City
Epaper

Facebook takes down Trump campaign ads for violating policies against 'organised hate'

By ANI | Published: June 19, 2020 2:41 AM

Facebook on Thursday (local time) deactivated dozens of advertisements placed by US President Donald Trump's re-election campaign, including a symbol once used by the Nazis to designate political prisoners in concentration camps, which the company said breached its policies against organised hate.

Open in App

Facebook on Thursday (local time) deactivated dozens of advertisements placed by US President Donald Trump's re-election campaign, including a symbol once used by the Nazis to designate political prisoners in concentration camps, which the company said breached its policies against orgsed hate.

The ads, which attacked what the Trump campaign described as "Dangerous MOBS of far-left groups," featured an upside-down triangle, CNN reported.

The Anti-Defamation League said on Thursday that the triangle "is practically identical to that used by the Nazi regime to classify political prisoners in concentration camps."

"We removed these posts and ads for violating our policy against orgzed hate. Our policy prohibits using a banned hate group's symbol to identify political prisoners without the context that condemns or discusses the symbol," Andy Stone, a Facebook spokesperson, told CNN Business.

The ads targeted the far left group Antifa, calling on Trump supporters to back the President's calls to designate the group a terrorist orgzation.

Responding to criticism of the ad earlier on Thursday, the Trump campaign claimed the red triangle was "a symbol widely used by Antifa."

According to Facebook's political ad library, a set of ads featuring the offending symbol began running on Wednesday on Trump's main Facebook page, the "Team Trump" campaign page, and Vice-President Mike Pence's Facebook page.

The paid ad was seen almost one million times in Facebook users' feeds on Trump's page alone, according to data from Facebook.

In a statement, Tim Murtaugh, director of communications for the Trump campaign, insisted that the red triangle is a "symbol used by Antifa".

The campaign pointed to several links of t-shirt, sticker, and magnet websites that sell merchandise with the symbol.

Murtaugh added, "We would note that Facebook still has an inverted red triangle emoji in use, which looks exactly the same, so it's curious that they would target only this ad."

Facebook has long prohibited hate speech and symbolism on its platform, but the company has faced blowback at times for being too permissive. In this case, the company's move against the Trump ads came after a concerted push, including by the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.

The company's CEO Mark Zuckerberg, in a lengthy post cited by The Washington Post this month defending his handling of the president's use of his platform, said he worried about an approach "leading us to editorialize on content we don't like even if it doesn't violate our policies."

Yet in a very similar move, Twitter last month applied a label fact-checking the president's misleading tweets about mail-in ballots, in the midst of demonstrations over the killing of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis, that looting could lead to "shooting."

( With inputs from ANI )

Tags: NazismAndy stoneTim murtaughusFacebookMinneapolis
Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTornado in US: Twisters Tear Across America's Heartland, Leaving Catastrophic Destruction in Many States; Disturbing Visuals Emerge

HealthBird Flu in US Cows: WHO Warns 'Extremely High' Mortality Rate in Humans As H5N1 Spreads to Milk

EntertainmentTaylor Swift's New Album 'The Tortured Poets Department' Breaks Records with Over 55.2 Crore First-Day Streams

InternationalAmid Israel-Iran Tensions, Biden Administration Weighs Sending USD 1 Billion More in Weapons to Israel: Report

InternationalWATCH: Joe Biden Makes Another Gaffe, Confuses Israeli City With Rafah in Gaza, Says 'Don’t Move on Haifa'

International Realted Stories

InternationalADB operations reach USD23.6 billion in 2023, achieve record climate finance of USD9.8 billion

International"We're looking them to act, if they don't, we will," US warns China over its support for Russia

InternationalFormer President Hamid Karzai says education of girls "vital issue" for Afghanistan

InternationalFour power plants hit in massive Russian overnight attacks on Ukraine

InternationalPakistan: Federal government proposed to impose tax on solar panel users