Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Monigote. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Monigote. Afficher tous les articles

mardi 14 mars 2017

Moral Cannibalism: Eating Chinese to Save the World

Unbending: German store says it'll keep selling ecological 'Save a dog, eat a Chinese' shirt
By Yvette Tan

A German online retailer is facing a stream of backlash from Chinese after several t-shirts with ecological slogans were made available for sale on its website.
Shirts containing the phrase "Save a dog, eat a Chinese" and "Save a shark, eat a Chinese" were featured on Spreadshirt.
The website allows users to create their own t-shirt designs, which can then be sold on the same platform.
Two users named as Quentin1984 and Monigote appear to be behind the t-shirt design.
Despite enraged Chinese protests, the t-shirts are still available for sale on Spreadshirt's website, with the company saying that they "have decided, based on our open platform principle, to keep the two designs in question."
The Chinese embassy in Germany has condemned the decision to keep the shirts, calling for the retailer to apologise and to stop the sale of the shirts.
As of Monday, both t-shirts are still available on Spreadshirt's website.
Dog meat is part of Chinese culinary culture and sharks fin, on the other hand, is considered a delicacy, although its popularity has somewhat declined in recent years. 
Cannibalistic cool

mercredi 8 mars 2017

Ecological Cannibalism: 'Save A Dog, Eat A Chinese'

Spreadshirt.com allows users to design their own shirts -- even ecological ones, apparently.
By Carla Herreria

For some weird reason, ironic graphic T-shirts are a persistent part of fashion.
Sometimes they’re adorable (here’s a pickle with a smiley face). 
Other times they’re confusing (”I’m busy rn.” Really?). 
Such is the case with two T-shirt designs recently pulled from Spreadshirt.com, a website that lets users design and sell their own T-shirts.

Two smart Spreadshirt users identified as Quentin1984 and Monigote thought it would be a good idea to create shirts with catchphrases that are not very funny to Chinese, according to Yomfyomf.com, a website that explores issues and controversies surrounding Sino-American communities.
“Save a dog, eat a Chinese,” read one shirt. 
“Save a shark, eat a Chinese,” read the other.
The shirts were for sale on Spreashirt’s website as early as last week. 
Although Spreadshirt employees don’t design T-shirts for sale on the site (users and customers do), some Chinese were disappointed with the company for allowing the shirts to be sold.

Radical solution: eating a Chinese for animal protection

Dog meat is daily consumed in China. 
But according to a 2016 Humane Society International poll, 62 percent of people in China think that eating dog damages the country’s reputation, 52 percent want to ban China’s dog meat trade.
Attitudes in China toward the consumption of shark appear headed in a similar direction. 
Spreadshirt representatives didn’t immediately answer a request for comment.