FRESNO, Calif. (FOX26) — Neighbors stood shoulder-to-shoulder on the streets in Fresno to voice their objections against ICE and the Trump Administration, on Sunday, Jan. 11.

This protest, which took place on Blackstone and Nees, follows the fatal shooting of Renee Nicole Good by an ICE agent in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, which has since sparked nationwide anti-ICE demonstrations.

“I don’t know why the entire nation isn’t enraged,” Mike Beevers, a protester, said.

Catherine Fowler, a protester from Madera, criticized former President Donald Trump for labeling Good a ‘domestic terrorist.’

“Donald Trump is using double-speak, which was basically laid out for us in George Orwell’s, ‘1984’ book,” Fowler said. “They’re trying to sanitize every evil thing they do. They’re trying to tell us not to believe our eyes.”

The protest drew participants of all ages, from young children to seasoned activists like Reuben Doggett, who participated in the March from Selma to Montgomery in 1965.

At 91, Doggett remains committed to advocating for what he believed in.

“I’m here to protest the Trump administration and all of the …people associated with him who are trying to take this country away from us,” Doggett said.

Alfred Aldrete of Fresno Resistance emphasized the community’s collective stance against various issues, including American imperialism and ICE’s presence in the U.S.

“We’re just here collectively as a town, as a community to say no, no to blood for oil, no to Venezuela, no to ICE in Fresno, no to ICE in the United States (and) no to American imperialism,” Aldrete said.

Aldrete also said he was raised to question authority and that the Trump Administration always leaves him with more questions than answers.

Despite their strong opposition to ICE, protesters like Fowler clarified their support for law enforcement.

“We’re not enemies of law enforcement. We support the law enforcement (and) we support the rule of law.,” Fowler said. “The people who don’t support the law enforcement are the people who run the administration at the high-states.”

Fowler also reflected on the symbolic meaning of Renee Nicole Good’s name.

“Renee means to be reborn (an) Nicole is ‘victory of the people,'” Fowler said. “Reborn-victory of the people-Good.”