YouTube Doesn’t Know What to Do With the Alt-Lite

How faulty academic work and shaky science is fueling a quieter, but equally dangerous form of white supremacy online

A. Khaled
OneZero

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Photo: vm/Getty Images

AsAs the latest wind of terror swept across America, the media blamed overt neo-Nazis like Richard Spencer, or soft-spoken white supremacists like Stefan Molyneux or Lauren Southern, but almost none would mention a more hidden form of very similar ideas. This group, known for its appeal to shaky scientific reasoning, is referred to as the alt-lite, and it’s gaining communicative power online precisely because it can distance itself from the alt-right.

The characterization of the alt-lite is similar to the “Intellectual Dark Web,” the group first brought to the attention of readers of mainstream media by Bari Weiss in an essay for the New York Times. Some of the group’s figureheads include, but are not limited to, right-wing ideologues like Jordan Peterson, conservative pundits like Ben Shapiro and Steven Crowder, scientists with fringe views on society like Sam Harris, Charles Murray and Richard Dawkins, and semi-libertarian show hosts like Joe Rogan. Weiss’ characterized the movement as being actively shunned (if occasionally indulged) by the mainstream media, leading them to resort instead to platforms like YouTube to spread their gospel of…

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A. Khaled
OneZero

Internet culture scribe with an interest in the digital economy, content creators, media and politics.