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MrBaptist on scored.co
1 year ago8 points(+0/-0/+8Score on mirror)2 children
Hopefully someone will make something for this to apply inline like the [Nonfren Radar](https://greasyfork.org/en/scripts/480944-nonfren-radar) (Coincidence Detector fork/successor - this puts (((echoes))) around "fellow whites" mentions online).
1 year ago4 points(+0/-0/+4Score on mirror)1 child
Yes. The jews responded as neurotically as you might expect when this emerged, drawing connotations that weren't even intended.
[(((The Jewish Cowbell))): Unpacking a Gross New Meme From the Alt-Right](https://archive.is/x9g4o):
> a typographical indicator of ethnicity that hearkens back to the starred armbands Jews were forced to wear in Nazi Germany. Looking at these parentheses is a surreal experience: Not only do they mark out Jews, but they visually contain them, sequestered as if in a camp or prison.
Install the Tampermonkey addon in your browser (or an equivalent addon for "user scripts").
You can then "install" the script from the download page. The install option will take you to a preview of the script with a button to confirm installing it.
Once it's installed it will be active by default, so you can go to Wikipedia or whatever and see the (((echoes))) in action.
Thanks, I'll give it a try. I already have the coincidence detector installed on my browser, but it came as an actual browser extension and not as a script (which I didn't know how to utilize)
[(((The Jewish Cowbell))): Unpacking a Gross New Meme From the Alt-Right](https://archive.is/x9g4o):
> a typographical indicator of ethnicity that hearkens back to the starred armbands Jews were forced to wear in Nazi Germany. Looking at these parentheses is a surreal experience: Not only do they mark out Jews, but they visually contain them, sequestered as if in a camp or prison.
u/#topkek
You can then "install" the script from the download page. The install option will take you to a preview of the script with a button to confirm installing it.
Once it's installed it will be active by default, so you can go to Wikipedia or whatever and see the (((echoes))) in action.