Native American Activists Call Cops on Shop Owner During MLK Jr. Day Celebrations
By Tyler Hayden
As the group walked down the street to their cars on Monday after participating in the downtown march, they passed Moon River--a novelty clothing store that sells t-shirts often stenciled with off-color jokes and images-and spotted a shirt that read “My Indian Name is Runs with Beer.”
According to a letter of complaint written by AIM representative Corine Fairbanks to Downtown Businesses Organization Executive Director Bill Collyer, the shirt’s public display not only mocked the “horrific effect” alcohol has had on indigenous people but also made fun of sacred naming ceremonies. “[Alcohol abuse] is not something to be celebrated, much less be used as a marketing gimmick or to find ways to profit from,” the letter reads.
Fairbanks said she and the other members of the group confronted the store’s employee--“an Asian lady (who refused to give me her name),” Fairbanks noted--and demanded she remove the t-shirt from display, stop selling it altogether, and make a formal, written apology to all Santa Barbara County Native Americans. Until then, Fairbanks promised she and her group would spread the word that Moon River is “a store that promotes racism.” The clerk refused, telling Fairbanks and the others there is no law against selling the shirt and that, if they didn’t like it up on the wall, they could buy it themselves. She then asked them to leave.
At this point AIM members called the police but “still the employee refused to acknowledge our complaint,” Fairbanks wrote in her letter. “Mind you,” she went on, “this dialog took place on MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY! What would Dr. King say?” Police Department spokesperson Lt. Paul McCaffrey confirmed officers spent about 20 minutes at the store talking to both parties. No report was filed. The Independent was not able to reach the store owner for comment.
For more t-shirt controversies, see Zazzle's "Indian Name" T-Shirts and Duluth Shop Sells "Drunk Indian" Shirts.
Moon River's owner apologizes and agrees not to sell the shirts anymore: "We are not fluent with English, and we clearly did not understand what the t-shirt was suggesting."
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