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BDS on American College Campuses: 2013-14 Year-In-Review

Report
Anti-Israel activity on American college campuses was largely dominated by Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaigns in the latest academic year. Student groups that are well-known for their outspoken opposition to Israeli policy advocated for a variety of BDS-related initiatives in an effort to isolate and delegitimize Israel. The most prevalent BDS initiative on campus involved the introduction and debate of divestment resolutions by the campus’s student government. Fifteen…
June 03, 2014
Read more about BDS on American College Campuses: 2013-14 Year-In-Review

Report: New Black Panther Party for Self Defense (NBPP)

Report
Read the full report here: New Black Panther Party for Self Defense (PDF). The New Black Panther Party for Self Defense (NBPP) is the largest organized anti-Semitic and racist Black militant group in America. Since October 2013, Hashim Nzinga, who pre­vi­ously served as the group’s Chief of Staff, has led the group. By taking on racially-charged issues, the NBPP has received national media attention for its efforts, garnered some support from prominent members of the…
November 21, 2014
Read more about Report: New Black Panther Party for Self Defense (NBPP)

Ecoterrorism: Extremism in the Animal Rights and Environmentalist Movements

Report
For Law Enforcement This document is an archived copy of an older ADL report and may not reflect the most current facts or developments related to its subject matter. During the past two decades, radical environmental and animal rights groups have claimed responsibility for hundreds of crimes and acts of terrorism, including arson, bombings, vandalism and harassment, causing more than $100 million in damage. While some activists have been captured, ecoterror cells - small and loosely…
February 05, 2005
Read more about Ecoterrorism: Extremism in the Animal Rights and Environmentalist Movements

Anti-Bias Study Guide Review and Impact

Report
In November 1999, an independent external panel was formulated to offer critique of the ADL’s A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE® Institute Anti-Bias Study Guide (Secondary Level). This panel was comprised of secondary level teachers and college-level professors representing California State University at Long Beach, University of California at Berkeley, New York University, Columbia University Teachers’ College, Manassas, Virginia and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania School Districts. Panelists…
October 31, 2012
Read more about Anti-Bias Study Guide Review and Impact

Names Can Really Hurt Us Assembly Program Findings

Report
For Educators A 2000 survey conducted by the Anti-Defamation League found that participation in the A WORLD OF DIFFERENCE Institute's Names Can Really Hurt Us Assembly Program allows students open, honest and relevant exploration about diversity and bias in their school communities. More than 600 students and staff from two Southern California High Schools participated in the study. Evaluations findings that as a result of participation: 47% of students perceived one or more…
October 31, 2012
Read more about Names Can Really Hurt Us Assembly Program Findings

Bigots on Bikes

Report
The Growing Links between White Supremacists and Biker Gangs Read ADL's comprehensive report, Bigots on Bikes: The Growing Links between White Supremacists and Biker Gangs (PDF). In recent years, a disturbing trend has emerged on the white supremacist scene in the United States. More and more white supremacists are developing links to motorcycle clubs across the country, including outlaw motorcycle gangs frequently involved with criminal activity. Though there has always been a small…
September 04, 2012
Read more about Bigots on Bikes

Anti-Semitism at UC Irvine

Report
Read the full, comprehensive report: Anti-Semitism at UC Irvine (PDF). The University of California, Irvine (UCI) has become a center for anti-Semitic activity in recent years. Much of this activity has been organized by the Muslim Student Union (MSU), a vocal student group at UCI, which is responsible for staging large events every spring featuring virulently anti-Semitic speakers. In July 2010, the MSU was suspended for one year because of its involvement in disrupting a speech by…
May 11, 2012
Read more about Anti-Semitism at UC Irvine

Y2K Paranoia: Extremists Confront the Millenium

Report
For Law Enforcement This document is an archived copy of an older ADL report and may not reflect the most current facts or developments related to its subject matter. Y2K and the Apocalypse The year 2000, the start of a new millennium, is fast approaching. For certain religious groups that believe in an apocalyptic vision of the "End Times," this dramatic turn of the century signals tremendous upheaval in the world, a period when chaos will prevail. In particular, a small number of…
January 01, 1999
Read more about Y2K Paranoia: Extremists Confront the Millenium

Schooled in Hate: Anti-Semitism on Campus

Report
The Issue The university has traditionally served as an enclave for intellectual expression, insulated from the distractions of the world outside. It has also served as a trendsetter for that outside society, a laboratory where social change first begins to ferment and find an outlet. To a large extent, the excitement and passion on American campuses stem from the combination of scholarly debate and student activism in a sheltered environment. In recent decades, Jews have generally…
January 01, 1997
Read more about Schooled in Hate: Anti-Semitism on Campus

271k

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271k
271k is shorthand for a false assertion put forward by Holocaust deniers that only 271,000 Jews died in the Holocaust, rather than 6 million.

Alternate Names: 271,000; 271

271k is an antisemitic shorthand reference to a false claim made by Holocaust deniers that only around 271,000 Jews died during the Holocaust rather than the consensus view, based on exhaustive research, that the Nazis killed approximately six million Jews in their extermination campaign. 

The number 271,000 stems from a scanned image of part of a 1979 document often shared by Holocaust deniers. The document originated from what is today known as the Arolsen Archives, based in Germany, one of the largest repositories of records related to victims of Nazi persecution.  Often attributed to the Red Cross, which administered the Archives for many years, the document provided then-current statistics on the number of victims at 13 concentration camps that the repository had, upon request, confirmed as dead and issued death certificates for (often needed by next of kin to obtain insurance benefits, pensions, etc.). This number was slightly over 271,000 (Holocaust deniers may also circulate a similar document from 1984 with somewhat higher numbers). 

As the Arolsen Archives and others have explained, such documents did not list the total number of Jewish victims at these 13 locations, nor did they include victims from the many other concentration camps, death camps, and slave labor camps operated by the Nazi regime, nor figures for the vast numbers of victims who died in ghettoes or were shot outside of camps, especially in the Soviet Union.  Holocaust deniers, however, claim that the 271,000 figure represents the totality of Jews who perished under the Nazi regime; many deniers further assert that most of these victims were not killed by the Nazis but rather died of malnutrition or diseases like typhus because of the chaos and dislocation caused by the Allied strategic bombing of Germany in the final year of the war.  In other words, they falsely claim that few Jews died during World War II and that most of the deaths that did occur were the fault of the Allies, not the Nazis. 

The 271,000 claim is linked to an older false assertion originating with the West German far right in the 1950s that the Red Cross had ostensibly said Jewish victims of the Nazis had not numbered more than 300,000. The Red Cross has repeatedly refuted that fabricated claim. Holocaust deniers say that Canadian Holocaust denier Ernst Zundel uncovered the “271,000” document in the 1980s and used it (unsuccessfully) to defend himself in Canadian trials over his reprinting of a Holocaust denial pamphlet from Great Britain in the 1970s that repeated the older 300,000 claim. The image of the document was later used by other Holocaust deniers, eventually making its way to the internet, where it spread still further.  However, it was not until around 2024 that 271k and 271,000 emerged on social media as popular shorthand references to the false claim and as antisemitic references, generally.

Antisemites often use 271k in response to online posts about the Holocaust or the six million Jews who perished in it. Often it appears in language such as “271k at best,” “271k tops, mostly from typhus” or “271k is the best we can do.”  It also frequently appears in Holocaust denial memes designed to suggest that the mass murder of six million Jews in such a short time was impossible. One such meme features a worker in a pizza parlor saying “Six million pizzas?  The most we can make is 271k.”  Variations replace pizzas with other things, such as tea: “Six million cups in five years? Sorry, the most I can make is 271k.” Other memes feature images from the television show Pawn Stars, depicting pawn shop workers from the show saying, “Best I can do is 271,301.”  Some people use it to suggest more Jews should be killed, employing phrases such as “271k is not enough.”  Since its introduction, use of 271k as antisemitic shorthand has grown rapidly on social media.

As numbers, 271, 271k and 271,000 may have very different meanings in other contexts; they should always be evaluated carefully in the specific context in which they appear. 

Read more about 271k

The Jew Cries Out in Pain

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The Jew Cries Out in Pain
The phrase “the Jew cries out in pain even as he strikes you” is a slogan that suggests Jews portray themselves as victims even though they are the ones who ostensibly harm others.
Read more about The Jew Cries Out in Pain

Terrorgram

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Terrorgram
Terrorgram is a white supremacist network formed to incite violent acts to bring about the collapse of society. It has used several logos, which generally include a Waffen SS shield.

Alternate Names: Terrorgram Collective, Terrorgram Network

Terrorgram emerged in the late 2010s as a loose international network of white supremacist individuals and groups, typically neo-Nazi in nature, seeking to promote violent acts in the service of white supremacist accelerationism. White supremacist accelerationism is a school of thought within the white supremacist movement that argues the only way to create a desired whites-only or white-dominated society is to destabilize and destroy current society through violence and disruption, then build a new society from its ashes. Terrorgram—taking its name from the internet platform Telegram, on which it conducted most of its activities—dedicated itself to accelerationist propaganda, glorifying white supremacist mass killers like Dylann Roof and Brenton Tarrant as “saints” and urging others to follow in their footsteps to commit terrorist attacks and hate crimes against minorities and other targets, such as infrastructure.  Their propaganda efforts included producing several lengthy and distinctively illustrated manuals with motivational screeds as well as ostensibly practical advice for would-be terrorists.

In 2024, the U.S. designated Terrorgram as Specially Designated Global Terrorists; later that year, the FBI arrested two key American Terrorgram leaders on a number of charges.  The arrests precipitated Terrorgram’s collapse as the network’s remaining members sought to avoid infiltration or identification.  However, Terrorgram’s digital publications are still in circulation among accelerationists, meaning that people can still encounter their symbols. Terrorgram logos imitate a Waffen SS divisional shield design, though with their own distinct symbology. One simply features a paper airplane, while a different logo depicts a swastika, an infinity symbol, and a ski mask. A third version features the swastika and ski mask along with part of a Sonnenrad symbol. 

Read more about Terrorgram

Right Wing Death Squad/RWDS

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Right-Wing Death Squad/RWDS
The term “right-wing death squads” (RWDS), originally a reference to violent groups associated with 1970s/80s-era regimes in Latin American countries, has been embraced today by white supremacists and other extremists.
Read more about Right Wing Death Squad/RWDS

Rhodesian Flag

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Rhodesian Flag
White supremacists have embraced the flag of Rhodesia, a former British colony whose white-controlled government fought an unsuccessful war to suppress the majority black population of what is today known as Zimbabwe.
Read more about Rhodesian Flag

O-Slash Hitler Salute

Hate Symbol
O-Slash Hitler Salute
The o-slash Hitler salute is a typographical symbol or emoticon used to abstractly depict someone giving a Nazi or fascist salute.
Read more about O-Slash Hitler Salute

Noticer

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Noticer
“Noticer” is a term used by online antisemites to refer to themselves, signifying that they are aware of what they believe are nefarious activities committed by Jews.
Read more about Noticer

Never Lose Your Smile

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Never Lose Your Smile
“Never Lose Your Smile” is a phrase that, when joined with the Totenkopf skull, is used as an in-joke or reference by white supremacists.

Alternate Names: NLYS

Never Lose Your Smile is a design/meme consisting of the phrase “Never Lose Your Smile” accompanied by the Totenkopf skull image or, more commonly, merely the bottom half of that skull, which obscures its true nature and thus allows the image to pass unnoticed as a white supremacist symbol. The deceptive nature of this design has also allowed extremists to sell clothing, patches, and other items featuring the image on major internet platforms without triggering moderation.

Some Never Lose Your Smile images may also contain the colors or designs of national flags. Other variations use Totenkopf imagery with a slightly different phrase, such as “Never Lose Your Love” or “Never Lose Your Hope.”

Some white supremacists have also used the phrase alone, without the skull, in circumstances such as screen names.  However, use of the phrase by itself without a clear white supremacist context should not be taken for granted as hate-related.

White supremacists likely borrowed this concept from older, non-extremist designs that combined the phrase with non-Totenkopf skull images. Use of the “Never Lose Your Smile” slogan in combination with generic skulls or other non-white supremacist images, such as generic clowns, should not be considered hate related.

Read more about Never Lose Your Smile

Hey Rabbi, Watcha’ Doing?

Hate Symbol
"Hey Rabbi, Watcha’ Doing?" Cartoon
“Hey Rabbi, watcha’ doing?” is an antisemitic slogan used to suggest that Jews invent hate crimes and other outrages against themselves to gain sympathy or profit.
Read more about Hey Rabbi, Watcha’ Doing?

Groyper

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Groyper Symbol
The Groyper image is a Pepe the Frog variation used by followers of white supremacist Nick Fuentes.
Read more about Groyper

Goyim Defense League

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Goyim Defense League Logo
The Goyim Defense League is an antisemitic hate group that employs logos with the letters “GDL” or GTV” in designs resembling the Nazi flag.
Read more about Goyim Defense League

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