‘Thanks for hating, it helps the movement’: How a 19 year old used her internet trolls to raise $2 million for abortion access in less than a week
Fortune · Courtesy of Olivia Julianna

It all started with a tweet.

“Welcome to Texas! Where the government regulates our bodies more than our electrical grid,” 19-year-old Olivia Julianna wrote in early July.

The Houston-based teen was referring to the state’s abortion ban after the reversal of Roe v. Wade, just one of many young people to speak out about the legislation.

But Olivia received a biting response from a popular account: “Feel free to f— off to anywhere else!”

She says the reply opened the floodgates of online trolls, who made fatphobic digs at her body.

“Hate comments do not bother me whatsoever,” Olivia told Fortune. “I just really couldn’t care less.” She pledged to donate $1 to an abortion fund in the name of every person who sent a comment, tweeting: “Thanks for hating, it helps the movement.” Beyond giving out $350 herself, Olivia urged others to match her with their own contributions, raising $1,500 in total for abortion access causes.

But the experience gave her an important insight: She could turn social media vitriol into money for the causes that were important to her. So a few weeks later, when Florida Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz targeted Olivia on Twitter after saying that abortion activists were overweight and unattractive, she was ready.

Without ever having led an official fundraiser, Olivia mobilized his insults and the growing social media attention into $2 million to support 50 abortion funds across the country in less than a week. That number has now climbed even higher.

“I don’t think he could have picked a worse person to pick on than me,” Olivia said.

The path to $2 million 

Olivia got involved in politics at 17 and built a steady social media following of thousands over the last few years by encouraging young people to vote in Texas elections.

She works at Gen-Z for Change, an activist collective, and has long believed that abortion access was one of the issues that would send people to the ballot box, suspecting early on that Roe would fall.

“It’s not a matter of if Roe v. Wade will be overturned. It’s a matter of when Roe v. Wade will be overturned,” she told a film crew hours before Justice Samuel Alito’s draft opinion was leaked to Politico.

Since Roe was dismantled in June, at least 10 states have banned abortion. Clinics and abortion funds, which help cover the logistical costs of the procedure, have relied on donations more than ever as pregnant people seeking abortions flood into states where it's still legal, often racking up considerable costs to do so.

That’s why in mid-June, Olivia decided to fundraise to assist these groups through Gen-Z for Change. They chose 50 abortion funds in states gearing up to receive a huge influx of patients from places where abortion has been banned or restricted. Donations reached $26,000 shortly after the fundraiser launched.