Federal ICE agents killed an immigrant in the street. Where is Houston's outrage? 51%
By Joy Sewing58%
7/15/2026, 11:00:00 AM
Topics: Ice, Immigration, Law Enforcement, Social Justice, Human Rights, Politics, Protest, Outrage, Community, Fear, Silence
Keywords: Ice, Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, Frida Adame, Houston, Immigration, Protest, Outrage, George Floyd, George Floyd Protest, George Floyd March, George Floyd Demonstration, Renee Good, Alex Pretti, Dilley, Texas, Trump Administration, Kinder Institute For Urban Research, Harris County, Los Angeles County, Stephany Padilla, Ervan Chew Park, Canal Street, Silence, Justice For Lorenzo, World Cup
BS Summary: This article contains 28 faulty reasoning types, including Negativity Bias, Anecdotal, and Hasty Generalization, with Appeal to Emotion as the most egregious example at 40.7% saturation with 261 hits. Analysis detected 1,659 faulty-reasoning hits from 642 analyzed words, generating a BS Score of 50.6% and a BS Rank of 51% (8,046 of 16,140 articles). This article is worse (more manipulative) than 50.20% of the article peer group.
A dozen people stood in the rain Sunday at the spot where 52-year-old Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was shot and killed by an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer last week.
On a Sunday afternoon, I expected hundreds of people to be there, filling this stretch of Houston's East End with flowers, candles and notes of condolences for a man who spent 35 years living in the United States, built a business, paid his taxes and, alongside his wife, raised three sons.
I expected the kind of outrage that brought parts of Minnesota to a standstill after the fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by ICE agents in 2025.
Instead, there was rain and a dozen people.
Houston has always been fickle about what it takes to the streets.
For some causes, it goes hard.
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In 2006, we had the largest immigration-rights protest in our history with an estimated more than 30,000 in attendance.
In 2017, some 22,000 turned out for the Women's March in solidarity with marches in other major cities.
Then in 2020, roughly 60,000 people peacefully marched downtown after the murder of Houston native George Floyd, making it the city's largest demonstration in decades.
There has been protest over Salgado's death.
Some 1,500 people marched down Canal Street carrying banners demanding justice.
A few hundred more attended a vigil and protest days later.
But for a city with one of the nation's largest immigrant populations, it doesn't feel like enough.
There should be more voices.
More outrage.
More people demanding answers.
"I'm disappointed in Houston," said activist Frida Adame.
"As an immigrant, I think it has a lot to do with the fact that he was brown and that we do not have a full video of what happened."
In Minnesota, widely circulated videos showed violent clashes between protesters and federal agents, including the fatal shooting of Renee Good, a white U.S. citizen.
Those images kept the nation's attention.
When I last spoke with Adame earlier this year, she had traveled with about 100 protesters to the Immigration Processing Center in Dilley, Texas, to oppose the Trump administration's immigration crackdown.
Federal agents tear-gassed the group.
She believes fear is keeping people silent.
"We saw so many people, so many Mexicans, pack the World Cup soccer events, but where is everyone now?"
she said.
"I can't let fear keep me quiet.
They are killing us, and I could be next."
Fear is an effective way to silence a community.
It tells people to keep their heads down, mind their own business and hope they are not next.
More than 600,000 undocumented immigrants were living in Harris County in 2023, according to the Kinder Institute for Urban Research.
We have the second-largest immigrant population behind Los Angeles County,
Chances are you know someone who is undocumented, whether you realize it or not.
They may have built your home, repaired your roof, mowed your lawn or cleaned your office.
Many are working quietly, minding their business.
But too many Houstonians have the power to speak up and don't.
Silence never protected anyone.
At Houston City Council on Tuesday, Adame was one of nearly 100 people who crowded City Hall to plead with council members to stand up against federal officials.
This wasn't a new for her.
In January, Adame spoke before city council demanding protection for Houston immigrants: "Must one of your own die before you act in Houston?"
Adame and fellow activist Stephany Padilla, are organizing a "Justice for Lorenzo" protest at 2 p.m.
Sunday at Ervan Chew Park, 4502 Dunlavy.
They hope thousands will come.
Houston can decide whether a dozen people in the rain is the end of this story or just the beginning.
Analysis
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