Tea party group posts racist image to Facebook
By Adam Serwer, December 16, 2013
A
tea party group’s rebranding effort first-person
shot itself in the foot Saturday
when it posted to its Facebook page an image from a popular video
game that contains racist caricatures of minorities.
The
National Liberty Federation, formerly known as the South Florida Tea
Party, changed its name last January as part
of a rebranding effort in
the aftermath of President Obama’s reelection. The
group’s founder, Everett Dickinson, told the
Palm Beach Post that
the group “wanted to differentiate ourselves from certain
organizations that have the name ‘tea party’ and we can’t
control.”
The
group helped Florida Republican Senator Marco Rubio burnish his
credentials among tea party activists in advance of his successful
2010 Senate bid.
The
video game, Bioshock Infinite, takes
place largely in a floating city called Columbia and
depicts a racist, xenophobic society where people worship the
American founding fathers as religious figures. The image posted to
the National Liberty Federation’s Facebook page is of an in-game
mural that depicts George Washington bathed in angelic light as he
holds the Liberty Bell in one hand and the Ten Commandments in the
other, as racist carictures of minorities gather at his feet. The
banner at the bottom of the image says, “It is our holy duty to
guard against the foreign hordes.” There’s no indication that the
image was posted ironically or that the poster understood that the
game does not endorse the sentiments portrayed in the mural.
After
criticism broke, the group apparently took the image down or changed
the privacy settings on its page.
While
the image seems inflammatory, it’s in line with the rest of the
material on the group’s Facebook page. The group has posted images
depicting
Obama as Hitler, misquoting
Winston
Churchill comparing
Islam to rabies,
and promoting
a book that accuses President
Lyndon Johnson as having murdered President John F. Kennedy.
Game
developer Ken Levine, one of the founders of Irrational Games, the
company that produced Bioshock Infinite, offered
a curt response on twitter when
the post was brought to his attention. “It takes a village…village
idiot,” Levine tweeted.
...................................................................................................................................................................
No comments:
Post a Comment