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Image via Evan El-Amin / Shutterstock.com and Shutterstock

Trump’s Team Proclaims Trademark Misuse On Cartoon Of Him Serving Fans Clorox

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US president Donald Trump’s suggestion to ingest disinfectant as a cure to coronavirus was natural fodder for an avalanche of memes. It was a remark even Pulitzer-winning cartoonist Nick Anderson couldn’t resist caricaturing.
In his drawing titled The Trump Cult, Anderson portrays POTUS serving purple liquid to a group of zealous MAGA hat-wearing fans out of a vat. The words, “Kool-Aid” and “chloroquine,” are canceled out on the container and are replaced with “Clorox.”
Aside from being in reference to Trump’s infamous remark, the image brings to mind the 1978 crime by cult leader Jim Jones who had poisoned over 900 people with cyanide-laced Kool-Aid.
The artist uploaded his cartoon on online print-on-demand retailer Redbubble to be sold on stickers, posters, face masks, mugs, and more, on 17 May. However, it was taken down by the site less than 24 hours later, along with an email to Anderson noting that someone had filed a complaint against the work.
“We’re sorry, but we had to remove some of your artwork from the Redbubble marketplace because it may contain material that violates someone’s rights,” stated Redbubble’s message, which was obtained by the Daily Cartoonist.

Redbubble said it had investigated and found the material pointed out by the “owner of the rights,” who was labeled as “Donald J. Trump for President, Inc.”
Anderson shared on the Daily Kos that he could only assume that Trump’s re-election campaign team was citing his depiction of MAGA hats as trademark infringement, which he thought was “absurd” since the First Amendment protects satire and caricature.
The illustrator filed an appeal but heard back from Redbubble that the artwork would not be republished on the site.
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He then alerted the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund (CBLDF), a nonprofit that handles legal disputes on behalf of cartoonists, of the dispute, who wrote to Redbubble detailing Anderson’s First Amendment rights and the freedom-of-speech stance that Trump so often claims to endorse.
The cartoon was finally reinstated on 27 May, and Redbubble replied that it wanted to “respect IP rights and freedom of speech, but we sometimes make mistakes, as we did here.”
Charles Browenstein, executive director of CBLDF, responded that the nonprofit hopes the website “will continue to assert the First Amendment rights they and their sellers are guaranteed by rejecting any similar censorship attempts.”

[via Business Insider, images via various sources]