XPost: alt.retaliation, alt.law-enforcement, sac.politics   
   XPost: or.politics   
   From: tpits@gmail.con   
      
   On 04 Feb 2026, J D posted some   
   news:XnsB3E9A3AE4E4424043B@0.0.0.1:   
      
   > What started as a burst of online moral urgency quickly became a   
   > cautionary tale about what happens when outrage outruns judgment.   
   >   
   > In the aftermath of the January 7, 2026, fatal shooting of Renee Good   
   > during an ICE operation, Sara Larson took to TikTok with a mission. In   
   > a now-deleted video, the Minnesota massage therapist identified the   
   > Chaska neighborhood of ICE agent Jonathan Ross and encouraged viewers   
   > to show up and “make him uncomfortable.” Accountability, apparently,   
   > works best with street-level directions.   
   >   
   > The video spread fast. Consequences followed faster.   
   >   
   > Federal prosecutors charged Larson with threatening a federal officer,   
   > a felony that carries a possible five-year prison sentence—a sobering   
   > reminder that TikTok activism does, in fact, exist in the same   
   > universe as federal law. Her employer promptly cut ties, her account   
   > vanished, and the wave of online praise she initially received flipped   
   > into a flood of criticism.   
   >   
   > Then came the irony. Larson reported receiving threats herself and   
   > filed police complaints, discovering—rather publicly—that once   
   > personal information is unleashed online, it has a habit of circling   
   > back. The same tactic meant to pressure a federal agent ended up   
   > spotlighting her own address, and sympathy from fellow activists   
   > cooled as many acknowledged that broadcasting residential locations   
   > was less “justice” and more reckless escalation.   
   >   
   > The episode underscores a persistent flaw in social-media-driven   
   > outrage: the belief that urgency excuses precision, and that exposure   
   > is interchangeable with accountability. It isn’t. What Larson framed   
   > as protest was interpreted by authorities as intimidation, and by much   
   > of the public as a textbook case of doxxing gone wrong.   
   >   
   > In the end, the story isn’t about ICE alone, or even about politics.   
   > It’s about how easily online activism slips into real-world   
   > consequences—and how often the loudest call for accountability ends   
   > with the caller learning, belatedly, that rules still apply when the   
   > camera is on.   
   >   
   > The Woman Who DOXXED The ICE Agent Who Shot Renee Good Accidentally   
   > DOXXED Herself As Well...Karma Came Hard And Fast For Her   
   >   
   > https://vidmax.com/video/236608-the-woman-who-doxxed-the-ice-agent-who-   
   > shot-renee-good-accidentally-doxxed-herself-as-well-karma-came-hard-and   
   > -fast-for-her   
      
   That's fucking great. It's not over for her yet either.   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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