Reduxx Media
This content was last updated May 6, 2024, 4:36 p.m. UTC
Reduxx Media is a self-described independent news and commentary website. The tagline at the top of their website suggests they publish “feminist news and opinion” articles and a slogan repeated throughout their website and social media accounts promises that they are “pro-woman, pro-child safeguarding, anti-bullsh*t.”
It is so overwhelmingly obvious that the cries of trans-genocide/transphobia are just part of the fantasy of vulnerability these people have constructed.
Primarily the porn-addled adult men who want to believe that anyone could mistake them for being petite coquettes.
Founding
Reduxx Media was founded in January of 2022 by co-founders Anna Slatz, Genevieve Gluck, and Jennifer Sieland. Their "about" page claims that they were founded to “[create] a truly pro-woman, pro-child safeguarding platform that could provide high-quality news and opinion on the stories the mainstream media ignores.”
No articles of incorporation for Reduxx Media could be located in Canada or the United States.
Finances
Reduxx Media is not required to disclose their income as a business, if they file taxes at all. However, their website has a “support us” page on which they provide links to their Paypal and Stripe accounts, a Patreon, a merch store and multiple cryptocurrency wallets.
Their Patreon account offers tiers ranging from $5 to $25, each tier offering rewards in the form of physical merchandise like keychains and tote bags. Their merch store’s landing page is an apology for being “sold out of just about everything,” describing the store as a limited-run pop-up and promising an upcoming merchandise collaboration to support “a prominent women’s rights group.”
Reduxx Media’s “about” page states that they are “100% independent,” and that they “[do not] receive any funding from special interest groups, governments, or big media corporations.”
History of Anti-LGBTQ+ Activism
Despite purporting to publish articles about “the stories the mainstream media ignores” without “bullsh*t,” Reduxx Media primarily published articles about LGBTQ+ news, in particular trans people, with a transphobic slant. For example, in an article published on February 21st, 2024, writer Nuria Muíña García refers to two transgender women exclusively as “trans-identified males,” a common slur used by anti-trans individuals. In an editorial note at the top of the article, Reduxx clarifies that the article has been “amended” after “incorrectly” referring to one of the transgender women as a woman.
Many of the non-opinion articles published by Reduxx Media lack credible sources for the information they provide. An article published on February 20th, 2024, is simply a republishing of a Facebook post. Neither the Facebook post, nor Reduxx Media’s article about the post, contain any verifiable, factual information.
Reduxx Media has collaborated with The Publica, another self-described independent news outlet that focuses primarily on the publishing of anti-queer and anti-transgender articles. Co-founders Anna Slatz and Natasha Biase have both written for The Publica.
In November of 2023, six days after that year’s Trans Day of Remembrance, a day meant to remember transgender people who lost their lives as a result of transphobia during the year, Reduxx Media posted a video to X claiming that no transgender people died as a result of transphobia in 2023. This is verifiably false, both using a website created to track these deaths, as well as any number of reports by news outlets. Furthermore, Reduxx Media purported that there are “more [transgender women] in prison for raping children in Canada” than have lost their lives since 2008. They provided no data to support this claim.
In April of 2023, co-founder Anna Slatz was announced by The Publica to be co-hosting a “cultural commentary” podcast alongside alt-right YouTuber Lauren Southern. The podcast does not appear to have materialized.
In January of 2018, co-founder Anna Slatz, serving as the editor-in-chief of University of New Brunswick Saint John’s student paper The Baron under the pen name Anna de Luca, published a “largely uncritical interview with a Nazi sympathizer.” The Baron also published a separate opinion piece by the same Nazi sympathizer. As a result, she was fired from her position as editor-in-chief, and The Baron’s board of directors published an apology for the incident.