The North Carolina man behind the now popular Twitter account “Yes, You’re Racist” has been getting death threats for outing those involved in Virginia’s violent white power demonstration.

“I have been receiving death threats for the past 20 hours or so,” Logan Smith, 30, of Raleigh told The News & Observer on Monday.

Smith, the communications director for political nonprofit Progress North Carolina Action, is the operator of the anti-racist social media account, which has now garnered more than 355,000 followers.

“They have been threatening my family, too. The overall response of course has been 99 percent positive, but there’s always that extremely small, but extremely loud and extremely angry minority that bites back,” Smith told the paper.

Smith’s 5-year-old Twitter account gained widespread traction following the white supremacy rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, on Saturday that left one woman dead and dozens injured.

He used the social media platform to identify those involved and shared photos of them — and at least one, Cole White of California, was fired from his restaurant job after his name and picture were posted.

“If you recognize any of the Nazis marching in #Charlottesville, send me their names/profiles and I’ll make them famous,” Smith tweeted on the account following the “Unite the Right” march.

Smith noted that much of the backlash and threats he has received have come from followers of the white nationalist website Stormfront and backers of neo-Nazi and alt-right groups.

“They’re mostly anonymous Twitter accounts with three followers that only tweet non-stop hate,” Smith said. “But there’s a lot of them — and they are mad.”

Smith called the photos taken from the weekend march depicting angry white-power supporters “disturbing.”

“These photos from the torch march — it was exactly what you see in photos from 1930s Germany. But this is not happening in history books or some faraway country — it’s here, it’s now,” Smith told the paper.

Heather Heyer, 32, was killed and 19 others were injured when white supremacist and Nazi fanatic James Alex Fields Jr., 20, allegedly rammed a Dodge Challenger into a crowd of anti-racism protesters Saturday.