponizing grief to pad political coffers rather than focus on facts or reforms that might prevent future tragedies. That cynical exploitation of human loss was documented in multiple campaign solicitations and should disgust anyone who believes in decent public life. If congressional leaders truly care, they’ll back a full, transparent probe rather than a press release.
None of this absolves law enforcement if misconduct occurred; Americans want justice when mistakes are made and consequences when rules are broken. But justice must be blind and methodical, not a political Rorschach test used to score partisan points. We owe it to the families of the dead and to every first responder to resist the easy narratives and insist on evidence, not hashtags.
Megyn Kelly calling out Elizabeth Warren’s spin wasn’t a mere TV moment — it was a reminder that patriots should stand for law, order, and truth over the left’s instinct to weaponize tragedy. Hardworking Americans deserve clear answers and honest leaders, not shrill moral preening from coastal elites who see every disaster as a fundraising opportunity. It’s time to demand the facts, protect our communities, and stop letting politics hollow out our institutions one death at a time.






