Faith Goldy
In June 2017, she broadcast on Rebel Media "White Genocide in Canada?", analyzing the Canadian government's foreign immigration policies with regard to the
Third World, and the effect of those policies on the demographic composition of Canadian society. She posited that the European population in the country was being replaced as a result.
[16] In response to the broadcast, several corporate entities withdrew their financial support from Rebel Media.
[16]
Goldy broadcast a
livestream in August 2017 covering the
Unite the Right rally in
Charlottesville, Virginia, protesting the
removal of Confederate monuments. Goldy mocked counter-protesters and complained of apparent police bias against the alt-right demonstrators.
[6] Goldy's video also recorded the
car attack which killed counter-protester Heather Heyer.
[17] Rebel Media co-founder
Brian Lilley resigned after Goldy's broadcasts were published to the site.
[18][19] Goldy was fired by co-founder
Ezra Levant after she appeared on
The Krypto Report, a
podcast on the neo-Nazi website
The Daily Stormer.
[20][21] Levant explained that he had directed Goldy not to cover the events in Charlottesville and that her appearance on
The Daily Stormer was "just too far".
[20][22]
In December 2017, Goldy appeared on the alt-right
podcast Millennial Woes and recited a
white supremacist slogan, the
Fourteen Words: "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children".
[23][24] She continued: "I don't see that as controversial ... We want to survive."
[24] As a result of reciting the slogan,
[3] crowdfunding site Patreon suspended her account in May 2018
[2] and she was subsequently banned from PayPal that July.
[25][26] After losing her Patreon account, she began receiving contributions through an alternative crowdfunding system,
Freestartr. This platform was itself shut out of PayPal the same month, leaving her unable to receive payments.
[25][27][28]
Goldy allegedly believes in the
white genocide conspiracy theory.
[31][32] She reportedly linked the topic with the
removal of Confederate statues, claiming they were being replaced "because [white] people are being replaced". It has been reported to have significantly raised her profile outlining the "terrible truths of white genocide".
[33] Her belief in the subject has resulted in criticism, including a petition to rescind her
Gordon Cressy Student Leadership Award.
[34] GQ labelled her as "one of Canada's most prominent propagandists" of the theory.
[24]
According to
Winnipeg Free Press columnist Dan Lett, Goldy seemed to be working to provide mainstream respectability to
far right demonstrators in the course of her reporting of the
Charlottesville Unite the Right rally, arguing that they suggested a wider "rising white racial consciousness" in America. Goldy referred to a manifesto by
white supremacist Richard Spencer, which Lett described as including "calls to organize states along ethnic and racial divides and celebrat[ing] the superiority of 'White America'", as "robust" and "well thought-out".
[4]
Steve King, the Republican
U.S. Representative for
Iowa's 4th congressional district, endorsed Goldy for Toronto mayor in October 2018. King is known for being both controversial and outspoken regarding his opposition to immigration and multiculturalism, and has been criticized by members of his own party for making white nationalist statements.
[44]
This is the propaganda some of ya'all are associating yourselves with.

