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As the United States approached a fraught 2020 election season amid a national reckoning over racism and police brutality, the use and meaning of the American flag also became a subject of debate. Rumors about the destruction and banning of the American flag in different contexts spread online, creating a deeper divide between the right and left. One such rumor surfaced in June 2020, claiming that food retailer Weis Markets banned its employees from displaying the American flag anywhere on their person, and even on merchandise. Snopes readers asked us to look into these rumors, and Weis Markets told us that the claims were categorically untrue. Some Facebook users implied that the alleged ban was connected to protests over the May 2020 killing of George Floyd, a Black man killed by a white police officer in Minneapolis. They said the display of political logos, slogans, and symbols on clothing — including employees' protective face masks worn during the ongoing coronavirus pandemic — was even a fireable offense. Another post alleged that displaying the flag was deemed controversial: The rumors appeared to have stemmed from normal regulations requiring that all Weis Markets store employees adhere to their uniform, which is currently a red shirt and black trousers. The company has had such policies for at least 50 years. Weis Markets spokesperson Dennis Curtin told Snopes: Rumors that the ban on the American flag extended to merchandise were also untrue. Curtin said: Because the Weis Markets store policy hasn't changed in decades, despite recent outcry on social media alleging employees can't wear American flags on their uniforms and that the flag can't be displayed on merchandise, we rate the claim that such items were banned as False.
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