Don’t Ask Reddit About the Holocaust

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
December 22, 2014

So, Reddit, a website that I’m certain most everyone in the world is familiar with where the user can upvote and downvote content, and also create their own “subreddits” to share content on, has a subreddit called “Ask Reddit.”  The concept of this board that people can pose a question, and other users can answer it.  It has a generally light tone, but serious topics are also discussed.

Here are the top ten posts at time of writing:

Ask Reddit...

So, following the format, not breaking any rules, a Holocaust believer who had heard about Holocaust deniers went on and posed the question “Holocaust deniers, how do you refute video evidence?

Here’s what happened:

These facts you've mentioned - they are pure hatred, goyim.
These facts you’ve mentioned – they are pure hatred, goyim.

The thread was not deleted (as probably would have made the most sense for those censoring), but every response explaining how we respond to alleged video evidence was deleted, all in a row.

As the topic was not propagandizing for holocaust denialism (Reddit has no policy against that anyway), and the subreddit is known for controversial topics and discussions, the most likely explanation here is that a Jew weaselled his way into the moderation team for the board and uses that power to suppress criticism of Jews and Jewish agendas.  This is a very common phenomenon on the internet, Wikipedia being the most absurd example.

We should remember, in our internet browsing, that we are in the middle of a warzone.  These tubes are the last frontier of freedom for humanity, and we are soldiers fighting to keep the flame of free thought alive, so that future generations may have the right to decide for themselves what is truth.