Anti-Fascists To Unite The Right Attendees: We Will Find You In the weeks leading up to the Charlottesville rally, Donnelly coached future attendees how not to be doxxed. If you’re worried about being identified, Donnelly wrote to members of the group chat, try to be “low key.” Don’t wear T-shirts with slogans or carry signs that might attract the attention of photojournalists. He also tried to put the white supremacists at ease. “[Anti-fascists] can review all the footage they want, but unless there is a massive effort, they’re not going to be able to doxx every person there,” Donnelly wrote. Five years later, Donnelly has been doxxed by precisely that kind of massive effort. Ignite the Right is a coalition of anonymous anti-fascist researchers that formed on the five-year anniversary of the rally in Charlottesville this past August. When it launched, the coalition implored people in communities across the country to send them tips that could help them ID people who attended Unite the Right.
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