The Metro: From Minneapolis to Detroit, civil disobedience and the economics of justice
Robyn Vincent, The Metro January 20, 2026In the wake of the fatal shooting of Renee Good by a federal immigration officer, vigils and protests are spreading nationwide. Some participants have turned to civil disobedience, demanding accountability and systemic change. In Detroit, a city shaped by racial austerity and economic extraction, this moment resonates deeply.
Roughly 1,000 anti-Donald Trump protesters marched down Trumbull Avenue to Detroit Public Safety on January 13, 2026, just days after the killing of Renee Good by federal immigration officer Jonathan Ross.
There are weeks when the news feels like weather; something that happens over there, something you brace for and then move through.
And then there are times when it lands in your body.
In the last few weeks, vigils have spread across the country after a federal immigration officer killed Renee Good. People are mourning, but they’re also organizing — and not just with signs and speeches. Some are choosing disruption. Some are choosing civil disobedience. They’re asking a blunt question: if systems can take a life in broad daylight and then argue about vocabulary, what exactly are we supposed to do with our grief?
Detroiters know what it means to be extracted from, written off, and still survive. And that makes these stories feel like different chapters of the same book— a book about power, and whose lives it’s allowed to break.
To help us read that book more clearly, Robyn Vincent spoke with Saqib Bhatti of the Action Center on Race and the Economy. His work traces the money behind public pain, and it asks what happens when communities confront the power brokers who, he says, are facilitating that pain.
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Authors
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Robyn Vincent is the co-host of The Metro on WDET. She is an award-winning journalist, a lifelong listener of WDET, and a graduate of Wayne State University, where she studied journalism. Before returning home to Detroit, she was a reporter, producer, editor, and executive producer for NPR stations in the Mountain West, including her favorite Western station, KUNC. She received a national fellowship from Investigative Reporters and Editors for her investigative work that probed the unchecked power of sheriffs in Colorado. She was also the editor-in-chief of an alternative weekly newspaper in Wyoming, leading the paper to win its first national award for a series she directed tracing one reporter’s experience living and working with Syrian refugees. -
