'The Nazis were right:' What the leaders of Canada's biggest 'nationalist' group really want: The latest smear piece from Canada's propaganda organ.
Quote from: Jotunn on May 20, 2026, 03:19 AMI wonder if any of their employees ever pause to reflect on how much real-world misery and death they facilitate with their ruthless propaganda?
QuoteA livestreaming website started in Calgary that helped influencers monetize hateful content says it is shutting down — removing a revenue stream for dozens of neo-Nazis and white supremacists — following an investigation by CBC's the fifth estate.
Entropy allowed users to create and livestream videos or donate to their favourite streamers, but now, the website has stopped processing payments and the owners say they're closing down.
"We are back to square one in terms of looking for stable financial infrastructure, and with that being the case we can't in good conscience keep running the site," co-founder Emmanuel Constantinidis said in a May 4 post to the website's tech support forum.
"This was not the result we were hoping for, but we are grateful for how long we were able to keep the service going."
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Quote from: Phoenix on Mar 20, 2026, 03:55 AMAre there any public platforms in Canada that would permit a rebuttal to this shopworn marxist diatribe?I doubt it! At best, a news site based in America the way this website is. Canada is quick to suppress any anti-multiculturalist sentiment. They have an entire Newspeak of propaganda terminology to suppress it - "hate". "racism". "supremacy", "privilege", "colonizer", etc.
QuoteIt boasts that it's a "safe haven for monetization."
But a quick scroll through the website created by three tech-savvy Canadians reveals not everyone is welcome on the platform.
An investigation by the fifth estate has found the website known as Entropy, which launched in Calgary, is in fact a safe haven for white supremacists and other extremists seeking to monetize the hateful content they livestream to online audiences.
Within two years after it launched in 2019, Entropy processed more than $3 million in transactions and experts say it has since grown to become an essential service for dozens of neo-Nazis and white supremacists.
Many creators have found a home on the Canadian platform after being kicked off and blocked from making money on mainstream platforms such as YouTube for posting antisemitic and racist content that violates the streaming giant's terms of service.
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