Break up $[x\in(A\,\triangle\,B)\,\triangle\,C]$ and $[x\in A\,\triangle\,(B\,\triangle\,C)]$; you'll see they're both $[x\in A]+[x\in B]+[x\in C]$ mod $2$. QED.
@AkivaWeinberger you can get examples of infinite rings where every element has finite order by using $\mathcal{P}(X)$ for an infinite $X$ with symmetric difference as addition and intersection as multiplication
Prove that $[x\in A\,\triangle\,B]\equiv[x\in A]+[x\in B]\pmod2$, where $[P]=\begin{cases}1,&P\text{ is true}\\0,&P\text{ is false}\end{cases}$ (that's called the Iverson bracket)
But, yeah, essentially because the structure is the same
The set $\{\emptyset,A,B,A\,\triangle\,B\}$ forms a group congruent to $(\Bbb Z_2)^2$ under symmetric difference, for example.