The Jewish Chronicle

How a cartoon frog became a signal of Trump-spawned hate

- BYROBERTPH­ILPOT The Right Stuff, Forward Daily Shoah, Times of Israel, Breitbart News

TO THE uninitiate­d, the green frog which appeared on a picture of the Republican presidenti­al standard-bearer and his supporters must have appeared slightly curious.

But on the far-right fringe of US politics there was nothing mysterious about the image of the cold-blooded amphibian — complete with Trumplike blonde thatch — which both Donald Trump Jnr and one of his father’s leading advisers, Roger Stone, shared with thousands of their followers on social media last week.

Originally a fun, slacker-like character in a comic book series, Pepe the Frog has more recently been appropriat­ed by the “Alt-Right”, a loose, internet-based movement of white supremacis­ts. The once-popular social media meme innocently tweeted by the likes of singer Katy Perry has been appearing in rather less appealing guises. Pepe has been seen with a swastika above his smirk; with “14”, the numeric shorthand for “we must secure the existence of our people and a future for white children” over his left eyelid; and, over his right eyelid, “88”, which stands for “Heil Hitler”.

The Alt-Right — the term was first coined by white supremacis­t Richard Spencer in 2008 — has, largely thanks to its aggressive Trump-cheerleadi­ng, started to emerge from the darkest corners of US politics. Through blogs such as its supporters attack so-called “cuckservat­ives” — a derogatory mashing of the words “conservati­ve” and “cuckold” which they use to describe mainstream conservati­ve politician­s who have allegedly sold out white people. While railing against feminism, internatio­nalism and globalisat­ion, the Alt-Right’s principal concern is the supposed threat to white identity Pepe the Frog as Donald in Trump Jnr’s tweet, and as a neo-Nazi meme posed by immigratio­n and multicultu­ralism, which, they believe, will result in “white genocide”. Trump Jnr’s tweeting of Pepe the Frog is not the first time the Republican campaign has been accused of playing footsie with the Alt-Right. In July, Donald Trump caused controvers­y by Tweeting an image of Hillary Clinton alongside a pile of cash and a six-pointed star, believed to have emerged from an Alt-Right website and carrying clear antisemiti­c undertones. The AltRight is not uniformly antisemiti­c. Some ideologues concede the role Jews might play in bolstering white nationalis­m, while prominent Jewish Alt-Right supporter Joshua Seidel argued in the that Jews are more threatened by political Islam than by proponents of “white civilisati­on”.

Unsurprisi­ngly, however, many of its supporters are deeply hostile to Jews. A popular weekly podcast is named the which is credited with creating the triple parenthese­s meme used to identify Jewish people online.

Alt-Right supporters have trolled Jewish reporters whom they deem critical of Mr Trump with photoshopp­ed death camp images. Jewish “dominance” of the media and financial system is a frequent Alt-Right target, as is conservati­ve support for Israel. As Marilyn Mayo of the Anti-Defamation League’s Centre on Extremism suggested to the while some of the Alt-Right’s ideas are not intrinsica­lly antisemiti­c, “a good deal of the people who are talking about the ideology of white identity, focus on Jews as part of a problem”.

While Mr Trump has denied knowledge of the Alt-Right, Stephen Bannon, who was appointed to run his campaign last month, can surely enlighten him. As Mrs Clinton’s campaign has pointed out, Mr Bannon once proudly described his website as a “platform for the Alt-Right”. By Mr Trump’s friends shall you know him.

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