Support our work!

Ensure the future of local Bay Area News by becoming a Local News Matters member today.

$
$
$

Thanks for your contribution!

Sign up for our free newsletters!

Receive in-depth news stories and arts & entertainment coverage from around the Bay Area in your inbox.

  • DONATE TO SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS!
  • Sign In
  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News โ€ฆ in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • RSS

  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News โ€ฆ in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
Skip to content
Local News Matters

Local News Matters

Connecting audiences with quality, local news

  • DONATE TO SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS!
  • Sign In
Sign In
  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News โ€ฆ in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
Posted inLocal News

Why I spoke out against ICE: How a school walkout burst our bubble of complacency

by Benjamin Barba-Zuniga, Contra Costa Youth Journalism February 26, 2026

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
California High School senior Benjamin Barba-Zuniga speaks to a crowd of students rallying against U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in front of the San Ramon City Hall on Feb. 6, 2026. (Ethan Miyasaki via CCSpin)

MY LEGS SHOOK and my voice was sore from shouting into a crappy megaphone, but after seeing the sitting president of the United States call my friends, family (and to some extent โ€” me) โ€œanimals,โ€ I knew that I had to speak up.

โ€œIt feels a little strange to be up here,โ€ I began. โ€œBecause of, yeah, the nerves, but I donโ€™t feel like I, of all people, should be giving a speech at a protest โ€” like, Iโ€™m just a guy.โ€

Don't miss out on Bay Area news, delivered to your inbox twice a week.

Benjamin Barba-Zuniga is a senior at California High School in San Ramon and a member of Contra Costa Youth Journalism. (Ishita Khanna/CCYJ via Bay City News)

But it was my belief in this countryโ€™s idealsย โ€”ย ideals itโ€™s preached yet somehow never fully attainedย โ€”ย that made me join hundreds of students from California High School in San Ramon as the clock struck 2 p.m. on Feb. 6 to rally against recent ICE actions across the nation. Together, we walked out of our classrooms and started a 40-minute march toward City Hall.

Students learned of the protest through the account โ€œgoodtroubleyouthโ€ on Instagram. Who says social media is a teenage scourge when it can organize over 300 students to demonstrate? The account, created by fellow 12th grader Hailey Yi, was inspired by the Indivisible Tri-Valleyย volunteer group and its โ€œGood Troubleโ€ events.ย 

Contribute to Local News Matters

$
$
$

Support our independent, nonprofit newsroom, Local News Matters, by becoming a member today. Members enable us to pay reporters, photographers and editors to serve our communities with local news that matters in the greater Bay Area.

The rally wasnโ€™t specifically advertised as a protest against ICE, though many students said the main reason for going was the deaths at the hands of border patrol or ICE agents during President Donald Trumpโ€™s second term. For me, the shootings of two Minneapolis, Minnesota, residents were fresh on my mind, as were the imperialistic actions taken by the U.S. in Venezuela and the horrific implications of the recent release of the Jeffrey Epstein files. 

But what got me out the door, what got me to hand out flyers and help my friends who organized the walkout instead of being a social media warriorย โ€”ย what got me to stand up and give a speech in front of hundreds of my classmatesย โ€”ย was the profound sense of complacency I felt in my own community.

Outside the bubble

San Ramon is a small, sheltered, upper-middle-class city. Itโ€™s a West Coast hub for the corporate offices of AT&T and GE Digital, and as of 2024, PG&E was its largest employer. Such privilege affords my peers a level of dissociation. Who wants to know about what their country supports, what their country perpetrates on its own citizens, when your daily life remains unchanged?

My speech in front of City Hall began simply enough:

โ€œSo Iโ€™ll be honest, hopefully that helps with the nerves. โ€ฆ Entirely honest โ€” I need you guys to stay with me now โ€” Iโ€™ll be honest with everyone by describing what Iโ€™ll do after this protest,โ€ I said. โ€œIโ€™ll get home, procrastinate on all of the work I have to do for next week, and instead, will doomscroll and bomb my friends with slop-ridden reels. Then, Iโ€™ll go out and just drive around with my friends, and weโ€™ll definitely eat, โ€™cus weโ€™re all fat. And then Iโ€™ll go home, Iโ€™ll sleep. And Iโ€™ll wake up and have a normal weekend. Most of us will have a pretty normal weekend. A pretty normal rest of our week. A normal month. A normal year (except for juniors, you guys get to suffer.)

My point is, we are normal students in normal San Ramon. Our daily lives are basically unchanged, even with everything going on. Which is why itโ€™s strange and uncomfortable to get a glimpse of just how abnormal it is outside this bubble.โ€

The disruption of the school day was necessary. What is happening in my country isnโ€™t normal, so purposefully disrupting our normal routine became imperative.

The truth is that in 2025, 32 people died in ICE custody, according toย The Guardian. The truth is that ICE has been buying up giant warehousesย across the country to house the men, women and children it rounds up, at best denying them due process and at worst putting them in American concentration camps. The truth is that as a birthright citizen of the United States, my family worried about me attending protests because of my native language, Spanish.

For me, the disruption of the school day was necessary. What is happening in my country isnโ€™t normal, so purposefully disrupting our normal routine became imperative. 

โ€œOur everyday lives are still normal, but thinking that our country is the โ€˜same as alwaysโ€™ will poison the very roots that have made it stand tall for 250 years!โ€ I shouted to the crowd.

Making good trouble

Blinding our eyes and complying with unjust policies is the foundation of a dying democracy. It was so inspiring for me to see my classmates marching in the streets, chanting in protest, and cheering so loudly that I could barely hear my own voice yelling into the megaphone.

โ€œWe donโ€™t go quietly into the night!โ€ I yelled, channeling my inner Dylan Thomas. โ€œWe march, we rage against democracyโ€™s waning moon, our voices so loud the light cannot be extinguished!โ€

But as thrilling as it was to give a passionate speech in front of a responsive crowd and to hear others do the same, that wasnโ€™t what stuck with me. Instead, it was participating as one of the many students marching to City Hall. It was crossing the street in a hurry as we held up our signs to cars that honked in support. It was being part of a collective, a group of young Americans from a multitude of different backgrounds who believed they deserved better. Who made good trouble. 


Benjamin Barba-Zunigaย is a 12th grader at California High School in San Ramon, the opinions editor for the school newspaper,ย The Californian, and a CCYJ reporter. This story originally appeared in CCSpin.

Tagged: Alex Pretti, California High School, CCSpin, CCYJ, civic engagement, Contra Costa County, Contra Costa Youth Journalism, Featured, Featured News, government, high school journalism, ICE, immigration policy, Minneapolis, opinion, President Donald Trump, protests, Renee Good, San Ramon, San Ramon City Hall, student journalism, Trump administration, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, Youth Journalism
Local News Matters
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • RSS

Bay City News Foundation
(510) 251-8100
newsroom@baycitynews.com

Staff Page

Terms of Use

FIND MORE STORIES

  • Local & Community News
  • California News
  • Politics & Civic Engagement
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
  • The Big Issues
  • Arts & Culture
  • Education & Youth Voices
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
  • Special Projects
  • About Bay City News
© 2026 Connecting audiences with quality, local news Powered by Newspack

Sign in

Or

Sign in by entering the code we sent to , or clicking the magic link in the email.

Forgot password
Continue Set a password (optional)

Terms & Conditions. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Gift this article

 

Loading Comments...
 

    Complete your transaction