On the ThruLine podcast from NPR, the former slaveholder who took on the KKK and won.
It became more and more and more militant as time went on.
Listen to ThruLine in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts.
A vigil was held in Minneapolis last night,
marking one month since Renee Macklin-Good was shot and killed by a federal immigration agent.
Goods wife Rebecca was there.
She didn't speak, but a statement from her was read by Rabbi Arielle LeCoch Rosenberg.
Minneapolis has shown me that even in the middle of grief and fear,
people still show up for each other.
For that, I want to say thank you.
Weeks after Macklin Goode was killed, another person was shot dead by a federal immigration agent,
37-year-old ICU nurse Alex Pretty.
Protests have continued in Minnesota over the presence of ICE agents,
even after the Trump administration last week announced a partial withdrawal.
The State Department has confirmed its removing posts from its official accounts on the social media platform X made before President Trump returned to office last year.
NPR Shannon Bond reports.
State Department staff were told anyone who wants to see posts from the Obama, Biden,
or first Trump terms will have to file a Freedom of Information Act request,
according to an employee who asked to remain anonymous for fear of retaliation.
That's different from how the government typically archives the online footprint of previous administrations.