(New York, N.Y.) — The Counter Extremism Project (CEP) reports weekly on the methods used by extremists and terrorist groups on the Internet to spread their ideologies and incite violence. Last week, CEP researchers located an audio recording of the Jacksonville shooter’s racist manifesto on Telegram. The narrator in the recording praised the Jacksonville gunman, calling him a “saint,” and encouraged additional acts of violence.
Also this week, the CEO of the alternative social media site Gab, Andrew Torba, posted a link on Twitter/X to a video glorifying Nazi Germany and the Third Reich and blaming Jews for both world wars. Gab also introduced AI chatbots featuring 81 fictional and historical characters, including Adolf Hitler, some of which promote antisemitism and disinformation, including the myth that the political left was responsible for storming the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.
CEP researchers also identified a video game announcement by the far-right game developer Kvltgames for an upcoming release on Valve’s Steam platform. Finally, CEP reported 12 accounts to TikTok that promoted ISIS and pro-ISIS propaganda, including content that explicitly called for attacks against Jews.
Audio Recording of Jacksonville Dollar General Shooter’s Manifesto Released on Telegram
On January 23, at least 12 white supremacist Telegram channels posted an audiobook version of the August 26 Jacksonville shooter’s manifesto. The gunman murdered three African Americans at a Dollar General in a racist attack. He encouraged further acts of anti-black violence in the document that authorities made public on January 19. The narrator of the audio version of the Jacksonville gunman’s manifesto sounds identical to previous audio releases of the manifestos of white supremacist attackers and Terrorgram content, which were identified by the Huffington Post and antifascist activists as having been narrated by Dallas Humber. The audio file concludes with the narrator praising the Jacksonville gunman, calling him a “saint” and encouraging additional acts of violence with the sign-off, “Until next time, hail the saints, hail holy terror.”
CEP researchers additionally found a version of the gunman's manifesto on the flipbook website Publuu, which was removed after CEP reported it.
“The Terrorgram community continues to advocate for acts of white supremacist violence on Telegram,” said CEP researcher Joshua Fisher-Birch. “It is past time for Telegram to consistently remove accounts that call for violence and celebrate lone actor attackers. As an important part of the violent extreme right’s communications strategy, Telegram should institute more aggressive procedures for enforcing its terms of service.”
Gab CEO Promotes Antisemitic Propaganda Film on Twitter/X, Receiving Over One Million Views
On January 22, the CEO of the alternative social media platform Gab, Andrew Torba, posted a link on Twitter/X to an antisemitic revisionist purported documentary that promotes antisemitic conspiracy theories, glorifies Nazi Germany, justifies the crimes of the Third Reich, and blames Jews for both world wars. Torba claimed that he was sharing the link after Europol requested that Gab remove a post on their social media site sharing the link to the video. His tweet had over 1 million views three days after it was posted.
Torba also shared a link to watch the multipart video directly on Twitter/X, posted by another account. CEP previously reported the same Twitter/X account in June, but it was still online as of January 25. The account also shared content from neo-Nazi Active Clubs, a modified Hamas video, and large quantities of antisemitic content.
The antisemitic video posted by Torba was recently voted the best piece of propaganda for “waking people up” in a Twitter/X poll conducted by a prominent white supremacist account allegedly tied to members of the Canadian neo-Nazi scene. The video received 64% of the total 1,199 votes by January 29.