Peace may have finally come to the Middle East, but back home, chaos still reigns courtesy of the anti-ICE, open-borders left. While President Trump is brokering historic deals overseas, radical activists here are waging a different kind of war — one against the rule of law.
These self-proclaimed “justice warriors” aren’t just protesting anymore; they’re actively threatening and doxxing federal agents online, coordinating harassment campaigns against ICE officers and anyone enforcing immigration laws.
Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi took a decisive stand on Tuesday, announcing that Facebook had finally shut down a group page being used by radical activists to dox federal ICE agents—essentially putting targets on the backs of men and women enforcing our immigration laws:
Today following outreach from @thejusticedept, Facebook removed a large group page that was being used to dox and target @ICEgov agents in Chicago.
The wave of violence against ICE has been driven by online apps and social media campaigns designed to put ICE officers at risk…
— Attorney General Pamela Bondi (@AGPamBondi) October 14, 2025
Her post adds:
The wave of violence against ICE has been driven by online apps and social media campaigns designed to put ICE officers at risk just for doing their jobs. The Department of Justice will continue engaging tech companies to eliminate platforms where radicals can incite imminent violence against federal law enforcement.
Here’s the thing: while it’s good that Facebook finally took action, let’s not kid ourselves—these left-wing lunatics will have another page up within the hour. This is like swatting flies with an icepick. The radical activists behind these doxxing campaigns thrive on chaos, and as soon as one platform cracks down, they scatter and regroup somewhere else.
As activist and independent journalist Andy Ngo aptly remarked, this isn’t just about one Facebook page—it’s about an entire movement of far-left extremists using the internet as a weapon against law enforcement:
They will immediately open up other accounts and start again. These are highly motivated open border, anti-US government extremists.
— Andy Ngo (@MrAndyNgo) October 14, 2025
Ngo is absolutely right. How many more of these groups are already out there, operating in the shadows? This one happened to be on Facebook, but let’s be honest—any of these radicals with half a clue about the internet can spin up their own discussion board or private site in a matter of minutes. They don’t need Facebook, LinkedIn, or any of the big platforms to spew their hatred and organize harassment campaigns.
Heck, Myspace is still around, and you can bet some of these people are using it—or other obscure corners of the web—to fly completely under the radar.
It’s hard to see this as anything other than what it is — an organized campaign of intimidation and political terror. When radical activists create and maintain anti-ICE doxing groups, they’re not engaging in “free speech” or “activism.” They’re targeting law enforcement officers and their families to silence and scare them — which, by definition, looks an awful lot like domestic terrorism.
And here’s the infuriating part: the people behind these groups are not ghosts. They can be identified. They post under usernames, share IPs, run payment processors, and coordinate openly on encrypted channels. So where are the arrests? The indictments? The prosecutions? The answer, as usual, is next to zero.
What’s more, this isn’t just unethical — it’s illegal. 18 U.S. Code § 119 specifically prohibits disclosing personal information about individuals performing official duties for the purpose of threatening or intimidating them.
This will keep happening until the ringleaders are dragged out of the shadows, arrested, and prosecuted. Period. The law means nothing if it’s never enforced. These people feel untouchable — emboldened by the inaction of federal authorities and the indifference of Big Tech.
The only way to stop this wave of anti-law-enforcement harassment is to make the consequences severe enough to deter it. Right now, there’s zero fear of accountability. They can dox ICE agents, post their families’ addresses, and call for violence — and nothing happens. That has to change.