NPR gets hammered for saying Florida license plates with the Gadsden flag symbolize a 'dangerous far-right extremist ideology'



A "Don't Tread on Me" license plate was introduced late last month. The new license plate features the Gadsden flag – a popular resistance symbol that Americans flew during the Revolutionary War. However, NPR warns that the Revolutionary-era flag symbolizes a "dangerous far-right extremist ideology." The notion that a license plate with a Revolutionary War-era symbol of Americans was quickly lampooned on Twitter.

On July 30, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis unveiled the Gadsden flag license plate featuring a black coiled rattlesnake over a yellow background and the words: "Don't Tread on Me."

"The free state of Florida has a new license plate for pre-order that benefits the Florida Veterans Foundation and sends a clear message to out-of-state cars, 'Don’t Tread on Me' or Florida," DeSantis wrote on Twitter.

\u201chttps://t.co/ID8qlU1nJp\u201d
— Ron DeSantis (@Ron DeSantis) 1659189602

Florida offers 149 specialty license plates, plus 31 potential license plate ideas that require 3,000 vehicle tags to be pre-ordered for them to be approved for production. In less than two weeks, the Gadsden flag license plate has reached more than half the total needed for it to be produced.

For every Gadsden flag license plate sold, $25 will reportedly go to the Florida Veterans Foundation – an organization for "Florida veterans and their families by providing direct services and partnering with state and local governments, veteran service organizations, and educational institutions to improve their physical, financial, mental, emotional, and social well-being."

The choice of the Gadsden flag for the fundraising license plate was made in 2019.

Last week, Newsweek claimed, "Much like the Confederate flag, the Gadsden flag is accused of harboring racial connotations, seeing as its designer owned and traded black slaves."

A spokesperson for DeSantis told Newsweek, "From a historical perspective, the Gadsden flag was used during the American Revolution by colonists fighting for freedom from the oppressive big government of the English king. That spirit has guided America to this day, and Governor DeSantis likewise believes that freedom is a worthy pursuit and viable alternative to heavy-handed government."

The statement added, "Many Floridians celebrate Florida as the vanguard of freedom, and countless others have moved here from across the country to live under a state government that enshrines freedom in its decision making."

NPR dedicated an entire article to the specialty license plate – which it characterized as a "far-right" symbol.

The NPR author did concede that other states such as Kansas, Missouri, and Virginia have "similar plates" available.

The article also noted that the flag was an anti-British and anti-colonial symbol created by South Carolina political Christopher Gadsden during the Revolutionary War.

However, the article stated, "The imagery of the Revolutionary War-era Gadsden flag dates to Benjamin Franklin but has, for many, come to symbolize a far-right extremist ideology and the 'Stop the Steal' movement that sought to overturn the 2020 presidential election results."

NPR cited a member of the left-leaning Southern Poverty Law Center – who claimed that the Gadsden flag has been used for some "really awful" causes, including the Jan. 6 riot.

The official NPR Twitter account posted the article with the description: "Gov. Ron DeSantis said a new Florida license plate featuring the Revolutionary War-era Gadsden flag sends a 'clear message to out-of-state cars.' Critics say it symbolizes a dangerous far-right extremist ideology."

Twitter reactions to the NPR article widely mocked the idea that a Revolutionary War-era symbol was "dangerous."

BlazeTV contributor Jill Savage: "Imagine being such a snowflake that a license plate scares you."

Hudson Institute senior fellow Rebeccah Heinrichs: "Freedom is 'far right' now. Wild stuff."

YouTube personality Tim Pool: "They refer to our history as dangerous far right extremism. A brain slug is taking over our country."

Defense of Freedom Institute spokesperson Angela Morabito: "I am begging you to read a history book."

Journalist Jim Treacher: "The American Revolution is dangerous."

Claremont Institute fellow Jarrett Stepman: "The message of the Gadsden flag is dangerous if you're in league with tyrants looking to do some treading. I guess NPR is covering news it thinks is the most relevant to its audience."

U.S. Air Force combat veteran Col. Rob Maness: "Shut up you un-American communists – I have it on my truck twice."

Heritage Foundation communications director John Cooper: "I don't use the term 'snowflake' too often, but, if you're triggered by the Gadsden flag..."

Media critic Stephen L. Miller: "NPR refused to cover the Hunter Biden story because it said it wasn't newsworthy. Here they are up in arms over a license plate."

'Don't Tread on Me' image considered 'racial harassment'? Catholic school allegedly orders conservative students to nix Gadsden flag



Conservative students at a Catholic high school in California said the administration ordered them to remove the image of the Gadsden flag from a promotional video as the flag could be considered "racial harassment," Young America's Foundation reported.

What are the details?

The organization said it obtained an email from Chris Walter — Loyola High School's director of student activities — to a conservative student that said "you will have to remove the Don't Tread on Me image" and cited an Equal Employment Opportunity Commission case.

YAF said Walter claimed the EEOC ruled that displaying the Gadsden flag in the workplace "could be considered racial harassment, depending on the circumstances" — and the organization said such a claim is "blatantly false."

More from Young America's Foundation:

The EEOC case he is citing clearly states that "it would have been premature and inappropriate for EEOC to determine, one way or the other, the merits of the U.S. Postal Service's argument that the Gadsden Flag and its slogan do not have any racial connotations whatsoever," and that "EEOC's decision simply ordered the agency – the U.S. Postal Service – to investigate the allegations. EEOC's decision made no factual or legal determination on whether discrimination actually occurred."

YAF said it reached out to Loyola High School but did not receive a response in time for publication.

History teachers there ought to know that the symbol on the flag was created by Christopher Gadsden — a general in the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War — and gained favor among colonists who wanted independence from Great Britain.

What did the student in question have to say?

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the student who reported the alleged incident to YAF's Campus Bias Tip Line told the organization that the "Don't Tread on Me" crackdown is frustrating.

"This is just a small example of the different struggles conservative students go through while in school," the student told YAF. "Students should have the freedom to express their beliefs and values in a school environment without having to fear the repercussion that can arise."

YAF went further and characterized the mandate to the conservative students as "bullying" in an effort to "silence speech" that isn't in line with what the school says is acceptable.