PropertyValue
?:author
?:datePublished
  • 2020-01-22 (xsd:date)
?:headline
  • Did Extinction Rebellion Post 'Drive a Car? You're a Nazi' Stickers? (en)
?:inLanguage
?:itemReviewed
?:mentions
?:reviewBody
  • In January 2020, a photograph supposedly showing an official sticker from the environmental group Extinction Rebellion circulated on social media: This sticker was not made or endorsed by Extinction Rebellion. It appears it was created as part of a smear campaign against the environmentalist group. A spokesperson for the group told us: We have been unable to determine who specifically created this photograph. However, on Jan. 21, 2020, a thread on the internet forum 4chan asked users to hijack Extinction Rebellion by sharing a series of fake slogans: Another thread that same day on the forum encouraged users to spread the viral Nazi image: More than a week prior, a 4chan user shared a link to an Extinction Rebellion Poster Generator allowing users to easily create Extinction Rebellion-branded messages without the consent, knowledge, or endorsement of the environmental organization. The Argus reported that another batch of fake Extinction Rebellion posters were spread around Brighton, England, in January 2020. Those posters, which bore fraudulent slogans such as Only White People Care About the Environment and Save the Environment End Mass Migration, also drew condemnation from the environmentalist group. Extinction Rebellion Brighton said in a statement, Extinction Rebellion, in Brighton and any other location, are not associated with these racist posters in any way and do not wish to give any more air time to their abhorrent messages. The Drive a Car? You Are a Nazi sticker campaign is reminiscent of other stunts deployed on 4chan. When Nike endorsed politically outspoken former quarterback Colin Kaepernick in September 2018, for instance, online trolls on the 4chan forum started spreading a series of racist ads as if they were created by the apparel company. The 4chan forum was also responsible for spreading fake posters bearing the slogan Pedophiles are People Too in order to smear the LGBTQ community, fake Starbucks coupons in an attempt to stir up racial controversy, and a fake flyer calling for the murder of children in order to paint the group Antifa as extremist. (en)
?:reviewRating
rdf:type
?:url