A journalist working for Business Insider allegedly tried to force a United Kingdom grocer to reveal the names of customers purchasing large amounts of eggs and other produce in an effort to dox right-wing X (formerly Twitter) user Raw Egg Nationalist. Katherine Long, who is part of Business Insider’s “fast investigations team,” emailed a local UK farm shop requesting the names of customers who “regularly buy large quantities of eggs and milk.”
The email was published on X by Raw Egg Nationalist, who claims the inquiry is in violation of sections 44 to 46 of the UK’s Serious Crime Act of 2007. This act states that anyone encouraging or assisting the commission of an offense is also committing a criminal offense themselves. The contention appears to be that Long aided in illegally violating Raw Egg Nationalist’s privacy through her inquiry.
Raw Egg Nationalist told The National Pulse that he confronted Business Insider and sent them an image of the email but has yet to receive a reply from the publication. The National Pulse has reached out to Katherine Long for comment, who refused to speak on the record, and passed on the contact details of her public relations officer.
The incident took place around two weeks before Raw Egg Nationalist was doxxed by the notorious UK far-left activist group Hope Not Hate last month. When asked if he believed there may have been coordination between Hope Not Hate and Long, he stated, “Yes, that’s a potential avenue.”
Leftists and their media allies have long used unscrupulous methods to dox anonymous right-wing accounts online, including Bronze Age Pervert, a bodybuilder and author of the book Bronze Age Mindset, as well as the popular X account, Libs of TikTok. Shortly after the pandemic, Taylor Lorenz revealed that Chaya Raichik ran the Libs of Tiktok in 2022; NBC published an article praising the doxxing of right-wing figures like Raichik while claiming others, like transgender individuals, should not be publicly exposed.