In the six months since the insurrection that took place at the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, there have been countless lies told by the right wing about the events and intent of that day, but perhaps the biggest is that the shooting of Ashli Babbitt as she attempted to breach the Speakerâs Lobby through a smashed window somehow rendered the military veteran turned QAnon conspiracist a martyr.
To be sure, Babbittâs death was senselessâsenseless because it was in service to the irrational, inane, yet persistent lie that Donald Trump is somehow the duly elected president of the United States. (Spoiler alert: Heâs not.) However, that hasnât stopped fellow conspiracists from praising Babbitt as a âpatriotââand now, American retailers seeking to profit from the third-party retailer market are getting caught in the crosshairs.
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As the nation and media reflected on the insurrection and ongoing investigation on Tuesday, Aaron Rupar, associate editor of politics & policy at Vox made another discovery at two of the countryâs most recognizable retail brands. Sears and Kmart, both American big box pioneers now under the same ownership, were each selling âAshli Babbitt âAmerican Patriotââ t-shirts in their online marketplaces.
âAshli Babbitt, a four tour Air Force hero was killed defending liberty,â the itemâs description read, adding: âHonor her today with our Ashli Babbitt American [Patriot t-shirt].â
To be clear, the items were created and posted by a third-party seller, and similar items are available throughout the internet. However, as more and more retailers have been called to account for their political affiliations in the wake of the Capitol riots, the behavior of the third-party sellers they host on their platforms has become an increased liability. As of 2016, Sears Holdings had donated to both parties, but called out by Rupar on Twitter on Tuesday, the company quickly responded, claiming to have removed the Babbitt-branded merchandise from both its website and Kmartâs. (A Wednesday morning search of both platforms seemed to confirm this.)
Nevertheless, as the culture war continues to escalate, third-party sellers will likely prove a consistent problem which require increasingly extensive (and expensive) monitoring, as proven last week when Walmart was sued by Kanye West for selling third-party knockoffs of his Yeezy Foam Runners. However, these marketplacesâwhich host millions of itemsâhave already proven a profitable enough model for most retailers to consider them well worth the trouble.
Case in point? Almost a full day after Ruparâs callout caused Sears and Kmart to trend for hours on Twitter, as of Wednesday morning when I began this post, the worldâs biggest retailer, Amazon, still had Babbitt merch for sale from a third-party seller named Huskite. This time, the âAshli Babbitt âAmerican Patriotââ t-shirt ironically featured art in the style of Shepard Faireyâs iconic Obama âHopeâ poster. Perhaps the worldâs biggest marketplace was taking its chances, but itâs clearly since gotten the memo; the t-shirt has been pulled from the site within the past hour.
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