Posted on 08/24/2014 5:59:48 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
The Internet is proving to be a lifeline for those seeking information about the ongoing investigation into the officer-involved fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager in an otherwise quiet suburban Missouri town.
Unfortunately, the Internet is also serving as a reminder that will always be those who seek to make a dollar off the chaos and misfortune of others.
The online merchant TshirtLegend is selling a Justice for Mike Brown t-shirt alongside other shirts that read Lets Get Nashty and I Want to Believe on the online marketplace Etsy.
Some online merchants have begun selling T-shirts and other merchandise in an apparent attempt to financially benefit from the shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, whose death has sparked widespread civil unrest in the Missouri town of Ferguson since Aug. 9.
At least nine separate merchants on two online marketplaces are selling apparel emblazoned with the rallying cries of protesters in Ferguson, including Hands Up, Dont shoot and Justice for Mike Brown.
Almost all of the merchants appear to be in the print screen business many sell T-shirts, hoodies and other apparel printed with other phrases, cartoon characters and the logos of major league athletic teams. The apparel sells for anywhere between $5 for buttons to $30 for a hoodie (average price of a shirt: $18).
Of the nine merchants reviewed by TheBlot Magazine, only one appears to be donating a portion of sales to charity: The maker of a Hands Up, Dont Shoot short-sleeved t-shirt priced at $16.99 pledges to donate 10 percent of proceeds to the National Urban League, a socioeconomic charity benefitting the African-American community.
The seller of a similar Hands Up T-shirt on Etsy wrote that the apparel was being sold at cost. The price listed was $8.50.
Other merchants wrote messages of support to the Brown family and the community of Ferguson, but offered no inclination that they were selling the apparel at cost or donating any portion of money earned to charity.
Two years ago, merchants also capitalized on the death of Trayvon Martin, an unarmed black teenager who was shot by 28-year-old George Zimmerman at an apartment complex in Florida. At a rally in support of Martin, a Huffington Post reporter noted that they saw saw piles of merchandise for sale with Martins face on it being sold by individuals who did not appear to be affiliated with Martins family.
One month after the shooting, Martins mother Sybrina Fulton filed a trademark on her sons name as well as the rally cry Justice for Trayvon Martin. While some saw Fultons trademark as an attempt to capitalize on her sons image, a patent attorney told the Huffington Post that Fulton was likely driven by a desire to curb potentially negative uses of her sons name.
If you trademark the name, thats going to prevent others from doing it and potentially capitalizing on it in a negative way or a different way than you want, attorney Victor Baranowski told the website. In a case like this, theres gonna be others who would want to. So does she want to let somebody else do something with her sons name or does she want it for herself?
TheBlot searched for the terms Hands Up, Dont Shoot and Mike Brown in an online database maintained by the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office on Tuesday. So far, it does not appear anyone has attempted to trademark the words.
We should do Conservative versions:
Michael Brown: “No Cigars, No beatdown”
Michael Brown: “Next time, gimme the gun, cop bitch”
LOL!
Why, I didn’t know there was more than ONE ‘ground’.
Huh!
At his side he needed more than one?
Mike Brown “bobbleheads” would seem to be appropriate!
LOL!
Live like a thug, die like a thug.
Capitalism always wins.
I love it.
Good one Cripp!!!!!!!!
Did his parents trademark his name like Trayvon’s mama did?
Let the scams and T-shirt sales begin.
Where’s my “Close... but No Cigar” t-shirt?
NO TRUTH
NO JUSTICE
Dibs on “Gentle Giant”.
Why are they asking for justice for Brown. He got exactly the justice he deserved.
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