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Substack Has a Nazi Problem
The newsletter platforms lax content moderation creates an opening for white nationalists eager to get their message out.
By Jonathan M. Katz
The newsletter-hosting site Substack advertises itself as the last, best hope for civility on the internetand aspires to a bigger role in politics in 2024. But just beneath the surface, the platform has become a home and propagator of white supremacy and anti-Semitism. Substack has not only been hosting writers who post overtly Nazi rhetoric on the platform; it profits from many of them.
Substack, founded in 2017, has terms of service that formally proscribe hate, along with pornography, spam, and anyone restricted from making money on Substacka category that includes businesses banned by Stripe, the platforms default payment processor. But Substacks leaders also proudly disdain the content-moderation methods that other platforms employ, albeit with spotty results, to limit the spread of racist or bigoted speech. An informal search of the Substack website and of extremist Telegram channels that circulate Substack posts turns up scores of white-supremacist, neo-Confederate, and explicitly Nazi newsletters on Substackmany of them apparently started in the past year. These are, to be sure, a tiny fraction of the newsletters on a site that had more than 17,000 paid writers as of March, according to Axios, and has many other writers who do not charge for their work. But to overlook white-nationalist newsletters on Substack as marginal or harmless would be a mistake.
At least 16 of the newsletters that I reviewed have overt Nazi symbols, including the swastika and the sonnenrad, in their logos or in prominent graphics. Andkons Reich Press, for example, calls itself a National Socialist newsletter; its logo shows Nazi banners on Berlins Brandenburg Gate, and one recent post features a racist caricature of a Chinese person. A Substack called White-Papers, bearing the tagline Your pro-White policy destination, is one of several that openly promote the Great Replacement conspiracy theory that inspired deadly mass shootings at a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, synagogue; two Christchurch, New Zealand, mosques; an El Paso, Texas, Walmart; and a Buffalo, New York, supermarket. Other newsletters make prominent references to the Jewish Question. Several are run by nationally prominent white nationalists; at least four are run by organizers of the 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginiaincluding the rallys most notorious organizer, Richard Spencer.
Some Substack newsletters by Nazis and white nationalists have thousands or tens of thousands of subscribers, making the platform a new and valuable tool for creating mailing lists for the far right. And many accept paid subscriptions through Substack, seemingly flouting terms of service that ban attempts to publish content or fund initiatives that incite violence based on protected classes. Several, including Spencers, sport official Substack bestseller badges, indicating that they have at a minimum hundreds of paying subscribers. A subscription to the newsletter that Spencer edits and writes for costs $9 a month or $90 a year, which suggests that he and his co-writers are grossing at least $9,000 a year and potentially many times that. Substack, which takes a 10 percent cut of subscription revenue, makes money when readers pay for Nazi newsletters.