The Atlantic

How the 'Alt-Right' Came to Dominate the Comments on Trump's Facebook Page

Over the course of the campaign, the comments left on the president’s official Facebook page increasingly employed the rhetoric of white nationalism.
Source: Lucas Jackson / Reuters

The alt-right gathered in Washington, D.C. in November to celebrate President Donald Trump’s victory, and the president has come under fire for choosing cabinet appointees and advisors who have faced charges of racism. That’s fed growing concern––both from liberals, like recently-retired Senator Harry Reid, and conservatives, like Evan McMullinthat the Trump presidency will have ties to white nationalism, the belief that society should be structured to ensure white political, social, and economic domination.

While the president has said that he rejects the support of white nationalists, against the backdrop of a , a large-scale analysis of 8,215,332 comments from 1,734,738 different accounts left on the president’s Facebook page between January 1st, 2016 and November 1st, 2016 shows that their language increasingly reflected anti-Semitic

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