Memphis residents are forcefully rejecting Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem’s assertion that the city has avoided the kind of unrest seen in Minneapolis after the fatal shooting of Alex Pretti by a federal immigration agent, and they’re doing it loudly, emotionally, and in public.
A discussion in r/memphis lit up over the weekend following Noem’s remarks, with hundreds of commenters accusing federal officials of misrepresenting what’s actually happening on the ground in Tennessee’s largest city. While Noem praised Memphis as an example of successful cooperation between local leaders and federal law enforcement, many Memphians say that narrative erases fear, anger, and real harm within immigrant communities.
‘Low-key’ enforcement
Some commenters acknowledged that Memphis looks different from Minneapolis on the surface. National Guard troops are visible in small groups downtown, and ICE operations don’t always appear as aggressive or confrontational as those captured on viral videos elsewhere.
“I live in Memphis and this is accurate from my experience,” one resident wrote. “The National Guard is noticeable downtown. ICE operations are here, but not actively harassing random people to stir things up.”
But many others argued that this perception is misleading. It isn’t evidence of restraint, but of quieter, more coordinated enforcement that’s harder to document.
“They work in tandem with state police and often drive unmarked cars,” one Midtown resident wrote, describing an ICE arrest on a city sidewalk with guns drawn. Another added, “If you live in the city or in a suburb with a decent immigrant community, you’ve probably seen them and not realized it.”
Frustration wasn’t aimed solely at federal officials. Memphis Mayor Paul Young drew sharp criticism for cooperating with state and federal authorities, even from users who identified as longtime Democratic voters.
Several commenters said Memphis was being used politically while residents pay the price.
“It’s not because of our governor or our mayor,” one widely shared comment read. “It’s because of the people. This city has a history of civil rights. They know better than to provoke Memphis.”
Others were less convinced that restraint was intentional, arguing instead that Memphis lacks the same rapid-response protest infrastructure as larger, more walkable cities.
Immigrant communities say impact is real
As the discussion grew, accounts from people with direct ties to immigrants painted a far darker picture than Noem’s comments suggested.
Multiple users described ICE detaining legal residents, asylum seekers, and even U.S. citizens, sometimes during routine check-ins or traffic stops. One commenter claimed an employee was detained in her driveway while taking her children to school, held for more than 24 hours despite proof of citizenship.
Others said Latino neighborhoods and businesses have been transformed by fear, with families staying indoors, skipping work and school, and avoiding public life altogether.
For many Memphians, the backlash comes down to one core objection: the idea that silence or fewer viral videos equals approval.
“We aren’t happy,” one commenter wrote. “City leadership and people afraid of non-white communities might be. But the rest of us aren’t.”
Far from accepting Noem’s framing, the discussion reflects a city wrestling with its identity. Memphians are proud of their civil rights legacy, furious at being politically weaponized, and deeply divided over whether cooperation has brought safety or simply driven suffering out of sight.






