Women Create Database to Track People Who Say Mean Things Online

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 15, 2016

A group of women have created a new site entitled “Social Autopsy” which will allow women and faggots with damaged feelings to hunt down people who have said mean things to them on the internet.

Interestingly, the entire concept of it is based around entering the name of someone you know personally IRL, rather than someone who has attacked you online. So rather than researching someone who has attacked you, you research someone you know to see if they’ve attacked others.

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“Search for your friends and co-workers”

The obvious purpose is not to harass specific feelings-hurters, but to form a lynch-mob to attack anyone who says anything politically incorrect online and subject them to IRL punishment. So for instance, you have a co-worker you don’t like, so you search them on this database and find they said something mean to some woman or member of another protected group online, then you give this information to your boss in an attempt to get them fired.

They even say it in their FAQ:

Users submit a screenshot of a person’s hate-fueled social media post, which is then used to create a profile that includes their full name, place of employment, city of residence and schools.

Screenshots are submitted anonymously by online friends of that user. Their “friends” of course, know their full names and details.

We do not allow any commenting on our database, and we have disabled the ability to search our database by keywords (e.g homophobia, racism, etc). In other words, you would have to know the individual by first and last name in order to discover them.

Note that this program is being developed by the same people who whined when we uncovered the fact that Alison Rapp is a hooker. In fact, people who attacked Alison Rapp for being a hooker are the types of people that will be included in this database.

Granted, due to the fact that most people use anonymous accounts to question hookers, sluts and whinorities, this database won’t really be very effective (relying on people who secretly know a person’s real identity to submit information on them is not especially efficient). But it is the beginning of something bigger, to be sure, where they will develop an organized method to identify anonymous posters who say mean things online, then get them fired from their jobs.

We can also expect government and ultra-governmental agencies to get involved in the e-witch-hunt process. Last year, Zoe Quinn and Anita Sarkeesian spoke at the UN about their plan to make it an international war crime to call women “liars” or “sluts” on the internet.

And the system wants this. They want UK-style feelings laws globally.

It will come.

But so will the backlash.

They can’t arrest us all.