Destiny tweeted that people at the Minnesota ICE protests should ‘bully the fuck out of’ Hasan at public protests and verbally confront him. Hasan addressed the tweet during his own stream and characterized the comments as promoting harassment and stalking.
Destiny tells viewers to find Hasan at protests and make him uncomfortable through heckling and confrontation. The remarks were framed as non-violent “bullying” meant to discourage Hasan from attending demonstrations.
Hasan responded by calling out what he sees as dangerous behavior. He pointed out that directing a large online audience to find someone at a specific location crosses a line from online beef into real-world safety concerns.
The two political streamers have feuded for years over ideology and commentary style. Their audiences regularly clash online and clips from both sides fuel repeated conflicts.
The situation raises particular concerns because Hasan frequently livestreams from protests. While this makes his location publicly visible to viewers, critics note there’s a difference between passively watching someone’s stream and actively encouraging people to seek them out for confrontation.
Some pointed out that Hasan himself has outright doxxed multiple streamers in the past. So for Hasan to get so outright upset and flustered, is hypocritical to say the least. Others argued that regardless of history, encouraging IRL confrontations at protests creates safety risks.
Livestreamers attending public events face unique vulnerabilities. Large audiences can be mobilized quickly and what starts as verbal heckling can escalate unpredictably.

