Last Saturday, I drove an hour out from Des Moines to the small town of Brooklyn, Iowa, to report on the murder of Mollie Tibbetts, a 20-year-old University of Iowa student who had gone missing. When her body was found, it made national headlines as first Iowan politicians and then national conservative politicians and commentators used the charging of her murderer, who’s technical documentation as an immigrant is still being debated, as a call to increase enforcement and enact more punitive laws against immigrants arriving from lands south of the U.S. border.
Apple pie à la mode
Apple pie à la mode
Apple pie à la mode
Last Saturday, I drove an hour out from Des Moines to the small town of Brooklyn, Iowa, to report on the murder of Mollie Tibbetts, a 20-year-old University of Iowa student who had gone missing. When her body was found, it made national headlines as first Iowan politicians and then national conservative politicians and commentators used the charging of her murderer, who’s technical documentation as an immigrant is still being debated, as a call to increase enforcement and enact more punitive laws against immigrants arriving from lands south of the U.S. border.