Far-right extremist Nicholas Fuentes ‘doxxed’ after vile election rant

Far-right white supremacist Nicholas Fuentes has reportedly found himself at the center of a doxxing incident, following his incendiary rant in the wake of the US election.

The 26-year-old triumphantly declared “your body, my choice” to women after Donald Trump’s victory in the presidential election last week, in an X post that’s since been viewed 91.2 million times and reposted by at least 35,000 people.

“Hey bitch, we control your bodies! Guess what? Guys win again. Okay? Men win again,” Fuentes continued in a blatantly misogynistic video spiel.

“There will never ever be a female president … It’s over. Glass ceiling? Dude, it’s the ceiling made of f–king bricks. You will never break it. Your stupid face keeps hitting the brick ceiling. We will keep you down forever. You will never control your own bodies.”

Far-right white supremacist Nicholas Fuentes has reportedly found himself at the center of a doxxing incident. AP
Fuentes triumphantly declared “your body, my choice” to women after Trump’s presidential victory. Nicholas Fuentes/X

His woman-hating rallying cry was largely met with revulsion.

That he’s since been doxxed – the publication of a person’s private or identifying information, in Fuentes’ case, the address of his Chicago home – is nothing more than a much-needed helping of karma, some of his critics say.

One woman, Jewish activist Marla Rose, claimed in a Facebook post she’d taken it a step further and actually went to “neo-Nazi” Fuentes’ house only for him to allegedly attack her.

Jewish activist Marla Rose alleged in a Facebook post she went to Fuentes’ house and he attacked her. Marla Rose/Facebook

“I rang the doorbell, he immediately swung the door open like he was at damn Waco (the Branch Davidians’ compound in Texas), sprayed me with a burning liquid (Pepper spray? Mace?), and pushed me down the stairs onto his sidewalk,” Rose wrote, as seen in screenshots shared online.

“I rolled into a protective position because I was anticipating kicks or stomps, he grabbed my phone, ran back inside, bolted the door, and shut the blinds.”

The New York Daily News reports it has obtained video that “appears” to confirm the woman’s claims.

Police in Berwyn, Illinois, where the alleged incident took place, said neither party was cooperating in its investigation so no charges have been brought forth at this point, and that they had not been provided with Rose’s video.

Fuentes is yet to comment on the incident but did repost a message on X from fellow right-wing activist Tristan Tate, who, along with his brother Andrew Tate, is currently under house arrest in Romania after being charged with rape and human trafficking in 2022.

“If a man turned up at a ‘pro-choice’ woman’s house to confront her about her views she could literally shoot him dead and nobody would care,” he wrote.

“I’d also totally agree with her and her right to defend her home. Nobody should be turning up at any bodies (sic) house uninvited. Harassment.”

For some men, particularly the Gen Z cohort, Trump’s victory and Fuentes’ comments affirm that women will never have, and do not deserve, the right to their own bodily autonomy.

“Women threatening sex strikes like LMAO as if you have a say,” Jon Miller, who has more than 100,000 followers, wrote.

Or, as self-proclaimed misogynist and king of the manosphere Tate put it: “I saw a woman crossing the road today but I just kept my foot down. Right of way? You no longer have rights … The men are back in charge.”

The nonpartisan Institute for Strategic Dialogue (ISD), which tracks the spread of disinformation and propaganda online, found a spike in blatantly misogynistic statements following the election, according to a report it released on Friday.

Fuentes has yet to comment on the incident. Marla Rose/Facebook
For some men, Trump’s victory and Fuentes’ comments affirm that women will never have the right to their bodily autonomy, critics say. AP

“In a national election heavily focused on women and reproductive rights, women in the United States have faced an onslaught of online abuse, harassment, and denigration following Vice President Kamala Harris’s loss,” the report read.

“This is more than just a continuation of misogynist trends that ISD documented in both the run-up to this election and in the aftermath of previous cycles including 2020 and 2022.

“As an emboldened group of ‘manosphere’ influencers, extremist ideologues and politicians exploit Donald Trump’s election as a rebuke of both reproductive rights and women’s rights, the impact on women could extend into the next presidential election and beyond.”

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