The Guardian (USA)

Tara LaRosa: the worrying case of MMA's 'Proud Girl'

- Karim Zidan

On 14 November 2020, thousands of President Trump’s supporters flocked to the nation’s capital for a “Million Maga March” in support of the thenpresid­ent and his baseless claims that the presidenti­al election had been rigged. Among those who gathered were the Proud Boys, a far-right hate group known for violent confrontat­ions with left-wing demonstrat­ors.

Dressed in their characteri­stic Fred Perry polo shirts with hipster beards and short, close-cropped haircuts, the Proud Boys made their presence known as they vandalized historical­ly Black churches and trashed the Black Lives Matter Plaza. By evening, clashes erupted in downtown DC between the Proud Boys and counter protestors, while the police attempted to separate the two sides.

Among the most recognizab­le faces alongside the Proud Boys was Tara LaRosa, a pioneer of women’s mixed martial arts. Dressed in a yellow sweater emblazoned with the Proud Boys logo and a blue bandana, LaRosa appeared on video hugging Enrique Tarrio, the leader of the Proud Boys, as the extremist group marched through downtown.

Several videos later showed what appeared to be LaRosa – dressed in the same yellow sweater – joining in clashes involving the Proud Boys. LaRosa denied that the woman in the video is her: “I don’t pull hair. I don’t punch untrained women . ... and I don’t wear vests,” she wrote on Twitter.

LaRosa later posted photos on social media while flashing the OK hand sign – a gesture used by some to denote white power. One photo caption read: “Yo Antifa... I’m at the Washington Monument... come get me”. Yet another photo showed her flashing the white power sign again while standing alongside a member of the Proud Boys.

LaRosa, 43, had long been associated with the Proud Boys. For years, the MMA fighter, who has a 22-5 profession­al record, appeared at protests where she challenged anti-fascists and intimidate­d protesters. After retiring from MMA in 2015, LaRosa began attending right-wing protests, and in 2018, she spoke at a #HimToo event in Portland organized by a member of the far-right Patriot Prayer. She has since been a consistent presence at rightwing events, especially those involving the Proud Boys.

Shortly after Veteran’s Day in 2019, LaRosa made headlines when she pinned an anti-Trump demonstrat­or to the ground. The incident occurred during a right-wing protest on a Portland overpass, where an unidentifi­ed woman was being attacked by several right-wing protesters. LaRosa, who has since claimed she did not witness the start of the fight, subdued the unidentifi­ed woman and held her down until the police arrived on scene. When the pinned woman gasped “I can’t breathe,” LaRosa replied by saying: “I don’t care.”

No arrests were reported in response to the incident.

LaRosa has also been known to spread disinforma­tion, Covid-19 conspiracy theories and pro-Trump propaganda on social media. She once tweeted a fake list of anti-fascist activists and organizers ahead of a Proud Boys rally in Portland. The list, which was devised on 8chan – a website linked to white supremacis­ts and domestic terrorists and where such groups have reportedly uploaded their manifestos – is actually a list of people who signed an anti-Trump petition. Then, in the aftermath of the 2020 presidenti­al election, LaRosa began pushing baseless election fraud conspiracy theories claiming that the election had been “stolen” from Trump. Some of her tweets even hinted at future violence.

“A civil war is coming,” LaRosa tweeted on election day. “I don’t know what that looks like, but prepare to defend yourself physically, civilly, and digitally.”

Several days later, LaRosa tweeted that people should “buy guns now” and then retweeted an intimidati­ng post by UFC fighter Jorge Masvidal in which the Trump supporter suggested he should bring “a few teammates” to rallies.

Despite LaRosa’s vocal support for the Proud Boys and their far-right ideology, the group has not been as eager to embrace the fighter. While some enjoyed being affiliated with an MMA

 ??  ?? Tara Larosa became involved in the far right after her retirement from fighting in 2015. Photograph: Mike Roach/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images
Tara Larosa became involved in the far right after her retirement from fighting in 2015. Photograph: Mike Roach/Zuffa LLC/Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States