Twitter / @sophieming_

A South Carolina couple came under fire this week for selling rubble from Charleston protests as jewelry named after victims of police brutality.

The couple, Paul Chelmis and Jing Wen of Shan Shui Studio, came up with the idea after watching footage of the George Floyd Protests. "I kind of saw it as a natural reaction," Chelmis told the Post and Courier about the rioting that occurred. "Like yeah, of course this is the result of our inattention. Instead of focusing on how terrible these people are who are ‘rioting,’ we should focus on what we should do to prevent it from happening in the future."

The pair came up with the idea for a jewelry collection. Dubbed "Wear Their Names," it featured debris turned into earrings and necklaces and were given names such as the Breonna, the Trayvon, the Elijah, etc. Each item cost between $45 and $500, and all proceeds were reportedly going to the Black Lives Matter cause.

The sale caught the attention of Twitter user @sophieming_, leading to a wave of backlash against the idea.

"Nonblack people itching to profit off of black people’s deaths," wrote one Twitter user. "At it's worse this could be insidious capitalization and reinforcement of performative concern using 'I didn't know better' as a shield," wrote another.

The pair quickly took down their website and pulled the items from their store after the backlash hit, issuing an apology.

"Just want to say we’ve heard the feedback from the community loud and clear and are taking it seriously. So sorry to those we offended or harmed," they wrote. "Though we only wanted to honor the victim’s names and retell their story, we see now that using those names was inappropriate and in poor taste. The two of us started this project from a place of creativity and in good faith, with a sense of duty to do our part and help the movement by bringing funds and awareness -- and through all the backlash we want to keep sight of that duty and move forward on the best path."

The couple has offered to fulfill any orders placed before they removed the item and issue refunds and returns to those who want them.


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Comments 7 total

Paradoxed

Adam, is it that hard to add the word "alleged" when describing a fairly long list of people who were killed by police being described as police brutality? I am old enough to remember when the left used to be able to distinguish between an actual tragic and undeserved death, and violent criminals getting appropriate lawful force. You throw George Floyd on one end and try equating cases like Michael Brown or Jacob Blake on the other, and you get the bullshit youre seeing now with violent criminals who fully deserved what they got being given full celebrity status.

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Kenetic Kups

Fucking peak neoliberalism
protesting is sold as a fucking souvenir for the upper class

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ConspiracyNut

Even worse: rioting as souvenir.

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Lone K. (Echoid)

Nothing makes me angrier than profiteering over tragedy. Scum.

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Maxilor64

Profiting off the deaths of others?

It's another beautiful day in the neighborhood I see.

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Stuff Beater of wife

I wonder what would have happened if the couple decided to double down. I mean, if they tried to push it further (more or less in bad faith) and claim that it's all for the sake of the movement and how it's empowering for black americans.

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