Clothing company yanks rainbow swastika T-shirt

Jewish man finds swastika on shorts at Goodwill store

NEW YORK -- An apparel company that lets people design their own clothes has removed a rainbow swastika T-shirt from its site amid fierce criticism.

Teespring said it is adding layers of oversight to prevent people from offering offensive designs for sale. The company allows anyone to post a T-shirt design, and if it sells Teespring will produce it. The designer keeps a portion of the sales.

After images of the shirt circulated on social media, Jewish groups and others pushed for a boycott of the site. Arsen Ostrovksy, executive director of the Israeli-Jewish Congress, in a tweet called the shirt "obscene" and "disgusting."

Teespring, which is owned by KA Design, says it didn't sell any of the design and didn't profit from it. In a video on its Facebook page, KA Design said the swastika is thousands of years old and is a symbol of peace, love, life and other ideas. But the Nazi party corrupted that symbol, the company added.

"[T]hey stigmatized the swastika forever. They won. They limited our freedom. Or maybe not? The swastika is coming back," the video said.

Teespring says it typically uses keyword detection, image recognition and human reviews to keep offensive designs out, but will add layers of review. Other shirts featuring swastikas and images of Adolf Hitler were still on the site Monday afternoon, but were removed by Tuesday.

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