Popular American singer, songwriter, and guitarist Bruce Springsteen has expressed his anti-ICE views in the best way he knows how. The Born in the U.S.A crooner released a song dedicated to the recent Minneapolis killings by ICE agents. View this post on Instagram Instagram PostThe song titled "Streets of Minneapolis" was released on Wednesday, and Bruce Springsteen announced it via his social media. He wrote:“I wrote this song on Saturday, recorded it yesterday and released it to you today in response to the state terror being visited on the city of Minneapolis. It's dedicated to the people of Minneapolis, our innocent immigrant neighbors and in memory of Alex Pretti and Renee Good. Stay free.”More details on Bruce Springsteen’s anti-ICE songBruce Soringstren released Streets of Minneapolis on Wednesday as a response to the killing of Alex Pretti by ICE agents in Minneapolis. He released the song just four days after Pratti’s passing.In the first verse, the singer slams President Trump’s administration, referring to him as ‘King Tump’ and calling ICE his ‘private army.’“Through the winter's ice and cold/ Down Nicolett Avenue/ A city aflame fought fire and ice/ 'Neath an occupier's boots/ King Trump's private army from the DHS/ Guns belted to their coats/ Came to Minneapolis to enforce the law/ Or so their story goes.”In the second verse, Bruce Springsteen mentions Alex Pretti and Renee Good, the two recent victims of ICE agents.“Against smoke and rubber bullets/ In the dawn's early light/ Citizens stood for justice/ Their voices ringing through the night/ And there were bloody footprints/ Where mercy should have stood/ And two dead, left to die on snow-filled streets/ Alex Pretti and Renee Good.”The third verse read:“Trump's federal thugs beat up on/ His face and his chest/ Then we heard the gunshots/ And Alex Pretti lay in the snow dead/ Their claim was self-defense, sir/ Just don't believe your eyes/ It's our blood and bones/ And these whistles and phones/ Against Miller and Noem's dirty lies.”Bruce promises in the chorus that he will continue to fight and will not forget those who were killed in the streets of Minneapolis.“Oh, our Minneapolis, I hear your voice/ Singing through the bloody mist/ We'll take our stand for this land/ And the stranger in our midst/ Here in our home, they killed and roamed/ In the winter of '26/ We'll remember the names of those who died/ On the streets of Minneapolis.”In the outro of the song, Bruce Springsteen chants “ICE out.”Also read: What did Bill Cosby admit under oath about giving Quaaludes to women? Details explored