The cowardly anonymous racist US-based account
@RitualofLuv pushes disgusting explicitly racist, accelerationist, white-nationalist propaganda: it posts almost exclusively obsessive anti-non-white content.
It uses repeated slurs ("brown sub race," "3rd world subhuman," "cunt," "phagget"), calls for whites to "embrace our racism" because "we are better," and frequently posts graphic violent fantasies including multiple "swinging from the end of a rope" lynching-style threats: textbook accelerationist white supremacist ideology.
The tone is compulsive and repetitive, as if the user is locked in a feedback loop of scrolling, seething, and discharging venom - much like Trump, who the account holder supports.
Likely traits of the user include chronic online radicalisation, possible real-life social/sexual frustration, and a need to feel powerful through anonymous cruelty. It's a sad, isolated figure channeling personal failures into racial hatred.
No prominent cases exist of an American
@X user being criminally held accountable in the UK for racist threats, such as lynching references, made against a British citizen. There is no publicly documented evidence of a low-profile American X user being fully identified, prosecuted, and convicted in the UK for this type of content.
Such posts cause significant harms by inflicting direct emotional distress, fear, and anxiety on the targeted individual, particularly when invoking graphic racial violence like lynching against a named British citizen; for public figures such as journalists, they heighten personal safety concerns, disrupt daily life, and contribute to long-term mental health impacts including trauma and hypervigilance.
This creates a chilling effect on public speech when fear of further harassment or violence leads targeted individuals and others in similar positions to self-censor, avoid certain topics, or withdraw from platforms altogether, which is precisely what these evil cowardly anonymous racists want.
Such content may also encourage copycat harassment, amplify racial intimidation, deepen community divisions, and erode trust in online spaces.
UK authorities have issued general warnings about pursuing overseas online offenders, including potential extradition, but no high-profile successful actions have occurred in this specific category.
UK law does allow for extraterritorial application in theory for offences affecting British citizens, yet enforcement against US-based anonymous users remains rare due to legal, practical, and diplomatic barriers.
The most effective immediate steps continue to be preserving evidence, reporting the post and account to X for violent threats, and submitting a formal hate crime report to UK police via True Vision or 101, which can trigger data requests to the platform.
Full identification and prosecution of low-profile anonymous accounts is possible but uncommon in practice for this type of content, with prosecutions for online racist threats happening in the UK but overwhelmingly against UK residents, while cross-border enforcement against low-impact US accounts remains theoretical.
Elon Musk bought a social media platform and turned it into a racist hate amplification machine - not because he believes in free speech, but because the rich and powerful have always depended on ordinary people being divided.
The rich and powerful have long used "divide and rule" because it effectively maintains control at low cost. By pitting ordinary people against each other along lines of race, religion, ethnicity, class, or ideology, elites prevent unified collective action against them, distract from wealth concentration and systemic issues, and position themselves as arbiters.
This political strategy succeeds by exploiting natural in-group/out-group psychology, being cheap to sustain through propaganda and selective policies, and becoming self-reinforcing: while unity of the many threatens elite power, engineered division preserves it.