I’ve noticed a bit of a trend on Instagram. While perusing my feed, I’ll see someone repost something health- or fitness-related that strikes me as a little … off. Maybe it’s about the purported virtues of drinking raw milk — which, seriously, you should not do — or organic skin care, but it’s rarely overtly right-wing. Yet when I visit the original page that posted it, in many cases, it usually only takes me a few scrolls to realize it belongs to some MAGA kook who espouses conspiracy theories and pushes far-right propaganda under the guise of health consciousness.
And a new report shows how these ostensibly health-conscious accounts are helping steer users toward accounts that promote right-wing extremism, illustrating how such content can “serve as an entry point from wellness to narratives associated with the far-right.”
While perusing my feed, I’ll see someone repost something health- or fitness-related that strikes me as a little … off.
The Institute for Strategic Dialogue’s report — headlined “How women seeking information about health and wellness are recommended sites that promote election denialism” — uses Turning Point USA spokesperson Alex Clark as an example. She hosts a wellness podcast called “Culture Apothecary,” on her rebranded POPlitics account, that’s essentially used to welcome women into the MAGA fold.
Clark is known for spreading right-wing health misinformation and has been part of the right-wing push to promote raw milk, which garnered justifiable backlash — and mockery, too. The ISD’s report explains how using search terms like “workouts for women” or “#fitspo” — or engaging with “Culture Apothecary,” which might not seem political at first glance — can lead to Instagram suggestions to follow other right-wing political accounts, such as TPUSA co-founder Charlie Kirk’s and the Tucker Carlson Network.
The report also shows how the “Culture Apothecary” account, which has a little under 200,000 followers, is able to gain millions of views with its wellness-focused content. The report makes clear how Instagram’s algorithms can serve as a dangerous mechanism for pushing unsuspecting users toward extreme and conspiratorial content:








