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That same day, the human resources department chastised the Jewish employee for using the word “Nazi” in the workplace. Two days later, the employee was terminated for unspecified “patterns of behavior,” the outlet stated.

Before his corporate accounts were deactivated, the employee wrote about the experience in a Slack group for Jewish employees. He said he “did not know that, as a Jew, it would be so polarizing to say this word.”

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“We grew up saying [Nazi],” the employee wrote in the Slack group, per Business Insider. “It was a story we told because we had to — the decimation of whole lines of ancestry were at the hands of people who went by that title.”

GitHub refused to explain if it had fired the employee for saying “Nazi” in the immediate aftermath of the incident, which prompted some of the company’s workers to start saying “Nazi” in Slack to reference the Capitol rioters to protest what they consider to be unfair treatment, according to the Verge.

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“Others have already said so, but just want to say it explicitly myself - I think that nazis were present at some protests on Jan 6, and that it’s very scary to see those ideas on display,” a senior engineer wrote a company Slack channel titled #inclusion-belonging.

Groups that held Nazi, neo-Nazi views and anti-Semitic sentiments were among the rioters who tried to mount an insurrection at the nation’s capital. A report by the Rutgers Miller Center for Community Protection and Resilience and the Network Contagion Research Institute identified at least half a dozen neo-Nazi or white supremacists groups involved in the attack.

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Some rioters proudly displayed their affiliations to these gross ideologies in plain sight, such as the man wearing a Camp Auschwitz sweatshirt. He was subsequently arrested.