“…Far right and White nationalist movements in the United States (and around the world; see Fielitz & Thurston, 2019) have long used the Internet to promote their ideas and their aims (e.g., Bjork-James, 2020; Daniels, 2018; Thompson & Hawley, 2021). However, it was not until the emergence of the “alt-right” on platforms such as 4chan and Reddit, and their influence in the 2016 US presidential election, that this phenomenon came more fully into the public consciousness (Hawley, 2017; Thompson & Hawley, 2021; Wendling, 2018). Although the alt-right as such has largely declined since 2017, it has always overlapped with other “radical pro-White movements” (Hartzell, 2018, p. 7), and it is clear that online far right movements continue to exist (and even inform mainstream US conservatism).…”