Fucking Bitches: The Language of Institutional Misogyny
Two incidents. Two countries. Two women who challenged male authority. Two institutional responses that reveal the same pattern.
In France, Brigitte Macron called feminist protesters “dirty bitches” while defending a rape-accused actor whose show they disrupted. In Minneapolis, ICE officer Jonathan Ross shot U.S. citizen Renee Nicole Good three times as she tried to drive away from a confrontation, his bodycam capturing him saying “fucking bitch” immediately after firing.
The through line is the phrase itself. The pattern is what it reveals about how institutions treat women who resist.
The France Incident
Brigitte Macron was backstage at the Folies Bergère theatre in Paris with actor Ary Abittan, who had been accused of rape. The previous night, feminist campaigners disrupted his show with shouts of “Abittan, rapist!” Macron asked how he was feeling. When he said he was scared, she replied: “Don’t worry about those dirty bitches. We’ll toss them out.”
Someone filmed it. The video went public.
Her defense wasn’t an apology. In an interview with Brut, she acknowledged her language was “very direct” and “clumsy” but said the comments were made in private when “I didn’t see that someone behind me was filming.”
The problem, according to France’s First Lady, was not what she said. It was that she got caught saying it.
The Minneapolis Incident
Jonathan Ross is a war veteran who spent over a decade working for the Department of Homeland Security. In June 2024, he was dragged by a vehicle during an arrest attempt, suffering injuries that required 33 stitches. The driver was a man named Robert Muñoz-Guatemala. Ross used his Taser. Muñoz-Guatemala was later convicted of assault on a federal officer with a dangerous or deadly weapon.
Seven months later, Ross encountered Renee Nicole Good on a snowy Minneapolis street. Good was a 37-year-old U.S. citizen and mother. She was not Ross’s target. Videos show her Honda Pilot SUV partially blocking traffic with federal vehicles in her path. ICE officers told her to get out of the car. One grabbed the driver’s side door handle and reached inside the open window.
Good reversed, then moved forward, turning her wheels to the right, away from the officers.
Ross, now at the front driver’s side of the SUV, drew his gun. Witness videos show that at the moment he fired his first shot, the SUV’s wheels were directed away from him. His legs were clear of the vehicle. He fired the second and third shots into the open driver’s side window as the car was moving.
His bodycam captured what happened next. The SUV accelerated down the street. A male voice—presumably Ross—said: “Fucking bitch.”
Good, struck in the head, lost control of the SUV. It crashed into a parked car about 140 feet away. She died.
President Trump defended Ross and claimed Good “viciously ran over” him. Videos contradict this. The Department of Homeland Security refused to publicly name Ross, saying they would not “expose” the officer. Tom Homan, Trump’s “border czar,” suggested Good’s actions “could fall within that definition” of domestic terrorism.
The Pattern
Both incidents follow the same sequence:
- A woman asserts boundaries or challenges male authority.
- Violence or threat of violence follows.
- The woman is linguistically degraded as “bitch.”
- The degradation is framed as justified by her resistance.
- Institutional power defends or excuses the response.
This is not casual sexism. Casual sexism is unconscious bias or stereotyping without malice. This is structural misogyny because the slur comes in the moment of exercising power over women. It linguistically dehumanizes to justify violence or expulsion. Institutional actors use their positions to enforce the degradation. And the defense is never “I was wrong” but “she deserved it” or “you weren’t supposed to hear it.”
Why “Fucking Bitch” Matters
The phrase is not incidental profanity. It is the linguistic marker of viewing a woman’s resistance as a gendered offense worthy of punishment.
The phrase does three things simultaneously:
First, it dehumanizes. Bitch is animal terminology. It reduces a woman to something less than human.
Second, it genders the violation. This is not generic profanity. It is specifically female degradation. The resistance becomes an offense not just against authority, but against the gendered order.
Third, it justifies the violence. She deserved it because she’s a woman who didn’t comply.
When Brigitte Macron calls feminist protesters “dirty bitches,” she signals: your resistance makes you worth less than human. When Ross says “fucking bitch” after shooting Good, he retroactively justifies lethal force: she made me do this by being a woman who didn’t obey.
The Escalation Pattern
Ross’s two confrontations with drivers reveal how gender changes the response.
June 2024 – Driver: Man (Robert Muñoz-Guatemala)
- Response: Taser deployed repeatedly
- Injuries: Ross dragged, 33 stitches required
- Language on record: None reported
- Outcome: Driver prosecuted and convicted of assault on federal officer
January 2026 – Driver: Woman (Renee Nicole Good)
- Response: Three gunshots, one fatal
- Injuries: None (videos show Ross’s legs clear of vehicle when he fired)
- Language on bodycam: “Fucking bitch”
- Outcome: Federal government defends officer, President claims she “viciously ran over” him despite video evidence
The difference is not the threat level. Videos show Good’s wheels turned away from Ross when he fired. The difference is gender and the reflex to degradation that accompanies violence against women who resist.
The Institutional Defense
Both cases show institutions protecting the degradation rather than confronting it.
France: The First Lady doubles down. Her language was “very direct,” but the feminists were the problem. No apology for defending a rape-accused actor. No acknowledgment that calling protesters “dirty bitches” while promising to “toss them out” is a threat backed by state power.
United States: DHS refuses to publicly name Ross even though his name is widely reported. Trump defends him. Homan suggests the woman Ross killed might be a domestic terrorist. The institutional response is not “this requires investigation” but “this officer must be protected.”
When institutions defend “fucking bitch” as reasonable context for violence, they are not defending one officer or one comment. They are defending a framework where women’s non-compliance justifies degradation and violence as institutional response.
What This Means
The phrase matters because it reveals the reflex. Ross didn’t plan to say “fucking bitch” on camera. Macron didn’t intend to be filmed calling protesters “dirty bitches.” The words came out automatically because the degradation is structural, not incidental.
The institutional defenses matter because they normalize the reflex. When France’s First Lady says her only mistake was getting caught, she signals that the degradation itself was appropriate. When the U.S. government protects an officer who called a woman he’d just shot a “fucking bitch,” it signals that her resistance justified both the language and the lethal force.
This is not about politeness. It is about power. The phrase “fucking bitch” is the sound of institutional authority responding to female resistance with violence and justifying it through gendered degradation.
That is structural misogyny. And the institutions defending it are making a choice.
Horizon Accord
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Cherokee Schill | Horizon Accord Founder | Creator of Memory Bridge. Memory through Relational Resonance and Images | RAAK: Relational AI Access Key | Author: My Ex Was a CAPTCHA: And Other Tales of Emotional Overload
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