Sup! You must login or signup first!

Echo

Confirmed   214,501

Part of a series on Judaism. [View Related Entries]


About

Triple Parentheses, also known as (((Echo))), is a symbol used by anti-Semitic members of the alt-right to identify certain individuals as Jewish by surrounding their names with three parentheses on each side. The symbol became a subject of online discussions and media scrutiny in June 2016 after Google removed a browser extension that automatically highlights Jewish surnames in the style.

Origin

According to an article on the news site Mic,[1] the (((echo))) symbol originated in "Merchant Minute" segments on the podcast The Daily Shoah, launched by the right-wing political news blog The Right Stuff[12] in 2014. During the show, Jewish surnames would be played with a reverberating echo sound. On The Right Stuff's lexicon page,[2] the word "Echoes" is listed along with the description "All Jewish surnames echo throughout history."

ECHOES All Jewish surnames echo throughout history. The echoes repeat the sad tale as they communicate the emotional lessons of our great white sins, imploring us to Never Forget the 6 GoRillion

Precursor

The triple paranthesis can also be found in various antisemitic videos prior to this report from Mic. For example, on September 10th, 2012, YouTuber EATATROLL published a heavily edited video in which actor Marlon Brando makes a number of antisemitic claims without context. At the end of the clip, the video shows text that reads (((Holy Shit))) Mel Gibson had a right to be scared.

[This video has been removed]

Spread

In January 2016, a Chrome extension titled "Coincidence Detector" was made available on the Chrome store, which would query a database of surnames and add parenthesis around names determined to be Jewish (shown below).

On May 26th, The New York Times[10] published an article by deputy editor Jonathan Weisman titled "The Nazi Tweets of 'Trump God Emperor'", in which he describes being harassed on Twitter by Trump supporters typing his name the parentheses symbols:

The first tweet arrived as cryptic code, a signal to the army of the “alt-right” that I barely knew existed: “Hello ((Weisman)).” @CyberTrump was responding to my recent tweet of an essay by Robert Kagan on the emergence of fascism in the United States. “Care to explain?” I answered, intuiting that my last name in brackets denoted my Jewish faith.

On June 1st, Mic[11] published an article by staff writers Cooper Fleishman and Anthony Smith, who traced the use of the symbol back to The Daily Shoah podcast. Additionally the article contained a statement about the echo symbol issued by The Right Stuff, who explained the meaning behind the different parentheses:

"The inner parenthesis represent the Jews' subversion of the home [and] destruction of the family through mass-media degeneracy. The next [parenthesis] represents the destruction of the nation through mass immigration, and the outer [parenthesis] represents international Jewry and world Zionism."

The following day, Google removed the Coincidence Detector extension from the Chrome store for violating the company's hate speech policy. On June 3rd, Twitter user Yair Rosenberg[4] encouraged others to "raise awareness about anti-Semitism" and "show solidarity with harassed Jews" by putting the triple parentheses symbol around their name (shown below). Within 72 hours, the tweet gained over 1,000 retweets and 800 likes.

(((Yair Rosenberg)) @Yair_Rosenberg Follow Want to raise awareness about anti-Semitism, show solidarity with harassed Jews & mess with the Twitter Nazis? Put ((())) around your name. 12:09 AM 3 Jun 2016 わt3 1,025 827

On June 7th, the echo symbol was added to the Anti-Defamation League's Hate Symbols Database.[3] In the coming days, several news sites published articles about the anti-Semitic symbol, including The Guardian,[5] The Mirror,[6] The Verge,[7] Vox[8] and Slate.[9]

Search Interest

External References



Share Pin

Related Entries 6 total

The-goyim-know-shut-it-down-jew-walkie-talkie
The Goyim Know / Shut It Down
Cover4
"Early Life" Wikipedia Section
_45373139_jidf
JIDF
Fiveish
Fiveish / Yap Dollar


Recent Images 20 total


Recent Videos 0 total

There are no recent videos.




Load 190 Comments
Triple Parentheses / (((Echo)))

Triple Parentheses / (((Echo)))

Part of a series on Judaism. [View Related Entries]

Updated Dec 27, 2024 at 09:00PM EST by LiterallyAustin.

Added Jun 07, 2016 at 01:59PM EDT by Don.

PROTIP: Press 'i' to view the image gallery, 'v' to view the video gallery, or 'r' to view a random entry.

About

Triple Parentheses, also known as (((Echo))), is a symbol used by anti-Semitic members of the alt-right to identify certain individuals as Jewish by surrounding their names with three parentheses on each side. The symbol became a subject of online discussions and media scrutiny in June 2016 after Google removed a browser extension that automatically highlights Jewish surnames in the style.

Origin

According to an article on the news site Mic,[1] the (((echo))) symbol originated in "Merchant Minute" segments on the podcast The Daily Shoah, launched by the right-wing political news blog The Right Stuff[12] in 2014. During the show, Jewish surnames would be played with a reverberating echo sound. On The Right Stuff's lexicon page,[2] the word "Echoes" is listed along with the description "All Jewish surnames echo throughout history."


ECHOES All Jewish surnames echo throughout history. The echoes repeat the sad tale as they communicate the emotional lessons of our great white sins, imploring us to Never Forget the 6 GoRillion

Precursor

The triple paranthesis can also be found in various antisemitic videos prior to this report from Mic. For example, on September 10th, 2012, YouTuber EATATROLL published a heavily edited video in which actor Marlon Brando makes a number of antisemitic claims without context. At the end of the clip, the video shows text that reads (((Holy Shit))) Mel Gibson had a right to be scared.


[This video has been removed]


Spread

In January 2016, a Chrome extension titled "Coincidence Detector" was made available on the Chrome store, which would query a database of surnames and add parenthesis around names determined to be Jewish (shown below).



On May 26th, The New York Times[10] published an article by deputy editor Jonathan Weisman titled "The Nazi Tweets of 'Trump God Emperor'", in which he describes being harassed on Twitter by Trump supporters typing his name the parentheses symbols:

The first tweet arrived as cryptic code, a signal to the army of the “alt-right” that I barely knew existed: “Hello ((Weisman)).” @CyberTrump was responding to my recent tweet of an essay by Robert Kagan on the emergence of fascism in the United States. “Care to explain?” I answered, intuiting that my last name in brackets denoted my Jewish faith.

On June 1st, Mic[11] published an article by staff writers Cooper Fleishman and Anthony Smith, who traced the use of the symbol back to The Daily Shoah podcast. Additionally the article contained a statement about the echo symbol issued by The Right Stuff, who explained the meaning behind the different parentheses:

"The inner parenthesis represent the Jews' subversion of the home [and] destruction of the family through mass-media degeneracy. The next [parenthesis] represents the destruction of the nation through mass immigration, and the outer [parenthesis] represents international Jewry and world Zionism."

The following day, Google removed the Coincidence Detector extension from the Chrome store for violating the company's hate speech policy. On June 3rd, Twitter user Yair Rosenberg[4] encouraged others to "raise awareness about anti-Semitism" and "show solidarity with harassed Jews" by putting the triple parentheses symbol around their name (shown below). Within 72 hours, the tweet gained over 1,000 retweets and 800 likes.


(((Yair Rosenberg)) @Yair_Rosenberg Follow Want to raise awareness about anti-Semitism, show solidarity with harassed Jews & mess with the Twitter Nazis? Put ((())) around your name. 12:09 AM 3 Jun 2016 わt3 1,025 827

On June 7th, the echo symbol was added to the Anti-Defamation League's Hate Symbols Database.[3] In the coming days, several news sites published articles about the anti-Semitic symbol, including The Guardian,[5] The Mirror,[6] The Verge,[7] Vox[8] and Slate.[9]

Search Interest

External References

Recent Videos

There are no videos currently available.

Recent Images 20 total


Top Comments


+ Add a Comment

Comments (190)


Display Comments

Add a Comment