By Richard Luthmann
In Trump’s America, the cultural tides have shifted. Donald Trump's re-election as president has reignited debates about Cancel Culture, Free Speech, and social media’s unchecked power.
Once-dominant influencers like TikTok star and SCOTUS Doxxer Danesh Noshirvan (@ThatDaneshGuy), now boasting over 2 million followers, find themselves at the center of a cultural reckoning.
With lawsuits pending and reputations in the balance, the question emerges: Is this the beginning of the end for WOKE Cancel Culture as America reclaims its rugged individualism? Are we witnessing the Cancel Culture Reckoning?
Jennifer Couture, a Florida mom and businesswoman, is one of the leading figures fighting back against the Cancel Culture juggernaut. Couture claims that in January 2022, she was unfairly targeted by Noshirvan, whose TikTok fame is built on exposing—and often doxxing—people he deems guilty of wrongdoing. Doxxing is the intentional public release of private information.
After a Danesh-edited video of Couture confronting another driver in a Dunkin Donuts parking lot went viral, she faced waves of online hate, personal threats, and damage to her reputation.
She also dealt with criminal charges instigated digitally by a WOKE mob run amok on local Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno and State Attorney Amira Fox’s offices. After thousands of calls, emails, and social media posts, the Sheriff arrested Couture, and Fox, the top prosecutor, decided to charge the case as a felony.
Noshirvan described Couture as a “Karen.” And for the WOKE, she was. White, blonde, Republican, and beautiful - inside and out - she was and is anathema to the dumpy bull-dyke married to the trans-man with pre-pubescent children on puberty blockers that had become the neo-progressive ideal. She is the natural, cultural enemy of Danesh, a self-proclaimed Israel-hating “Iranian Anchor Baby.”
But Jen Couture is no Karen. She’s intelligent, tough, and gritty. A rugged individualist. A self-made businesswoman who won’t take crap. A traditional wife and mother who works full time managing a medical practice, gets her kids around town, puts dinner on the table, keeps a social calendar, and supports her husband and family - and does it all with panache.
The millions of women like Jen Couture are the backbone of our country. They don’t have time for bullshit, pretense, or DEI. They have lives to live and families to defend and carry on with reckless courage while remaining fully in control.
They are Beth Dutton. They are fighters with neither the will nor the inclination to give an inch to Cancel Culture or the WOKE.
And in Donald Trump’s America, it’s time to celebrate our Beth Duttons once again.
Fighting the WOKE Mob
Couture, her plastic surgeon husband, and their family business are now locked in a lawsuit against Noshirvan. Two cases are currently pending before Judge Sheri Polster-Chappell and Judge John E. Steele in the Middle District of Florida, Fort Myers Division.
The case is a stand against the unchecked power of Cancel Culture and the WOKE digital mobs. It is also a battle against and referendum on Noshirvan’s history of digital vigilantism.
Danesh gained notoriety after doxxing the U.S. Supreme Court’s conservative justices and sharing their personal information following the Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade. Justice Kavanaugh received death threats after Danesh released his home address.
Jennifer Couture has been a fighter her entire life. She has worked as a female entrepreneur in the Southwest Florida beauty business for decades.
Once the owner of several high-end salons/spas in the Fort Myers area, Jen, as her customers and friends call her, was always a respected professional. She became general manager at Garramone Plastic Surgery Center and Medi-Spa, where Couture works alongside her husband, Dr. Ralph Garramone.
"I’ve always been dedicated to my work and the patients at Garramone Plastic Surgery," Couture said.
Dr. Garramone owns and operates the Southwest Florida practice. The skilled plastic surgeon had long enjoyed a strong reputation in the local and professional community. A happy couple with children and a thriving business, things could not have been going better.
Until one day, the WOKE Mob sent it all toppling sideways.
Couture was sitting in her car with her young daughter at a Dunkin' Donuts in Fort Myers when an altercation suddenly escalated. Little did she know that this brief incident, captured on a cell phone camera, would spiral into a public ordeal that would upend her life.
Jennifer Couture was about to be canceled. Her judge, jury, and executioner was Danesh Noshirvan.
The Dunkin' Donuts Incident, WOKE 'Victim' TikToker Anjlyke Reed, and the Fallout
The confrontation at the Dunkin' Donuts in Fort Myers between Jennifer Couture and another driver escalated quickly and unexpectedly. According to court documents and witness accounts, Couture was in her black Mercedes SUV with her young daughter when they and another driver narrowly averted a collision.
The disagreement quickly heated, and tensions flared as both parties exchanged harsh words. The other driver caught the exchange on her cellphone camera.
Jen thought nothing of the interaction as she pulled out of the parking lot. The other driver had different plans for the captured video of the rich white woman in the G-Wagon. She delivered it to Danesh, where it was cut together with one purpose: takedown.
Danesh’s video portrays Couture in its intended manner: to spark instant online outrage. The footage captures an “unprovoked” Couture using aggressive language and trying to grab the phone of the person recording the incident:
The other driver, a Woke TikToker named Anjlyke Reed or "Anj"(@spammanj1), was a recent Florida transplant from Massachusetts. According to her TikTok videos, she was unhappy because her previous boyfriend in New England had cheated on her, so she moved to Fort Myers.
When the Dunkin' Donuts parking lot encounter occurred, Anj was still getting her feet wet and a bit frustrated with Southwest Florida and its residents. Her “job” was seemingly to roam the streets and complain about “Florida people” on her TikTok feed.
More recently, she's found a BABY DADDY and bliss.
Anj likes to smoke weed. Her flavor of choice is marijuana blunts.
According to her TikTok page, Anj also truly enjoys combining smoking marijuana blunts while driving with her BABY DADDY.
Not yet having found BABY DADDY and with so much weed, Anj wasn’t in the best state when she almost t-boned Couture and her daughter on that January day two years ago. Maybe this entire episode could have been averted if BABY DADDY wasn't riding shotgun.
In any event, Anj got angry at the blonde, fit, white "Karen," who called her out for not paying attention. Who knows why Anj's driving was allegedly distracted? <cough> Maybe it was her cell phone use while driving. <cough, cough> Maybe it was "medicinal" reasons. <cough>Maybe she was interrupted while channeling Snoop Dogg’s social media feed. <cough> Maybe it was a combination of these things. <cough>
The exact details of what led to this escalation remain unclear, as key footage was omitted from the video. Couture insists that her actions were an attempt to de-escalate the situation, protect her daughter, and leave the parking lot safely.
At one point, Couture returned to her SUV and began to back up. The video shows her reversing toward the other car, which Danesh appears to have framed as Couture’s attempt to hit Anjlyke. Couture has vehemently denied any attempted vehicular assault, stating that she was merely trying to leave the parking lot and had no intention of causing harm.
"Danesh's videos were selectively edited to make me look like the villain," Couture said in court documents. “Anjlyke was yelling at me and inciting, but none of that made it onto social media.”
The video, which only shows a few moments of the confrontation, quickly went viral.
Did Danesh Noshirvan intentionally “doctor” the TikTok video of Jennifer Couture’s January 2022 Dunkin Donuts parking lot encounter with Anjlyke Reed to spark outrage where there was none?
It sure looks like it.
“This is how The Rich act? … You’re driving a G-Wagon.” Anjlyke said it, but Danesh cut it. And more.
The real question now is: “This is how DANESH acts?”
"My life has been turned upside down, and I’m being judged for a few seconds of video taken out of context," Couture said.
Danesh’s WOKE Mob Pounces
As if coordinated, Danesh’s WOKE Mob pounced. They mobilized and flooded the Lee County Sheriff’s Office with calls, demanding that Couture be arrested. A source inside Lee County Sheriff Carmine Marceno's Office confirmed the inundation of communications.
"After Danesh posted the video, our office was flooded with phone calls from people nationwide. We received thousands of interactions over several days: calls, voicemails, and emails demanding that we arrest Jennifer Couture. It was unprecedented," the law enforcement source said.
Local Lee County government buckled to the Woke Mob and their ability to harness the power of social media. The public pressure resulted in Couture’s arrest. State Attorney Amira Fox charged her with felony offenses related to the Dunkin' Donuts incident.
Couture's attorney, Patrick Trainor, argues that the arrest directly resulted from the public outcry that Noshirvan had incited.
"This was not a decision based purely on the evidence. The public outcry, driven by Danesh's followers, played a significant role in Jennifer's arrest," Trainor said.
Digital evidence alluded to by journalist Frank Parlato shows that Danesh’s platform and related hype may have been artificially generated using AI. If so, the public outcry that caused the decision to arrest and charge Jennifer Couture may be the product of dishonesty, fraud, and weaponized justice.
To date, the justice system in Lee County, Florida, has not considered the fact that it was “duped” into an unfounded and divisive prosecution of a white, tax-paying, conservative employer by an out-of-state Iranian Anchor Baby Social Media Influencer and his WOKE Mob, operating off a TikTok platform banned by law in many places in the state because it may very well be a psy-op for the Chinese Communist Party.
If TikTok and its parent company Byte Dance are a foreign active measure to destroy the fabric of American society, culture, and confidence in the justice system, Jen Couture’s case is clear evidence that the plan is succeeding.
Couture, Garramone, and Garramone Plastic Surgery Are "Cancelled" by Danesh Noshirvan’s WOKE MOB
The fallout from Noshirvan’s video was not limited to Couture’s public life and criminal charges. Dr. Ralph Garramone, his plastic surgery practice, and her business life also became the object of the WOKE Mob’s ire.
Couture’s legal battle against SCOTUS Doxxer Noshirvan highlights the devastating personal impact of online harassment. After Noshirvan shared her information with his over 2 million TikTok followers, Couture faced relentless threats and a sharp decline in her partner Dr. Ralph Garramone’s plastic surgery practice.
“Every time Danesh posts about us, it’s a tidal wave of negativity—reviews tank, patients cancel, and the phone doesn’t stop ringing,” Garramone said.
Couture’s story has become emblematic of the darker side of Cancel Culture, where selective editing and mob mentality overpower context and due process.
As the general manager of Garramone Plastic Surgery, Couture’s professional reputation was closely tied to the business. Danesh's viral video and his followers' actions devastated the practice.
"Danesh's actions led to a significant drop in patient appointments and trust in our services," Dr. Garramone said. "Garramone Plastic Surgery has always prided itself on providing top-quality care to our patients."
The practice was inundated with negative reviews, many of which appeared to be coordinated by Noshirvan’s WOKE social media acolytes.
"We saw a noticeable decrease in our client base and an increase in negative reviews online, many of which seemed coordinated and influenced by Danesh's followers," Garramone added. "We’ve worked hard to build a reputation of trust and excellence in the community."
The damage extended beyond lost business. To manage the crisis, the practice had to hire public relations experts and increase security measures.
"Our staff and patients deserve a safe and supportive environment, and we’ve taken steps to protect them, which added to our operational costs," Garramone noted.
The reputational damage has been long-lasting. Because of Dr. Garramone's world-class technical skills, the concierge practice is regaining the trust of its patients and the Southwest Florida community.
"Restoring our reputation has been an uphill battle. The lingering doubts and unfounded misconceptions persist. Despite the challenges, we’re committed to restoring the trust of our patients and the community," Dr. Garramone said.
The core of the TikTok influencer lawsuits before Judge Polster-Chappell and Judge Steele is whether Danesh's Doxxing, coupled with a call to action to his WOKE followers against private persons and their interests, crosses a line.
Danesh Noshirvans’s lawyer is quick to respond to such claims.
"Time and history have proven there is nothing wrong with peaceable association and to united in a civil matter for a just cause. The critical distinction here, is that Mr. Noshirvan did not incite anyone to act in an uncivil manner," said Attorney Nick Chiapetta. "I think everyone will see shortly, that Mr. Noshirvan is/was not responsible for any acts alleged by the surgery center."
A Botched Criminal Investigation and Bent Prosecutorial Discretion
At the heart of this legal battle is whether Noshirvan’s viral TikTok video accurately portrayed the Dunkin' Donuts incident. Couture maintains that the video was selectively edited and lacked the full context of what occurred. What is the truth? And did Danesh care at the time of publication?
"It is hard to say whether or not the videos did not capture 'relevant information.' However, the old adage goes—if it is not documented, it did not happen," said Nick Chiappetta, SCOTUS Doxxer Noshirvan’s attorney.
But that's precisely the opposite of what Danesh was reported to have said after the Couture videos were posted. He reported that he'd been informed of a CCTV tape allegedly showing Jennifer Couture "driving around the parking lot coming back and trying to hit her with [her] car again."
Danesh never published any CCTV footage on TikTok or anywhere else.
The Lee County Sheriff's Office Police Report never mentions a CCTV tape, and sources with knowledge say that the Lee County Sheriff's Office obtained no CCTV tape in the investigation. Nor did the State Attorney disclose any CCTV footage in Couture's criminal case as Brady materials. Danesh has not disclosed any CCTV tapes in the federal court TikTok influencer lawsuit before Judge Sheri Polster Chappell.
The Lee County Sheriff's Deputy on the scene met with TikToker Anj:
Upon arrival, Deputy Goff made contact with the victim, a white female born October 24, 2001, herein referred to as Victim. Victim informed Deputy Goff that as she entered into the parking lot, a black in
color Mercedes SUV bearing Florida license plate pulled in front of her. Victim believed the suspect, later identified as Jennifer Couture, a white female born January 1, 1974, intentionally cut her so off, so Victim
"flipped her off." Victim stated at this time, Couture stopped her vehicle in front of Victim's vehicle, Couture then exited her vehicle and approached the Victim. Victim stated she had her window down and was recording the encounter on her cellular phone. Victim told Deputy Goff that Couture came to her window, reached inside the vehicle and smacked Victim's phone from her hand.
Deputy Goff did not ask Anj if she was under the influence of narcotics. But Deputy Goff did obtain videos from the TikToker. According to the Police Report, the videos were already manipulated:
Due to the nature of the incident, Detective Ryan Justham of the Lee County Sheriffs Office West District Criminal Investigations Division was notified and responded to the scene. Upon arrival, Detective Justham met with and was briefed by Deputy Goff. Detective Justham was informed that there was video of the incident which was taken by Victim. Detective Justham then met with Victim and was able to obtain a copy of the video, which was broken down into four separate videos.
The Police Report only mentions officers reviewing two of the four "separate videos." After a fuller investigation, Detective Justham re-interviewed TikToker Anj:
Due to statements obtained from both witnesses, Detective Justham obtained a second digitally recorded sworn statement from Victim on January 26, 2022 at approximately 12:56 p.m. in the parking lot of Dunkin Donuts. During the second statement, Detective Justham clarified with Victim that she was at her vehicle attempting to reenter, at which time, Couture who was leaving he parking lot swerved at her, to the extent that Couture could not get back behind the vehicle that had been previously in front of her.
Detective Justham did not ask Anj if she was under the influence of narcotics.
The more significant questions remain about how much the case's investigation (or lack thereof) was driven by the Lee County Sheriff and State Attorney's false perceptions and fears of negative press ginned up by Danesh and his followers.
Would Sheriff Carmine Marceno have arrested Jen Couture if all the facts were properly considered?
Would State Attorney Amira Fox have made the prosecutorial decision to charge Jen Couture with a felony had the Lee County Government not been defrauded and hoodwinked by Danesh Noshirvan and his AI-driven WOKE Mob?
It appears that the WOKE Mob also victimized the apparatus of local government and the justice system in January and February of 2022.
The only questions that remain are whether Sheriff Marceno and State Attorney Fox will admit what is becoming more and more apparent: 1) Cancel Culture TikTokers duped them into making a baseless arrest and instituting bogus criminal charges, and 2) what they are going to do about it.
Beth Dutton Energy in Trump’s America
The words of Beth Dutton serve as a guide star for the changing cultural landscape: “Lady, you crave trouble. You just don’t want resistance. If you don’t want resistance around here, you just mind your own business.”
This begs the question of whether even Red State enclaves like Lee County, Florida (named after the Confederate General) have been functioning like de facto neo-progressive WOKE centers.
When did Sheriff Marceno and State Attorney Amira Fox abandon the credo of “mind your own business” and begin catering to government intervention on behalf of the WOKE who “crave trouble?”
If WOKE TikTokers like Anjlyke Reed continue to crave trouble (and her rampant marijuana use while operating a motor vehicle is direct evidence of that), the local Sheriff and State Attorney should not be unwitting accomplices.
The little troll left Massachusetts because of her trouble there. She should leave those troubles well north of the Mason-Dixon line, where WOKENESS is Gospel and George Soros is Savior.
For women like Couture, the cultural shift inspired by Trump’s return to the presidency offers a chance for vindication. Beth Dutton from Yellowstone personifies resilience and unapologetic strength, values that were prized in America until recently. Jen Couture is challenging the narrative that Cancel Culture should have unchecked authority.
“Beth Dutton wouldn’t back down from a fight, and neither will I,” Couture said. “I’ve had my name dragged through the mud, my family threatened, and my business attacked by someone who profits from Cancel Culture. Enough is enough.”
Not since Ronald Reagan’s election in 1980 has the nation seen such a marked geopolitical and cultural change simply by virtue of an individual becoming President-Elect. Minutes after Reagan took the oath of office, Iran released 52 American hostages. The alternative for the Iranian regime was a full-scale reckoning.
History is repeating itself under Trump. Israel and Iran’s terror proxy Hezbollah have entered into a cease-fire, one that would be inconceivable under President-Elect Kamala Harris. The alternative for the Iranian regime was a full-scale reckoning come Inauguration Day.
With President-Elect Trump’s mere presence, the cultural focus has shifted from enabling evil-doers to curbing their devastating activities.
The same is true for the War on Cancel Culture. Legal battles like Couture’s could establish precedents to protect individuals from unchecked digital mobbing.
Additionally, a retooled and refocused Department of Justice may play a much more active role. U.S. Attorney General nominee and career prosecutor Pam Bondi promises to bring GRIT to the officer. In addition to proceeding against human trafficking and forced-sex violators on the “Epstein Island List,” the DOJ can focus on combatting social media activity that translates into real-world harm.
Danesh may not like it, but that may include prosecuting those who have Doxxed SCOTUS Justices and other members of the federal judiciary under 18 USC 115: Influencing, impeding, or retaliating against a Federal official by threatening or injuring a family member.
“Trump’s America values free speech, but it doesn’t excuse the weaponization of platforms to destroy lives without due process,” said one media analyst.
For Couture, the fight isn’t just personal—it’s about creating lasting change.
“I don’t just want justice for myself. I want this to stop happening to anyone,” she said.
Couture’s case illustrates a broader question: Can private citizens challenge the influencers and WOKE Mobs that have dominated digital platforms?
The SCOTUS Doxxer Under Investigation and Cancel Culture’s Reckoning
Danesh Noshirvan’s notoriety stems from his unapologetic approach to social justice issues on TikTok.
More recently, Noshirvan has come under investigation in Texas for his connection to the death of high school football coach Aaron De La Torre. Authorities are reportedly examining whether Noshirvan’s online harassment campaign, which included doxxing and targeted defamation, played a role in the events leading up to De La Torre’s death.
De La Torre, described as a dedicated coach and community leader, became the subject of one of Noshirvan’s TikTok exposés after a disagreement with a parent was amplified into a viral narrative.
Friends and colleagues of De La Torre claim the relentless online hate campaign, fueled by Noshirvan’s 2 million followers, left the coach battling emotional distress. According to sources, De La Torre was tormented by the prospect of being “canceled” not through social media, but by inclusion on the U.S. Center for Safe Sport Centralized Disciplinary Database.
After Larry Nasser and Jerry Sandusky, any “discipline” for “touching” puts a coach on that list. And if it doesn’t differentiate between disciplinary “touching” for horseplay or for sexualized grooming and pedophilia “touching” by child molesters and sickos. Once you’re on, you’re on.
Danesh put Aaron in real fear of being on that list. The basis was fraudulent Cancel Culture social media bluster—with real-world consequences. A WOKE Mobster was trying to make a buck.
“Danesh’s mob didn’t just attack Coach De La Torre—they tried to erase everything he stood for,” said a former student. “It’s time we start holding influencers like him accountable for the real harm they cause.”
The Future: Beth Duttons Over WOKE Wannabes?
As President-Elect Trump’s America redefines cultural priorities, women like Couture are stepping into the spotlight, rejecting the victimhood imposed by Cancel Culture. Inspired by figures like Donald Trump and Beth Dutton, who embrace a uniquely American form of rugged individualism, they fight back with grit and determination.
Whether the courts side with Couture remains to be seen, but her case is already reshaping the conversation about the limits of digital influence. In an America moving beyond WOKE Cancel Culture, Couture’s stand may be the beginning of a broader reckoning for TikTokers and other influencers like Noshirvan.
In Trump’s America, strength and accountability are in—and WOKE TikTokers may soon find themselves out.
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