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‘Will I lose my job?’ Federal workers flock to Reddit for answers.

The Veterans Affairs subreddit on the computer of David Carson, a moderator of the group on Reddit, in Mount Pleasant, Tenn. The online forum's pseudonymity lets federal workers vent, share information, and find solace. Unpaid moderators, like Carson, are working overtime to keep up.WILLIAM DESHAZER/NYT

On March 4, a Trump appointee at the Department of Veterans Affairs circulated a memo to senior leadership. The agency, it said, would “move out aggressively” to improve efficiency, with an “initial objective” of cutting the workforce to 2019 levels.

The next morning, someone posted a copy of this “reduction in force” memo to a Reddit group called VeteransAffairs, an online community of 19,000 members. The copy was difficult to follow, a sequence of photos taken of the memo on a screen, but the message was clear enough: Some 80,000 jobs would be cut.

Questions and comments poured in, some bewildered, some frantic. The agency had half a million employees at hospitals, clinics, call lines and regional benefit offices that served veterans across the country. Who would be fired? Was this the end of the VA’s medical research? How would this affect wait times for medical appointments?

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No one had solid answers, just informed speculation. Livelihoods and veterans' well-being were at stake, so the vibe was somber. But there was still room for dark humor.

“We gotta pay for Greenland somehow,” one person joked.

Reddit, a bare-bones social media site organized around more than 100,000 niche communities called subreddits, has long catered to people with quirky shared interests, whether bitcoin, fly-fishing or photos of Keanu Reeves being awesome.

It is unlike other social media platforms. Instagram and TikTok offer videos and influencers; Reddit is text-heavy and aggressively unsuited to building star power. Facebook and LinkedIn require real names; anonymity reigns on Reddit, minimizing egos and consequences.

The Atlantic recently deemed Reddit possibly “the best platform on a junky web.” As other social media sites have fallen prey to artificial intelligence slop and incessant pleas to “like and subscribe,” Reddit has become one of the last places on the internet with authentically human information, community and advice.

For government workers, it has been a lifeline in recent months. With the Trump administration’s rapid downsizing of the federal bureaucracy, subreddits where government workers previously posted the occasional tale about a Zoom meeting mishap or health plan question have become crowded forums for fears, anxieties and tidbits of intra-agency observation. On one subreddit, FedNews, government employees have been relaying updates about layoffs, a new $1 limit on government credit cards and “what did you accomplish last week” emails. It has drawn an influx of millions of visitors since January, according to internal statistics shared by the subreddit’s creator.

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“These individual subreddits let people find niches that work really well for them,” said Sarah Gilbert, a researcher at Cornell University who focuses on online communities. “That’s happening on FedNews, where people are using that space to come together and talk to other people who are experiencing similar trauma.”

A participant on FedNews recently wrote a post saying a supervisor had told employees to stop “leaking” information on Reddit. “DON’T STOP, the people deserve to know,” added the author, who, like almost all Reddit users, employed a pseudonymous online handle.

(The Department of Veterans Affairs did not respond to a request for comment.)

Not using your real name makes it easier to share information or vent frustrations without further imperiling one’s career prospects. But anonymity can also breed misinformation, misbehavior and vitriol.

That’s where people like David Carson come in. Carson, 53, an Army veteran and former employee of the VA who lives in Mount Pleasant, Tennessee, is one of Reddit’s more than 60,000 moderators. These volunteers do a tremendous amount of content moderation work that other social media giants contract out. The work of unpaid moderators like Carson has made it possible for Reddit to shine in this moment of political tumult.

“Reddit is a community run by people like me focused on people like me," Carson said.

The front page of the internet

Reddit is 20 years old, which makes it ancient in internet years. It started out as a place to share interesting information and has remained essentially that ever since. Anyone can create a subreddit, becoming its first moderator. Anyone can visit or join it, unless it’s made private.

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“Each community on Reddit has its own topic, its own rules, its own moderators and, in many cases, its own in-jokes and culture,” said Galen Weld, a doctoral student at the University of Washington who has conducted research on Reddit, as well as done consulting work for the company.

What people want to share can sometimes be distasteful. Reddit earned notoriety in the past for communities devoted to revenge porn, videos of people’s deaths and other toxic content. But the site has tamed its worst impulses (and most devious moderators) by disbanding subreddits that consistently violate rules the company established in 2015 against harassment and inappropriate behavior.

Reddit, which went public last year, is now one of the most visited sites on the internet, with more than 100 million daily active users and $1.3 billion in revenue, according to the company’s most recent financial filing. It may seem chaotic to a first-time visitor, sent there by a search engine. Its homepage is a random collection of news articles, funny photos and unfamiliar shorthand like AIO (“Am I Overreacting?”). But the individual subreddits can feel intimate and welcoming.

Each of these subreddits, whether about home repair, romantasy or Dungeons and Dragons maps, is unique, and each has distinct rules, decided by its moderators. Want to chat with people who have decided life is better without kids? Join ChildFree. Parents are welcome, but only if they regret their choices. Enjoy schadenfreude? Try LeopardsAteMyFace. That community has been sharing anecdotes about Trump voters who immediately suffered from his policy decisions, but it forbids stories about actual animal attacks.

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A new rule: No politics

On the VeteransAffairs subreddit, there are two overriding rules: Stay on topic, and be respectful. That means no personal attacks and no politics.

When the subreddit’s creator tapped Carson to take over the channel a decade ago, politics were allowed. But in the run-up to the 2024 presidential election, Carson and his co-moderator instituted a ban on partisan political talk after commenters began getting too heated.

“People were pointing fingers and name-calling and being abrasive and insulting,” Carson said. “We’re trying to create a community that embraces people.”

On a recent weekday morning, Carson logged into Reddit and checked his moderator queue, which had a list of more than 1,000 posts and comments. He started reading each one, removing any not directly related to the Veterans Affairs Department.

On this morning, AutoModerator had flagged a comment: It claimed that spyware had been installed on all computers tapped into by the Department of Government Efficiency, the group led by Elon Musk to cut the federal bureaucracy. Carson removed the comment.

“We allow conversations that focus on facts and provide evidence,” he said. “But even then, it still has to be relevant to the VA.” The spyware comment, he said, was a “supposition.”

‘You’re not alone’

When federal workers received an email last month telling them to list five things they had accomplished the previous week, someone posted a poll on the VeteransAffairs subreddit for VA colleagues: “Did you reply to the email?”

A majority of respondents said they hadn’t.

That kind of information is “helpful and enlightening,” said Bruce, a VA employee in Salt Lake City who has been checking the subreddit every day.

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Bruce, who asked not to use his full name to protect his employment, said there had been little official communication from his regional office, and that Reddit had helped to fill the information vacuum.

“It just gives you an idea of what other people at the VA are going through, that you’re not alone,” said Bruce, who until now had thought of Reddit mainly as a place to go for sports news.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.