Good Dog – by Teri Carter – Reporting from Dog Lake

Good Dog

I am thinking about Renee Good’s dog because my heart hurts too much to think directly about the totality of her unnecessary death.

By Teri Carter, Jan 10, 2026

I’ve been thinking about Renee Good’s dog.

I’ve been thinking about Renee Good’s dog because my heart hurts too much think about what happened to Renee Good. Her dog in the backseat of her SUV; her dog looking out the rolled-down window at an ICE agent as he walks around her vehicle, filming with his cell phone; her dog, who we later see alive, in a Reuter’s photo, outside her SUV on the icy pavement next to Renee Good’s partner because Renee Good is dead.

Last week was the first week of Kentucky’s general assembly for 2026. And though nothing much happened outside the filing of bills and adjusting to having no House or Senate galleries for the public, I can’t help but feel a sense of dread. Why? Because in addition to lawmakers returning to Frankfort to fight, yet again, the DEI culture wars, the rolling tsunami of national news — Venezuela, the fifth anniversary of January 6, Renee Good’s execution on a Minneapolis street — is drowning us here in the commonwealth, too.

On Friday night I watched Comment on Kentucky, our weekly political recap, like I always do. It sounded so polite. It sounded so normal. It sounded so distant and sanitized from the 24/7 political dumpster fire we are all, every last one of us, living in.

Ten years ago this month, we bought our house in rural Anderson County. It would be another year and a half before we moved here permanently with our three big dogs, but to-a-person our neighbors welcomed us from the first day with bon fires and open houses and, “Hey, do you have a minute to walk on over here and meet our new grand baby?”

We thought we had arrived in paradise.

We thought we had arrived in paradise because there was proof of that paradise every single day until a billionaire from New York City came down an escalator and changed our lives from there all the way to rural Kentucky.

Because he came down that escalator there would soon be no more neighborhood bonfires.

No more open houses, not even during the holidays.

No more calls to “walk on over here.”

It turns out that a decade of poisonous political rancor — Facebook and Twitter sniping, cable TV talking heads and yard signs and MAGA flags, the joyful cruelty of the president, the Kentucky legislature with their addiction to culture wars and embarrassingly obvious envy of the governor, the decimation of local news, the giant chasm we feel between us and neighbors within walking distance — takes its toll. Even the Republicans out here don’t socialize with all of the other Republicans.

My heart hurts.

I’ve been thinking about Renee Good’s dog. Her big black dog with his white-tipped nose staring out from the back window of her SUV the same way my dog — Jack, Jack-o’-Lantern, Lantern of Love — his black snout whitening with age, stares out the back window of my truck, excited for every ten mile drive to town as if it’s the first time he’s ever been to town.

I found Jack at the Lexington Humane Society as a puppy in November 2017, one year into the MAGA presidency that was, even then, already shifting the tectonic plates of our humanity.

A few months earlier, I’d put our elderly yellow lab to sleep at the veterinarian’s office, and since I was sobbing they kindly waved me past the reception desk and out the door. Come back another day, they said, you can pay later.

A week or so later, I was back at the vet’s office, standing in line to pay, when the man behind me, his own big elderly dog at the end of the leash in his hand, said under his breath, “You’re that lady that writes for the paper” and proceeded to tell me what he thought of my politics. He kept on until I turned around and said, “I’m sorry this is taking so long, I put my dog to sleep last week” and suddenly the politics disappeared. How old was my dog, he wanted to know, what happened, boy he was sorry, there’s no friend like a dog, is there?

I was watching Comment on Kentucky on Friday night, my dogs asleep on the couch next to me, thinking about universal pre-K and the number of times I’ve sat in Frankfort committee meetings listening to dejected citizens tell the legislature about childcare deserts, the prohibitive cost of childcare, how common it is for kids to show up in Kindergarten unable to read.

And I thought about how this year’s legislature is going to waste our time and our tax dollars, yet again, arguing about DEI. They won’t even consider universal pre-K, and it has nothing to do with the budget. Our Republican lawmakers can’t give our beloved Democratic governor the slightest perceived win, even if it means we all lose.

Ten years ago, when we arrived in the paradise that was and is rural Kentucky, who could have imagined the massive, deleterious affect a multiply-bankrupt New York City billionaire playboy would have on us, on our neighbors, on our legislature, on our lives.

I’ve been thinking about Renee Good’s dog. How scared he must have been in the backseat of her SUV as she was shot to death by an ICE agent who was filming her — we see this clearly in video — with his cell phone in one hand while drawing his gun with the other, and then we hear the agent who shot her say, “Fucking bitch.”

I am thinking about Renee Good and her loved ones and her children and her community. I am thinking about her blood on the airbag, her six year old at school, her dog in the backseat.

Renee Good was not shot to death because she did something wrong.

Renee Good was shot to death because this is where a decade of 24/7 hateful, dehumanizing, political rhetoric leads; because the leaders we elected to represent us in the statehouse and the U.S. Capitol have allowed the president they either worship or are terrified of deploy thousands of masked gunmen into our streets to terrorize American citizens.

Renee Good was shot to death by a member of the president’s personal masked police force, who was filming himself shooting her for the president’s entertainment.

I am thinking about Renee Good’s dog because my heart hurts too much to think directly about the totality of her unnecessary death.

I bet Renee Good loved her dog.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Good Dog – by Teri Carter – Reporting from Dog Lake

Tags: Good Dog, Ice, Justice for Renee, Kentucky, Killing, Minneapolis, Minneapolis Shooting, Minnesota, Murder, Renee Nicole Good, Reporting From Dog Lake, Substack, SUV, Teri Carter, Videos, Wife
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Reporting from Dog Lake – These Orwellian United States – Teri Carter

Reporting from Dog Lake, Rural life, rescue dogs and Kentucky politics.

These Orwellian United States

No Kings rallies will be held in cities throughout the United States this Saturday. We’ve had enough already. I look forward to seeing you there.

By Teri Carter, Oct 14, 2025

From post…

At a high-profile, televised funeral last month, the President of the United States stood on a stage and said, “I hate my opponent and I don’t want the best for them… maybe they can convince me that that’s not right but I can’t stand my opponent,” and the funeral attendees responded with what sounded like laughter.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson — whom it appears would rather shut down the entire federal government than risk a vote, led by Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, to release the Epstein files — has amped up his rhetoric in recent days saying, “They have a ‘Hate America’ rally that’s scheduled for Oct. 18 on the National Mall. It’s all the pro-Hamas wing and the, you know, the Antifa people, they’re all coming out.” Joining the Speaker, Rep. Steve Scalise and Rep. Tom Emmer also called the upcoming No Kings rally, which will be held in cities around the country, a ‘Hate America’ event.

The “they” Speaker Johnson refers to are not just Democrats, but anyone who opposes the president.

It’s been a long ten years since Donald J. Trump came down the escalator, 24/7 tweets from political figures became official government statements, and both our news feeds and social media feeds were transformed into daily, disturbing dumpster fires of resentment and rage.

Prior to 2015, we had mostly normal news at news outlets, facts were not ‘alternative’, and a tweeting president would have been a joke. Social media was mostly for keeping up with far-flung friends and family.

Man, those were the days.

Before Mr. Trump first became president in 2016, we did not have incessant talk of Red States vs. Blue States; politicians did not openly call the free press “enemy of the people”; political protests would have never been called ‘Hate America’ rallies by the House Speaker; we could not have imagined the deployment of masked, secret police thugs in our streets as if we were a third world country; we would have been aghast to see political appointees like Attorney General Pam Bondi speak so flippantly and condescendingly to our senators — OUR elected representatives — in an oversight hearing; we could not have imagined a president, cheered on by his party, giddily telling us how hateful he is while speaking at a funeral.

Editor’s Note: Read the rest of the story, at the below link.

Continue/Read Original Article Here: These Orwellian United States – by Teri Carter

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Bye Bye, Blue Sky – by Teri Carter

Bye Bye, Blue Sky

On doomscrolling and the Democrats.

Teri Carter Aug 21, 2025

As the sun prepared to set last evening under a heavily clouded, not-blue sky, I walked down to the dock and sat there until the two turtles I was watching — one large, one teeny tiny — slipped sideways off the limb where they’d been perched and disappeared beneath the surface.

It was the first time all summer I’d taken the time to sit there. To do nothing. Even the bugs left me alone.

After last November, I swore I would not let the new administration take up so much space in my head, and yet here I am just 7 months in and I already feel like there’s been a coup (pun intended) between my ears. How to know enough about what’s happening without feeling suffocated by it? How to keep up with the news without feeling like I’ve been run over by Wile E. Coyote?

Earlier this week, I wrote about what I’m hearing from rural Kentucky Republicans re: upcoming elections. I’m back today to talk about the Democrats.

I do not have the same sense of alarm that many seem to be having about the Democrats or the Democratic Party, or maybe I’m just (see above) distracted by too much other political news.

Am I frustrated with the national Democratic party as a whole? Hell yes. All I could think when Ken Martin was chosen as DNC chair was that I could not be more underwhelmed by the choice. Nice guy, sure, but dull as dirty dishwater. Where is our courage, our sense of the future, our excitement? Where is our real leader, and when might he/she emerge?

Think what you will about Gavin Newsom — and having moved to Kentucky from California, I have many-a-thought about Newsom — but he is meeting the moment of today-today. He looks like a fighter; he’s keeping steady media attention on his antics; most importantly he’s shedding his slick persona and becoming funny. Many are focused on his Twitter posts and antics but I feel the biggest sense of relief that he’s willing to make fun of himself and the president to make all of us laugh.

Editor’s Note: Teri is a special writer. Her connections to our American lives and the changes it faces are inspiring, insightful, and deeply moving. Read her…

Continue/Read Original Article Here: Bye Bye, Blue Sky – by Teri Carter

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