As of 2024, Seibt has been described as
far-right and sometimes as
extreme-right. She is affiliated with, and openly endorses, the far-right party
AfD. In 2020, the
Neue Zürcher Zeitung described Seibt as a "right-wing Youtuber" who "attacks climate science in her videos".
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". Seibt self-identifies as
libertarian. This image was further propagated in 2019 by the
Heartland Institute, who compared her to Thunberg in promotional anti-climate change campaigns. In a 2020 interview with
The Washington Post, Graham Brookie, the director of the
Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research Lab, commented on Seibt's approach to Thunberg's message on climate, in which she counters Thunberg's "I want you to panic" by saying in a video posted on Heartland's website that "I don't want you to panic. I want you to think". 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. The tactic is intended to create an equivalency in spokespeople and message. In this case, it is a false equivalency between a message based in climate science that went viral organically and a message based in climate skepticism trying to catch up using paid promotion." in 2024 by
Elon Musk reposting her videos on X, the social media platform formerly known as
Twitter. Musk re-tweeted a Seibt video calling on
CDU leader
Friedrich Merz to ally with the
AfD instead of a German centre-left party like the
Greens, with Musk saying "Only the AfD can save Germany." 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. including several false claims linked to far-right and white nationalist online groups across multiple platforms, such as COVID-19 and climate-related content. A number of academic and journalistic publications have emphasised the links in her ideological beliefs between climate change denialism,
white nationalism, and culture wars (including Islamophobia). In 2020, she was also found to be promoting disinformation, and acknowledging far-right conspiracy theories propagated by groups related to
QAnon. == Notes ==