Confirmed   26,435

Part of a series on Kermit the Frog. [View Related Entries]


#ImWithKer

Part of a series on Kermit the Frog. [View Related Entries]

Updated Jan 29, 2025 at 07:12PM EST by LiterallyAustin.

Added Oct 04, 2016 at 11:42AM EDT by Adam.

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

Advertisement

About

#ImWithKer is a hashtag campaign employed by Twitter users that claims Kermit the Frog as an anti-bigotry, pro-hope symbol of the left in an effort to counter the rise of Pepe as a symbol of alt-right and white nationalist politics. It is a play on a slogan of Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton supporters, I'm With Her.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Origin

On October 2nd, 2016, journalist Josh Marshall of Talking Points Memo tweeted[1] a plea that America needed to get behind a "canonical pluralism frog to turn back the tide," along with a picture of Kermit the Frog. The tweet, shown below, gained over 1,600 retweets and 3,200 favorites as of October 4th, 2016. Shortly after Marshall's tweet, one of his followers, @BrooklynSpoke,[2] replied with the hashtag, "#ImWithKer."



Advertisement
Advertisement

Spread

Twitter users began tweeting pro-Kermit sentiments with with #ImWithKer and #TakingBackTheFrog hashtags,[3][4] along with the quote "Kermit Trumps Pepe,"[5] a play on a slogan popular with Hillary Clinton supporters, "Love Trumps Hate." In further tweets, Marshall claimed that Kermit "demonstrated generosity of spirit, perseverance, collegiality and openness to introspection and melancholy that are ingredients of any open, free society," while Pepe "embodies sadism, cruelty, and the lust for domination as touchstone of public life that are the makings of autocracy."[6] #ImWithHer trended on Twitter on October 3rd, 2016.[12]

Shortly after the hashtag's initial spread, alt-right users attempted to raid it in an effort to squash the movement.[7][8] Marshall responded to the attempted raid by suggesting it was he desperate work of people "who know they are about to lose."[9]

Threads about the trend were posted to Reddit in the /r/OutOfTheLoop[10] and /r/MillionDollarExtreme,[11] and the moment was covered by The Daily Dot[13] and Daily Kos.[14]

Various Examples



Search Interest

Unavailable

External References


Advertisement

Comments ( 95 )

Sorry, but you must activate your account to post a comment.

Please check your email for your activation code.

    See more