4chan Pol Why Arent Woman Funny
Type of site | 4chan imageboard |
---|---|
Available in | English |
Owner | Hiroyuki Nishimura |
Founder(s) | Christopher Poole |
URL | 4chan |
Commercial | Yes |
Registration | Optional |
Launched | October 23, 2011 (2011-10-23) |
Current status | Online |
/pol/, short for "Politically Incorrect",[1] is an anonymous political discussion imageboard on 4chan.[2] [3] [4] As of 2020, it was one of 4chan's most active boards.[5] It has had a substantial impact on Internet culture while acting as a platform for extremism;[6] [7] the board is notable for its widespread racist, white supremacist, antisemitic, anti-Muslim, misogynist, and anti-LGBT content.[18] /pol/ has been described as one of the "[centers] of 4chan mobilization", a title previously considered to have belonged solely to /b/.[16]
Overview [edit]
Common /pol/ content involves discussion of current news. A 2020 report categorized about 36% of news sources frequently posted to the board by American users as "junk news", a category that includes sources considered to be propaganda, sensationalist, or conspiracy theory content. Outside of traditional news sources, users also commonly rely on alternative media such as YouTube commentary as a source of news.[19] [5]
Flags are displayed on each post. A national flag corresponding to the user's geographic location (based on their IP address, which could be manipulated using a proxy server) may be displayed. Alternatively, users may select a "meme flag" (also referred to as a "troll flag"), corresponding to various political identifiers.[1] [13] [20] However, these are not common per amount of posts—the "Nazi" meme flag was the most commonly used meme flag in a 2020 analysis, while posts with an American geographic location were about 57 times more common (and appeared the most of any flag).[1]
Each post also has a unique ID attached, which is likewise associated with the user's IP address.[21] However, these unique IDs will only tend to remain attached to a user per a single thread, as they are not persistent between multiple threads.[22] [23] Threads have a limited lifespan, effectively prioritizing newer content.[21]
Much of the content on /pol/ relies heavily on Internet memes to further spread ideas.[24] [12] Many have questioned the sincerity of users on /pol/ as possible trolls.[25] [26] According to Mic, "On a place like /pol/, there's no clear delineation between sincerity, irony and cynicism."[27] First Monday commented that "The creation of character-based archetypes is common on /pol/ and makes this online space semi-performative and semi-authentic."[13]
While 4chan's /pol/ board is the most popular board under the "/pol/" name, versions on other websites have existed. These include Kohlchan, 8chan (later 8kun), 16chan, Shitchan, and Endchan, with some less popular "/pol/" themed boards accessible through the Tor network on sites such as 9chan and Neinchan.[3] However, 4chan's /pol/ board has become increasingly "synonymous with 4chan as a whole", according to New Media & Society.[28]
History [edit]
Prior to the creation of /pol/, there were two boards intended for discussing news that had been added and removed from the site. The first of these was /n/, which was added on 8 April 2006. It replaced /n/'s previous topic of animals and nature, which was moved to the /an/ board. /n/'s topic was changed to transportation on 19 February 2008, without moving the news topic to another board, effectively removing it.[29]
Another news board, /new/, was later added on 25 January 2010. It was deleted a year later on 17 January 2011.[29] According to 4chan's creator and ex-administrator Christopher Poole, this was because it had "devolved into /stormfront/".[30] [31] [32] This was comparing /new/ to Stormfront, which is the oldest and largest Holocaust-denialist white supremacist site.[32] [33] The /new/ board was the direct predecessor to /pol/.[34]
/pol/ was created on October 23, 2011.[16] [35] [29] According to Christine Lagorio-Chafkin, /pol/ was created by "4chan's founder [...] to siphon off and contain the overtly xenophobic and racist comments and memes from other wings of 4chan."[36] This has led to /pol/ acquiring the nickname of a "containment board", because its purpose is to keep far-right and generally political content off of 4chan's other boards.[32] [8] [6]
Notable events [edit]
Screenshots of Trayvon Martin's hacked social media accounts were initially posted to /pol/ in 2015.[37] [38]
After the Umpqua Community College shooting, /pol/ began attempting to circulate on social media claims that comedian Sam Hyde was the perpetrator of a mass shooting event or terrorist attack. They repeated this after several other mass shootings, in attempts to troll mainstream news outlets into reporting Hyde as the attacker.[39] According to BBC News, CNN mistakenly included Hyde's image on their coverage of the Umpqua shooting.[40] After the 2017 Las Vegas shooting, a Google search for a different man's name returned a /pol/ thread in the "top stories" section falsely identifying him as the shooter. A spokesperson for Google said that the thread had appeared because search queries and news about the man were rare, allowing for the thread to appear in results, but that the thread did not appear in broader searches about the Las Vegas shooting.[41] [42]
On April 6, 2016, users on the board's /sg/ (short for Syria General) thread collaborated with a Russian Twitter account to locate an encampment of Syrian rebels.[43] [44] The account then claimed to have forwarded the location to the Russian Ministry of Defense.[43] The board's users also allegedly located an ISIS training camp near Mosul, Iraq. The users coordinated on Telegram as well as on 4chan.[45]
In summer 2016, /pol/ users coordinated "Operation Google", a campaign to associate the name "Google" with the ethnic slur "nigger".[10] [46] This was undertaken in response to Google's Jigsaw subsidiary developing Conversation AI, a tool made to recognize offensive language.[46] [47]
One of the most popular memes found on the board during the period surrounding the 2016 US presidential election was Pepe the Frog, which has been deemed a hate symbol in some contexts by the Anti-Defamation League due to its use in uniforms, places, and people associated with Nazism, the Ku Klux Klan, and antisemitism.[48] [49] [50] Many /pol/ users favored Donald Trump during his 2016 United States presidential campaign.[8] Some right-wing memes about the presidential campaign originated on the board.[51] Upon his election, a /pol/ moderator embedded a pro-Trump video at the top of all of the board's pages.[52] [53] [54] [55]
Users of /pol/ engaged in coordinated attacks on LaBeouf, Rönkkö & Turner's HEWILLNOTDIVIDE.US, a 2017 performance art project made to protest Donald Trump's presidency.[32] [56] Some users on the board suggested committing acts of violence against participants in the art project.[32] Users also organized the It's OK to be white poster campaign the same year.[57] [58]
In 2017, users of /pol/ coordinated a campaign to convince mainstream news organizations that the OK gesture was a white power symbol; the OK gesture was later used unironically by white supremacists.[59]
In October 2017, a tripcode user referred to as "Q" began posting on 4chan's /pol/ board in what would become the QAnon conspiracy theory and political movement. Q soon moved to 8chan.[60]
In 2019, 4chan and 8chan were temporarily blocked by internet service providers in Australia and New Zealand for containing videos of the Christchurch mosque shootings.[61] [62] Before the shootings, the shooter posted on 8chan's /pol/ board.[3] [63] [64] The suspected perpetrators of the Poway synagogue shooting and the El Paso shooting also allegedly posted their manifestos there.[63] [64] In late 2019, a poster campaign coordinated on the board received some local and regional news coverage. The posters stated, "Islam was RIGHT about women".[65]
In late February and early March 2021, users on /pol/ boosted a social media trend called "super straight", which they said was a new sexuality describing heterosexuals who would never have a sexual relationship with transgender people.[66] [67] The trend began with a later-deleted TikTok video by a user who said he had created the term because he was tired of being called transphobic.[68] [67] The Daily Dot stated that "trolls, bigots, and trans-exclusionary radical feminists" were "reframing their harassment of transgender people" through this trend.[69] The trend spread to other platforms as well, including Twitter, and 4chan users were eager to "red pill" those in the Generation Z age group, create division among LGBTQ communities, and use the language of LGBTQ rights to troll leftists. Some 4chan members used Nazi symbols in their symbolism, including the logo of Adolf Hitler's Schutzstaffel, which also used SS as an acronym. Colors associated with "super straight", often used in the form of flags, were black and orange.[17] [69] [67]
In a manifesto allegedly written by the accused perpetrator of the 2022 Buffalo shooting, the author said he was introduced to his far-right ideology (including a belief in the Great Replacement conspiracy theory) through browsing /pol/, beginning in May 2020.[70] [14]
The day after the 2022 Robb Elementary School shooting, Representative Paul Gosar (R-AZ) falsely claimed that its perpetrator was a "transsexual leftist illegal alien" in a tweet, which was taken down two hours after it was posted.[71] The claim was based on a rumor started by an anonymous poster on /pol/, who posted the reddit account of a transgender woman and claimed that she was the shooter; photos of the woman were widely shared on social media, including in conservative Facebook groups, where she was also erroneously identified as the shooter and harassed.[72] [73]
Reception [edit]
/pol/ has been characterized as predominantly racist and sexist, with many of its posts taking explicitly alt-right and neo-Nazi points of view. In particular, the board is infamous for the prevalence of antisemitic threads and memes.[74] [9] [75] [76] [77] [8] One common antisemitic meme on /pol/ is the Happy Merchant.[7] [12] [78] Southern Poverty Law Center regards /pol/'s rhetorical style as widely emulated by white supremacist websites such as The Daily Stormer; the Stormer 's editor, Andrew Anglin, concurred.[9]
As a potential honeypot [edit]
Many have speculated whether the website is kept online as a honeypot for far-right groups, or to monitor extremists.[79] [80] In 2015, an Australian Department of Defence graduate used /pol/ to share classified information, only to be caught by another former Department of Defence worker browsing the site.[81] Within /pol/, suspected agents of various intelligence communities are called "Glowniggers",[82] a reference to the computer programmer Terry A. Davis who said "The CIA Niggers glow in the dark, you can see them if you're driving, you just run them over, that's what you do."[79] [83] Because of this, suspicious posts are deemed to be "glowing" and "glowposting" is a common phrase on the forum.[79]
Alleged moderator racism [edit]
In 2020, several past and current moderators spoke to Vice Media's Motherboard about what they perceived as racist intent behind /pol/ and 4chan as a whole. They described how the manager of 4chan's volunteer "janitors", a moderator known as RapeApe, wishes to generate right-wing discussion on /pol/ and has dissuaded janitors from banning users for racism. Additionally, they noted how janitors were often fired whenever they held left-wing opinions. Hiroyuki Nishimura was described as letting RapeApe have full control of the site. Neither Nishimura nor RapeApe responded to Vice Media's requests for comment, but RapeApe did, however, provide a video of two naked men dancing.[84]
Analysis [edit]
Influence [edit]
A 2017 quantitative analysis found that /pol/ was an important influencer of news content on Twitter, with the board contributing 3% of mainstream news links and 1.96% of alternative news links on Twitter (as a fraction of all links co-appearing on Twitter, Reddit, and 4chan). The researchers concluded that "'fringe' communities often succeed in spreading alternative news to mainstream social networks".[85]
Content and userbase [edit]
According to a 2017 longitudinal study, using a dataset of over 8million posts, /pol/ is a diverse ecosystem with users well-distributed around the world. The percentage of posts containing hate speech ranges from 4.15% (e.g., in Indonesia, Arab countries) to 30% (e.g., China, Bahamas, Cyprus). Elevated use of hate speech is seen in Western European countries (e.g., Italy, Spain, Greece, and France).[8] They also examined raids performed by /pol/ users against other platforms, particularly YouTube videos. They found that when a link to a YouTube video was posted on a /pol/ thread, an increase in hateful comments appeared on the video's comments section for the duration of that thread's existence.[86] [87] Another study found that adjusted for Internet-using population per country, users were most commonly from Canada, Australia, the United States, Ireland and Croatia. Users from other countries in Europe were also found to be common.[1]
Following the announcement of a COVID-19 lockdown occurring in Wuhan, China, in January 2020, an international team of researchers noted an increase of anti-Chinese sentiment and anti-Asian slurs on /pol/ in reaction to the events surrounding the virus outbreak, in an analysis that also examined similar activity on Twitter.[88] [11] This included calls for violence against Chinese people.[11] According to a 2020 report by the British charity Community Security Trust, many threads contain "explicit calls for Jews to be killed".[89]
A study with data collected from April 2020 to June 2020 and published in Perspectives on Terrorism in February 2021 analyzed the popularity and content present on different /pol/ boards. To analyze board content, they examined which word sets were most common per board. They found that schisms were characteristic of this subculture, with splinter communities being less popular and more extreme on average. For example, discussion on 8kun's /pol/ board contained more racial content than did 4chan's much more popular /pol/ board, which hosted racist content as well. Neinchan, hosted on the Tor network, was indicated as having among the most extreme /pol/ boards, albeit with low traffic. The researchers indicated that academic work examining this subculture of far-right imageboards was lacking.[3]
In a study published in January 2021, researchers found that there were escalating amounts of antisemitic rhetoric used on /pol/ after mass shooting events, particularly the Christchurch mosque shootings and the Pittsburgh synagogue shooting.[13] Another study found that activity on the board more generally tended to increase rapidly following mass shootings committed by right-wing extremists.[64]
A July 2021 analysis of climate change discussion on /pol/ found that there were large contingents of users who discussed the topic using antisemitic, racist and conspiracy theorist themes. It also found a growing trend of "climate nationalism" (i.e. the integration of nationalist and racist beliefs with narratives about the occurrence of climate change) among the board's users who participated in these conversations. These discussions still featured prominent amounts of debate concerning the scientific aspects of climate change, such as academic publishing and the validity (or lack thereof) of the scientific consensus on climate change. However, a trend was observed where, over time, this was a slowly declining feature of such discussions.[6]
Research design [edit]
A study published in New Media & Society on January 2022 discussed the interactions between /pol/ users and the researchers who study their community. The study observed the reactions of /pol/ users to a research workshop dedicated to studying them. The researchers suggested that studies that aim to learn about the /pol/ community and its users should take into account (for research design purposes) that they may be aware of observation by external entities, "rather than seeing it as a community that can be externally observed without consequence." They also suggested that, "[A]cademics may be influenced by knowing that 4chan is watching. /pol/, and associated communities, have long been associated with attacks on those trying to study or criticise them..."[7]
See also [edit]
- /b/
- Gamergate controversy
- Moon Man
- Pizzagate conspiracy theory
- Political correctness
- r/The_Donald
References [edit]
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- ^ a b c d Merrin, William (2019). "President Troll: Trump, 4Chan and Memetic Warfare". In Happer, Catherine; Hoskins, Andrew; Merrin, William (eds.). Trump's Media War. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 201–226. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-94069-4_13. ISBN978-3-319-94069-4. S2CID 158349744.
- ^ a b c d e Baele, Stephane J.; Brace, Lewys; Coan, Travis G. (2021). "Variations on a Theme? Comparing 4chan, 8kun, and Other chans' Far-Right '/pol' Boards". Perspectives on Terrorism. 15 (1): 65–80. ISSN 2334-3745. JSTOR26984798.
- ^ a b c Elley, Ben (March 2021). ""The rebirth of the West begins with you!"—Self-improvement as radicalisation on 4chan". Humanities and Social Sciences Communications. Springer Nature. 8 (1): 67. doi:10.1057/s41599-021-00732-x. ISSN 2662-9992.
- ^ a b Hagen, Sal; Jokubauskaitė, Emilija (18 January 2021). Dutch junk news on Reddit and 4chan/pol. The Politics of Social Media Manipulation. Amsterdam University Press. pp. 174, 180, 188, 202–203, 207. doi:10.1515/9789048551675-007. ISBN978-90-485-5167-5.
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- ^ a b c d e f g h Colley, Thomas; Moore, Martin (1 January 2022). "The challenges of studying 4chan and the Alt-Right: 'Come on in the water's fine'". New Media & Society. 24 (1): 5–30. doi:10.1177/1461444820948803. ISSN 1461-4448.
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He credited 4chan, where extremist views are expressed with few restrictions, with influencing him. In particular, he spent time on the platform's "politically incorrect" page that is known among analysts as a hub for spreading far-right ideology, including white supremacy.
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- ^ a b Milton, Josh (8 March 2021). "Super straight: Transphobic trend has links to the far-right". PinkNews. Archived from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 10 March 2021.
- ^ The board has been noted for widespread[6] content that is:
- Racist[8] [9] [10] [11] [6] [7] [12]
- White supremacist[2] [9] [4] [13] [14] [7] [12] [15]
- Antisemitic[3] [13] [4] [6] [7] [12]
- Anti-Muslim[12]
- Misogynist[2] [9] [16] [7] [12]
- Anti-LGBT[7] [17] [2]
- ^ Burton, Anthony G.; Koehorst, Dimitri (25 September 2020). "Research note: The spread of political misinformation on online subcultural platforms". Harvard Kennedy School Misinformation Review. doi:10.37016/mr-2020-40.
- ^ Ludemann, Dillon (2 August 2021). "Digital semaphore: Political discourse and identity negotiation through 4chan's /pol/". New Media & Society: 146144482110348. doi:10.1177/14614448211034848. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 238796625.
- ^ a b Wall, Travis; Mitew, Teodor (30 April 2018). "Swarm networks and the design process of a distributed meme warfare campaign". First Monday. 23 (5). doi:10.5210/fm.v22i5.8290. ISSN 1396-0466.
- ^ Fathallah, Judith May (19 May 2021). "'Getting by' on 4chan: Feminine self-presentation and capital-claiming in antifeminist Web space". First Monday. 26 (6). doi:10.5210/fm.v26i7.10449. ISSN 1396-0466.
...'/pol/' ... is slightly less anonymous than most of 4chan as a) identities are more likely to be stable throughout threads (but not between threads)...
- ^ Ludemann, Dillon (1 August 2018). "/pol/emics: Ambiguity, scales, and digital discourse on 4chan". Discourse, Context & Media. Elsevier. 24: 92–98. doi:10.1016/j.dcm.2018.01.010. ISSN 2211-6958. S2CID 148708994.
- ^ Hathaway, Jay (7 June 2017). "What the Harvard teens don't get about memes". The Daily Dot. Archived from the original on 15 August 2017. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ Tait, Amelia (16 February 2017). "First they came for Pepe: How "ironic" Nazism is taking over the internet". New Statesman . Retrieved 16 August 2019.
- ^ Wilson, Jason (23 May 2017). "Hiding in plain sight: how the 'alt-right' is weaponizing irony to spread fascism". The Guardian . Retrieved 12 April 2018.
- ^ McKay, Tom (13 July 2016). "Inside 8chan's /pol/, the Far-Right Forum Where Trump's Star of David Meme First Spread". Mic . Retrieved 20 May 2022.
/pol/ is a 4chan board too... On a place like /pol/, there's no clear delineation between sincerity, irony and cynicism.
- ^ Hagen, Sal (2022). "'Who is /ourguy/?': Tracing panoramic memes to study the collectivity of 4chan/pol/". New Media & Society: 146144482210782. doi:10.1177/14614448221078274. ISSN 1461-4448. S2CID 246726080.
- ^ a b c "4chan/History". Bibliotheca Anonoma . Retrieved 28 January 2021.
- ^ Beran, Dale (30 July 2019). It Came from Something Awful: How a Toxic Troll Army Accidentally Memed Donald Trump into Office. St. Martin's Publishing Group. ISBN 9781250219473
- ^ Poole, Christopher "moot" (19 January 2011). "Why were /r9k/ and /new/ removed?". 4chan. Archived from the original on 25 March 2021. Retrieved 16 August 2019 – via WebCite.
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- ^ "Stormfront". Hate on Display Hate Symbols Database . Retrieved 18 July 2020.
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- ^ Poole, Christopher "moot" (23 October 2011). "Welcome back, robots". 4chan /r9k/.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) [ dead link ] - ^ Lagorio-Chafkin, Christine (2018). "r/The_Donald". We Are the Nerds: The Birth and Tumultuous Life of Reddit, the Internet's Culture Laboratory. Hachette Books. p. 323. ISBN978-0-316-43536-9.
- ^ Bankoff, Caroline (29 March 2012). "White Supremacist Claims to Have Hacked Trayvon Martin's Email, Social Media Accounts". The New Yorker . Retrieved 17 July 2015.
- ^ Mackey, Robert (29 March 2012). "Bloggers Cherry-Pick From Social Media to Cast Trayvon Martin as a Menace". The New York Times . Retrieved 17 July 2015.
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- ^ Bell, Chris (2 October 2017). "Las Vegas: The fake photos shared after tragedies". BBC News. Retrieved 16 August 2019.
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- ^ Griffin, Andrew (3 October 2016). "Far-right Twitter and Facebook users make secret code to avoid censorship". The Independent . Retrieved 20 May 2022.
- ^ "Pepe the Frog". Anti-Defamation League. Archived from the original on 14 March 2017. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
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{{cite journal}}
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Around May 2020, during a period of pandemic boredom, Mr. Gendron said that he had begun to frequent 4chan, an anonymous forum, including its Politically Incorrect message board. There, he said, he was exposed to the conspiracy theory that white people are at risk of being replaced.
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Further reading [edit]
- Jokubauskaitė, Emilija; Peeters, Stijn (26 May 2020). "Generally Curious: Thematically Distinct Datasets of General Threads on 4chan/pol/". Proceedings of the International AAAI Conference on Web and Social Media. Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence. 14: 863–867. ISSN 2334-0770.
- Crawford, Blyth; Keen, Florence; de-Tangil, Guillermo Suarez (15 December 2020). "Memetic Irony and the Promotion of Violence within Chan Cultures" (PDF). Centre for Research and Evidence on Security Threats: 1–50. Archived from the original on 15 December 2020.
- Hagen, Sal (2020). Digital Media Research Centre, Queensland University of Technology. ""Trump Shit Goes into Overdrive": Tracing Trump on 4chan/pol/". M/C Journal. 23 (3). doi:10.5204/mcj.1657.
- Jin, J.; Williams, E.; Lams, S.; Savas, O.; Hohman, E.; Bosch-Ruiz, M.; Rodrigues, P. (5 November 2020). "Analysis of evolution of meme trends on 4chan.org's /pol/ board via image clustering" (PDF). Center for Informed Democracy & Social - Cybersecurity (IDeaS). Carnegie Mellon University.
- Whyte, Christopher (11 March 2020). "Of commissars, cults and conspiratorial communities: The role of countercultural spaces in "democracy hacking" campaigns". First Monday. 25 (4). doi:10.5210/fm.v25i4.10241. ISSN 1396-0466.
- Tuters, Marc; Jokubauskaitė, Emilija; Bach, Daniel (15 August 2018). Digital Media Research Centre, Queensland University of Technology. "Post-Truth Protest: How 4chan Cooked Up the Pizzagate Bullshit". M/C Journal. 21 (3). doi:10.5204/mcj.1422. ISSN 1441-2616.
- Milanović, Boris (9 July 2021). ""To Conclude, Women Are a Mistake"—A Study of Serbian User Discourse on 4Chan's /Pol/ Board on Women within Political Ideology". Nationalism and Ethnic Politics. Routledge. 27 (2): 193–212. doi:10.1080/13537113.2021.1914436. ISSN 1353-7113. S2CID 235792599.
- Tuters, Marc; Hagen, Sal (1 December 2020). "(((They))) rule: Memetic antagonism and nebulous othering on 4chan". New Media & Society. 22 (12): 2218–2237. doi:10.1177/1461444819888746. ISSN 1461-4448.
- Martineau, Paris (21 November 2017). "4channers Are Eating Onions to Be More Manly". The Daily Intelligencer. New York.
- Bessant, Judith; Devries, Melody; Watts, Rob (29 July 2021). Rise of the Far Right: Technologies of Recruitment and Mobilization. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN978-1-78661-493-3.
- Ricknell, Emma (1 July 2019). ""Is Sweden Finally Waking Up?": Debating the 2018 Swedish National Election on 4chan". Statsvetenskaplig Tidskrift. 121 (3): 441–463 – via Lund University Libraries.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki//pol/
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