If there was ever a question about how much America hates women, here’s proof. Jonathan Ross killed Renee Good, called her a “fucking bitch,” filmed the whole thing on his body cam, and sent the footage to a conservative news outlet because he genuinely believed it would clear his name.

I cannot make this stuff up in 2026. He executed a woman, narrated it with a slur, and delivered it to the media because he was that certain that when America watched this woman die, we would agree she had it coming.

He was betting on our misogyny. And he wasn’t entirely wrong. Let’s dive in.

The Performance of Justified Violence

There’s something uniquely chilling about circulating your own body cam footage. This was a man so confident in his righteousness that he willingly shared his own exoneration reel, assuming the audience would see what he saw: a woman who didn’t comply, and therefore, a woman who deserved what she got.

Sending his footage to the media shows how normalized violence against women has become in this country. This dude not only expected to avoid prosecution, he also expected to be vindicated! He expected to be called a hero because he exists in an America where he genuinely believed that watching a woman die would generate sympathy for him.

Unfortunately, he wasn’t completely delusional. The President defended him. The Vice President defended him. The Department of Homeland Security defended him. In the America Jonathan Ross understands, women who don’t obey don’t deserve to live, and the men who kill them are patriots.

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Pari and Eve are public health professionals who have dedicated their 15-year careers to fighting for global reproductive rights. When Roe v. Wade was overturned, they felt compelled to turn their attention to domestic activism; growing their decade-long friendship into an advocacy partnership committed to educating the American public on the importance of gender equality, and specifically women’s healthcare. Seeing a major gap in the presence of qualified public health voices on social media, Pari and Eve established a trusted digital presence that elevates women’s voices and combats misinformation on health issues. Their Instagram and TikTok accounts facilitate evidence-based learning on a range of sexual and reproductive health topics, highlighting the intersectionality of health with human rights and social justice. Pari and Eve went viral after launching a “Women in America” series focused on the daily inequities that women in the U.S. experience economically, environmentally, in health care, at work, and more - garnering over 25M views across both platforms. Pari and Eve are a go-to amplifier for health and justice. Some of their previous social media clients include: Reproductive Freedom For All, Plan C, Jen Psaki, and ACLU. In their professional careers, Pari and Eve have worked for the United Nations, U.S. Centers for Disease Control, Planned Parenthood, Population Reference Bureau, CARE and more. They have served consulting clients such as the DC Abortion Fund and Emory University. For more on Pari and Eve, visit their website at www.pariandeve.com.

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