Lauren Southern | |||||||
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Born | Lauren Cherie Southern 16 June 1995 Surrey, British Columbia, Canada | ||||||
Alma mater |
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Occupation | Political activist[1] | ||||||
Political party | Libertarian[needs update?] | ||||||
Children | 1[2] | ||||||
YouTube information | |||||||
Channel | |||||||
Years active | 2015–present | ||||||
Subscribers | 711k[3] | ||||||
Total views | 65 million[3] | ||||||
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Last updated: August 31, 2024 | |||||||
Website | laurensouthern |
Lauren Cherie Southern (born 16 June[4] 1995) is a Canadian alt-right[a] YouTuber, political activist and commentator. In 2015, she ran as a Libertarian Party candidate in the Canadian federal election,[5] finishing last in her riding with 535 votes, or 0.9% of the total.[6] Southern worked for Rebel Media until March 2017, when she began to work independently.[2]
In May 2017, Southern supported Defend Europe in their efforts to obstruct search-and-rescue operations of refugees from North Africa in the Mediterranean Sea.[7] Southern was briefly detained by the Italian Coast Guard for blocking a ship embarking on a search-and-rescue mission.[7] Consequently, crowdfunding website Patreon removed her from the platform, accusing her of engaging in activity "likely to cause loss of life".[8] She was also demonetized by YouTube and banned from GoFundMe.[9][10]
Some academics and journalists have described Southern as a white nationalist for her promotion of the Great Replacement and white genocide conspiracy theories,[b] though she has denied being a white nationalist.[2][11] Southern promoted the Great Replacement conspiracy theory via her YouTube video of the same name, released in July 2017;[12][13][14] the video was reported to have helped to promote the white nationalist viewpoint, having garnered over 600,000 views by March 2019.[12][15] She has been described as an advocate of the white genocide conspiracy theory for her documentary Farmlands (2018), in which she suggested the imminence of a race war in South Africa in response to South African farm attacks.[16][17][18][19]
In July 2018, she visited Australia for a speaking tour with Stefan Molyneux; that August, the pair visited New Zealand intending on continuing the speaking tour, but this was cancelled after local government withdrew its permission to use a government-run venue.[20] Southern announced her retirement from political activism on 2 June 2019, but returned to YouTube on 19 June 2020.[2][21][22] As of 2021, she is a contributor for Sky News Australia.[11] She has rejected the "far-right" label and said she is not a racist,[23] preferring to be described as a conservative.[24] In 2019, when making such denials to a journalist from The Times of London, Southern "end[ed] their conversation by predicting a race war."[23]
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Camus's notion of the Great Replacement has been spread by right-wing and white nationalist figures across the world. In July 2018, Lauren Southern, a Canadian alt-right figure posted, a video titled 'The Great Replacement' on YouTube that got over 250,000 views.(Punctuation error in the original.)
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was invoked but never defined (see the help page).Southern made a film about 'white genocide' in South Africa, a conspiracy theory that was picked up by Tucker Carlson on Fox News and led President Trump to tweet about the subject.
Southern has become a figurehead of the South African 'white genocide' narrative, after traveling to the country to produce a documentary on the murders of white farmers in the country.
When we speak, Southern flatly denies being racist or even far right, then ends our conversation by predicting a race war and quoting Enoch Powell.
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