this post was submitted on 25 Feb 2026
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U.S. Rep. Al Green was booted from President Donald Trump's State of the Union address Tuesday night after waving a sign reading, "Black People Aren't Apes!" as the president made his entrance down the aisle.

The Houston Democrat stood near the front of the chamber holding the sign above his head as Trump greeted lawmakers and shook hands. Gasps and boos quickly spread across the room as members on both sides reacted to the sudden disruption.

Fellow Texan Troy Nehls appeared to exchange heated words with Green before throwing his hands up and returning to his seat. Within moments, the sergeant-at-arms moved in.

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[–] pomegranatefern@sh.itjust.works 6 points 1 day ago (2 children)

This feels like a "read the room" kind of comment.

All humans are biologically considered animals, and there are many times when I feel that viewing human behavior through that lens genuinely encourages compassion and understanding, and yet: there is a long history of people being called "animals" as a dehumanizing measure in order to justify doing the same horrible things to them that humans routinely do to non-human animals. This is particularly true for historically marginalized groups.

Likewise, there is a long, racist history of white people calling Black people "apes" or "monkeys" to justify racist systems and treat Black people the way they view monkeys and non-human apes, as resembling humans but not fully human.

This representative is specifically responding to a video shared by Trump, who has a long history of racist behavior, in which the Obamas were depicted as distinctly non-human apes (I cannot recall the specific ape and cannot readily look it up. Gorillas, I think?), echoing that racist trope.

When someone responds to Trump trafficking in racist tropes with "Black people aren't apes," they are not getting into the nitty gritty of taxonomical clades, they're countering that trope. "Well, actually"-ing about humans technically being apes is undercutting the focus on countering Trump's racism. Time and place.

[–] moody@lemmings.world 2 points 1 day ago

It wasn't meant as a serious statement, more so like another commenter put it, we're not not apes.

I know what he meant, and it's why I specifically mentioned that it's not a question of race.

[–] Redditmodstouchgrass@lemmy.zip 1 points 23 hours ago

Yeah, but it feels weird for the pro science party to be doing this...