UPDATE: This post has been updated to reflect a statement from the Young Conservatives blog denying any link to Nazism, and to include comment from Young Conservatives CEO Josh Riddle.

Sarah Palin was accused of promoting white supremacy on Friday after sharing a post on social media that appeared to reference a neo-Nazi slogan.

Her post, shared on her Twitter and Facebook accounts, is a link to an article on the right-wing blog Young Conservatives paired with the caption "Trump Gives Speech to the People of Poland, Says 14 Words That Leave Americans Stunned."

The caption jumped out to several social media users, who pointed to the popular white-supremacist slogan known as the "Fourteen Words" — "We must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children." The phrase is often shortened to the number 14.

The Young Conservatives article summarizes President Trump's speech in Warsaw, Poland, on Thursday, which contained heavy nationalistic overtones and was well-received by an eager audience.

The article makes use of several of Trump's quotes from the speech, some of which contain strings of words that are 14 words long. (For example: "Let us all fight like the Poles. For family, freedom, for country, for God.") However, the article makes no mention of the phrase "fourteen words."

So where did Palin get her caption from?

The answer lies in the code of the Young Conservatives website, as one Twitter user discovered. As it turns out, the site has been built so that any time someone shares the article on Facebook, the caption is automatically populated with the "Fourteen Words" caption.

"And those familiar with Sarah Palin’s social-media habits know that her Facebook musings automatically post to her Twitter, hence the perceived neo-Nazi caption being shared on multiple platforms," The Daily Beast reported.

Young Conservatives CEO Josh Riddle denied any connection to Nazism in an email to Business Insider.

"Any connection of us or the Sarah Palin brand to something as disgusting as Nazism is something we take very seriously," Riddle said.

"It literally takes one Twitter search to prove 'word count' is a common tactic many websites use and is in no way associated with Nazism."

Inadvertent reference or not, Palin's tweet enraged several Twitter users.