How Facebook accidentally announced war in the Philippines
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To celebrate Independence Day in the Philippines on June 12, Facebook posted a shareable button that featured three people and the Filipino flag with the message: 鈥淗appy Independence Day! Here鈥檚 to all of the Philippines鈥 health, happiness and prosperity.鈥
But the social media giant ran into a major snafu: They featured the聽Philippine flag upside down.
This might not be a big deal in some countries, but in the Philippines, an inverted flag featuring the red portion of the flag over the blue means that the country is at war.聽
鈥, and we鈥檙e sorry,鈥 Facebook said in a statement. 鈥淲e care deeply about the community in the Philippines and, in an attempt to connect people on Independence Day, we made a mistake.鈥澛
With , the country ranks ninth in the world for the social media site. And this means that there were many Filipinos ready to call out Facebook鈥檚 mistake:聽
But given the current state of聽Philippine politics, some Facebook users originally assumed the flag inversion was intentional.
"Kamay na bakal,"聽or iron fist, is the rallying cry of incoming president Rodrigo Duterte who campaigned on a message of 鈥渁ny means possible鈥 to eradicate crime, drugs, and corruption in the archipelago nation. Mr. Duterte has told citizens it is fine for them , a call to vigilantism that some equate to fomenting civil war.
鈥淥h, that wrong orientation of the Philippine flag courtesy of Facebook! What an appropriate mistake, because read your timelines: it seems we are at war anyway, at least at war against ourselves, ,鈥 Filipino activist Jonas Bagas wrote on his profile Sunday. 鈥淭he next government has not yet assumed office, but it has already waged war against freedom of the press鈥. And, on top of that, we will soon have shoot-to-kill orders and bounties to eradicate the scums that plague our timelines and our streets, those who are offending the cult of kamay na bakal.鈥澛
Famed for making jokes about rape, swearing offensively at rallies, and endorsing a death squad, president-elect Duterte has been nicknamed the 鈥淭rump of the East鈥 and "The Punisher." During Duterte鈥檚 22 years as mayor of Davao City, extrajudicial death squads reportedly killed 1,000 people and Duterte himself has admitted to killing 鈥渁bout three people.鈥澛
Facebook, however, assures users that the flag inversion was a genuine mistake, and in this blunder the social media site is not alone.
In 2010, the United States apologized after inverting the聽Philippine flag during a meeting between President Barack Obama and Southeast Asian leaders. And then a few years later in 2013 Seattle Seahawks wide receiver Doug Baldwin carried the Philippine flag upside down before the start of a game with the Minnesota Vikings, in the well-meaning effort of raising funds for victims of Typhoon Haiyan.