Naomi Seibt

[13] When Seibt was 16, her poem on nationalism, "Sometimes I Keep Silent", was published on David Berger's anti-Islamisation blog Philosophia Perennis,[5] as part of an AfD competition.

[21] On 28 February 2020, an article in The Guardian stated that Seibt was inspired by the Canadian alt-right, white nationalist, and conspiracy theorist Stefan Molyneux after being introduced to his blogs.

She said that it was her decision not to renew a contract, and it was made because the Landesanstalt für Medien NRW [de] threatened to delete her YouTube channel on the grounds that she wants to influence German politics for an American think-tank.

[23] In May 2020, she endorsed QAnon, a far-right conspiracy theory alleging that Donald Trump is fighting a satanic network of paedophiles drawn from liberal elites.

[39] The Guardian described her as a "so-called 'YouTube influencer' who tells her followers that Thunberg and other activists are whipping up unnecessary hysteria by exaggerating the climate crisis".

Brookie said in an email: "While it is not outright disinformation, ... it does bear resemblance to a model we use called the 4d's — dismiss the message, distort the facts, distract the audience, and express dismay at the whole thing.

"[36][42] She has also been accused of promoting white nationalist ideas on X by directly engaging with groups such as QAnon, along with related accounts and channels that propagate conspiracy theories.

[22] She has also been found to spread disinformation on X,[43] including several false claims linked to far-right and white nationalist online groups across multiple platforms, such as Covid-19[44] and climate-related content.

[45] A number of academic and journalistic publications have emphasised the links in her ideological beliefs between climate change denialism,[46] white nationalism,[47] and culture wars (including Islamophobia).