Website Removes Racist 'Save A Dog, Eat A Chinese' T-Shirts

Spreadshirt allows users to design their own shirts -- even racist ones, apparently.

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?). At their very worst, they’re downright racist.

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 Spreadshirt users identified as Quentin1984 and Monigote thought it would be a good idea to create shirts with catchphrases that are offensive to Chinese people, according to Yomfyomf.com, a website that explores issues and controversies surrounding Asian 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), quite a few people were disappointed with the company for allowing the offensive shirts to be sold.

Dog meat is consumed in some parts of China, but the practice is not as widespread as stereotypes may suggest. 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, and nearly 70 percent have never eaten dog meat.

Attitudes in China toward the consumption of shark appear headed in a similar direction. In 2013, consumption of shark fin soup was down by 50 percent to 70 percent from two years earlier, according to Peter Knights, executive director of San Francisco-based animal welfare group WildAid. This year, Air China Cargo became the first mainland Chinese carrier to ban transportation of shark fin, according to the South China Morning Post.

“It is a myth that people in Asian don’t care about wildlife,” Knights told The Washington Post in 2013. “Consumption is based on ignorance rather than malice.” 

T-shirts can advocate animal rights without using xenophobic insults and vilifying all Chinese people for practices that are increasingly uncommon.

“What I also find troubling about issues like this is how they insidiously bring out the xenophobe in otherwise liberal people on both sides of the argument,” philosopher Julian Baggini wrote of controversy surrounding China’s Yulin dog meat festival in an op-ed for CNN in 2016.

The controversial T-shirts appeared to have been removed from Spreadshirt’s website by Tuesday afternoon. However, The Huffington Post spotted other shirts from various designers that some would consider offensive and racist. (A few are shown below.)

Spreadshirt representatives didn’t immediately answer a request for comment.

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Before You Go

China's 'Left Behind' Children
(01 of14)
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Luo Lie, 5, uses chalk to draw a picture on a wooden door of the family home. In the case of the Luo grandparents, who are elderly and poor, they do what they can to meet the basic needs of four children between the ages of 5 and 11. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(02 of14)
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Luo Hongniu, 8, holds flowers she picked while doing chores. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(03 of14)
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Luo Hongniu, 8, hangs laundry after washing clothes with her siblings. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(04 of14)
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Luo Hongni, 11, collapses from the weight as she carries flowers while doing chores in the fields. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(05 of14)
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Grandfather Luo Yingtao, 64, carries his grandson Luo Lie, 5, to bed at the family house. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(06 of14)
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Luo Hongni, 11, throws a stone as she tends to one of the family's cows. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(07 of14)
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Luo Hangni, 11, right, does exercises with classmates at a local school. Local schools, educators and community charities often try to the fill the gaps of being without a mother and father. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(08 of14)
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Luo Lie, 5, right, does eye exercises with classmates. Many children feel the absence of interaction with their mother and/or father, creating a generation of lonely kids who experts worry may be prone to anxiety, poor school performance, and depression. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(09 of14)
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Like millions of Chinese children, the four Luo siblings are being raised by their grandparents in rural China as their parents left to find work in urban areas. Joining parents in the city is not usually an option, as China's hukou documentation system dictates that education and health care are accessible only in the district where a child is born and registered. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(10 of14)
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Luo Gan, 10, stays warm by a fire at the family house. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(11 of14)
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Luo Hongniu, 8, leans on hay bales while doing chores. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(12 of14)
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Luo Hongni, 11, waits outside her class at a local school. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(13 of14)
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Luo Hongni, 11, top and sister Luo Hongniu, 8, play in hay bales. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)
(14 of14)
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Luo Lie, 5, walks home from school. China's government says it is making child welfare a national priority, and will work to improve support to 'left behind' children after launching its first-ever national census to assess the problem. (credit:Kevin Frayer via Getty Images)

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