Wednesday, April 1, 2026
Home / Technology / The New Era of Militia Influencers
Technology

The New Era of Militia Influencers

CN
CitrixNews Staff
·
The New Era of Militia Influencers
CommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyCommentLoaderSave StorySave this story

Just over a week into the US and Israel’s war with Iran, Eric Roscher, an Air Force veteran, published a YouTube video on what he describes as the “very real concerns surrounding sleeper cells and terrorist threats” in the US.

The video, titled “Credible DOMESTIC Threat? FBI warns of attack—Drills/Considerations for the Prepared Citizen,” was produced by Roscher’s Florida-based company Barrel and Hatchet, which runs military-style training, sells branded merchandise and tactical gear, and produces online content. In the video, Roscher and his associates advise viewers to carry “extra mags” and “that truck gun,” while keeping “your head on a swivel.” Toward the end of the post, Roscher shows off a tactical vest that’s on sale from one of the video’s sponsors.

The video, which is part of YouTube’s monetization program and has a total of eight ads, has been viewed over 110,000 times. (YouTube did not respond to a request for comment.)

Barrel and Hatchet is not a militia, but the company and Roscher are part of a broader rebranding of the entire militia movement in the US, one that is focused less on showing up at drag queen story hours and more on expensive weapons, manly sweatshirts, and highly curated Instagram grids.

Influencers like Roscher produce slickly edited content that is then shared widely among militia groups on platforms like Instagram, in an effort to promote not only their ideology but also, crucially, links to their online stores and training sessions. In turn, those same militias emulate Roscher by posting their own videos and images of weekend training sessions in the woods, close-ups of their camo gear and rifles, and slo-mo footage of live firing drills. The give-and-take between these groups, and the influencers and military members they seek to emulate, marks a new era of American militias, where gaining followers and earning clout on social media is as important as being able to hit a target from 300 yards.

Roscher and these modern militia groups, with names like River Valley Minutemen and Mountain State Contingency Group, have positioned themselves as emergency response organizations working to help their communities and prepare citizens to “weather the storm”—whatever, or wherever, that may be. They use real-world events like the Iran war and ICE attacks on immigrant communities to spread fear, leveraging that fear to recruit new members.

These influencers are filling a gap in the US militia landscape, which has changed dramatically in recent years. With the Oath Keepers and Proud Boys largely disbanded in the wake of prosecutions over the January 6 attack on the Capitol, these influencers and groups have filled the vacuum, resulting in a decentralized network of local groups and people who support or emulate the previous movement—albeit in smaller, local ways.

“What used to be a national movement, with groups like Oath Keepers and Three Percenters, has really gone back to their local and regional roots,” says Travis McAdam, a senior analyst with the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) who tracks militias and anti-government groups. “A lot of them have really tried to reframe themselves as auxiliary emergency preparedness groups and have done quite a bit to reform their reputation post-January 6, portraying themselves as ‘oh, we're just here to help the community.’”

This is a new era of militia recruitment and influence—and it’s all happening in social feeds near you.

The Militia Business

Dirty Civilian is a Tennessee-based group of influencers that describes itself as “prepared citizens inspiring and informing capable men to build strong families and resilient communities” in order “to weather the storms ahead.” The group doesn’t specify what those storms are, but in one YouTube video published on Sunday, Dirty Civilian outlined a scenario where a group of vigilantes take it upon themselves to assassinate someone they believe is a pedophile. The Dirty Civilian channel has almost 750,000 subscribers, and the video, which is monetized, racked up over 100,000 views on YouTube in its first 24 hours. Multiple militia groups reposted the video on Instagram.

“It's almost like a tutorial or something,” one commenter wrote under the video. “Food for thought at least.” Another commenter, using the acronym for minor-attracted person, a term some online communities use to refer to pedophiles, wrote: “A show that could inspire the targeting of MAPs? FANTASTIC.”

Dirty Civilian also has a Patreon with over 420 members paying $5 a month and an online shop where it sells branded merch and survival gear. The group did not respond to a request for comment.

These ubiquitous online stores, while not new, are a key part of the militia influencer business ecosystem. “The founders and cofounders of these groups end up having a side hustle where they're getting this stuff, and they're selling it as a way to make money,” says McAdam. “In some other cases, an actual legitimate small business is set up. In some cases, there’s a grift to it.”

What makes these militia-inspired influencers unique, however, is a burgeoning aesthetic that’s military meets Instagram. “I've seen them get into monotonous debates over the right type of camo to use. Painting their guns to match their outfit. It's extremely aesthetic, which also would make sense for a recruitment strategy based on the internet. It needs to be grippy,” Calum Farley, a research analyst at the SPLC’s Intelligence Project, tells WIRED.

A key part of the appeal of groups like Barrel and Hatchet and Dirty Civilian is that they appear to be run by military veterans. “All these guys worship American special forces,” Barrett Gay, a researcher with the Institute for Strategic Dialogue, tells WIRED. “So much of the expensive gear they're using is just because they saw a picture of a guy using it in Afghanistan or Iraq. So they think they have to use it.”

The highly curated aesthetic of many of these groups reminds Gay of the Boogaloo Bois, a far-right militia movement that gained prominence in 2020. “It's very similar aesthetically,” Gay says. “It's that same hyper-specific interest in gear and the weapon systems.”

Both the influencers and the militias they inspire claim to be focused on preparedness and civic duty. But in reality, they haven’t really changed. “There hasn't been any change in the way they train and how they're preparing,” says McAdam. “You can tell a lot by what type of training a group is doing. And these guys aren't trying to figure out how to fill sandbags and stack them faster to prevent flooding. They're not out there working with chainsaws so that they're really efficient at cutting and moving debris. They're still doing the same paramilitary training that they've always done.”

The Texas State Militia similarly claims to be serving its “community and teaching Texans the importance of self-reliance.” The group has also stated: “Our team stands ready to assist law enforcement and other entities when necessary.” It recently posted an AI-generated video on Facebook seeking a drone operator to join its team. The video lists what is included in basic training for those applying, with the top item “weapons/tactics.”

Militias and influencers have also been leveraging the anger about immigrants in the US to their advantage.

In January, a member of the American Patriots militia group on Facebook whose profile picture states “I love ICE raids,” shared a comment which read: “Personally I think we should put together militia’s [sic] to protect ICE.” The post was shared with WIRED by the Tech Transparency Project, a nonprofit that works to hold online platforms to account.

While some militia groups have been urging their supporters to sign up for ICE, the deployment of ICE agents has in some cases led to new recruits joining.

Aaron Alexander, who runs the Florida Militia Coalition, tells WIRED that some of those joining his group had been radicalized by the ICE raids. “Whether it’s from the perspective of the US government finally enforcing and going after immigration law breakers, but also the show of force of what the government can do, it’s a stark reminder of the government's strength.” Alexander shared one text exchange with a new recruit who appears to be referencing the ICE raids as his reason for wanting to join up. Alexander responded with a screenshot of Alex Garland’s film Civil War.

The new groups have also been working to put their organizations on legal footing. The Texas State Militia, for example, has set up a nonprofit arm called Viking Tactical which provides “miliitia-style firearm training.” Last week, the River Valley Minutemen, a militia based in the Ohio River Valley, announced on its Instagram page that it had “officially filed for our 501c(4) non-profit status.” This means that the group can engage in political lobbying work and does not have to disclose who is funding it.

“Blazing a new trail for the rest of us to follow, awesome stuff,” a supporter wrote in response.

Recruitment and advertising for these groups still goes through traditional social media outlets. While social media platforms like Facebook purged militia groups from their networks in 2020, pushing them to fringe platforms like Telegram and limiting their ability to organize and recruit new members, that’s all changed. In recent years, as social media companies have withdrawn from policing their platforms, militias have returned to the feeds; WIRED reported last year that a number of groups were openly recruiting on Facebook.

In recent months, militias have continued using Facebook to recruit new members, in many cases referring to the groups as a “community” or “tribe.” In one case, identified by the Tech Transparency Project and reviewed by WIRED, the Texas State Militia paid Facebook to run an ad on its platform on December 31, 2025, promoting the group.

Meta did not respond to a request for comment. When WIRED flagged more than 100 militia groups organizing on Facebook in 2024, Meta said it was “removing the groups and accounts that violate our policies,” adding: “This is an adversarial space, where actors constantly try to find new ways around our policies, which is why we keep investing heavily in people, technology, research, and partnerships to keep our platforms safe.”

The militias of five years ago might be gone for now. But those interested in emulating them are just one click away.

This is an edition of the Inner Loop newsletter. Read previous newsletters here.

Originally reported by Wired