removed a cluster of Trump campaign ads Thursday for violating its rules against imagery associated with banned hate groups. The campaign’s attacked antifa, the decentralized anti-fascist movement and a frequent target of the president’s political attacks, with imagery of an upside-down red triangle—a well-documented symbol
worn by Nazi political prisoners held in concentration camps.
The Trump campaign responded to criticisms from progressive watchdog
Media Matters for America
on Twitter, claiming that the symbol is both an emoji and “a symbol widely used by Antifa.” While the red triangle symbol is indeed an emoji, the latter claim isn’t true. Antifa’s far more common symbols include three downward arrows
and a red and black flag
.
“It is not in the ADL’s Hate Symbols Database,” the campaign tweeted.
This is an emoji.🔻
It's also a symbol widely used by Antifa. It was used in an ad about Antifa.
It is not in the ADL's Hate Symbols Database.
pic.twitter.com/V4fK8QWHKD
Trump War Room – Text TRUMP to 88022 get the APP (@TrumpWarRoom)
June 18, 2020
Facebook appears to disagree. “We removed these posts and ads for violating our policy against organized hate,” a Facebook spokesperson said in a statement provided to TechCrunch. “Our policy prohibits using a banned hate group’s symbol to identify political prisoners without the context that condemns or discusses the symbol.”
Facebook took down both the ads and the campaign’s organic posts containing the symbol, citing its
policy
against symbols associated with hate organizations.