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Racial slur or trademark? US Supreme Court rules Asian-American band can call itself The Slants

Ruling is expected to help the Washington Redskins in their legal fight over the team name

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The Asian-American rock band called The Slants. The Supreme Court struck down part of a law that bans offensive trademarks in a ruling that is expected to help the Washington Redskins in their legal fight over the team name. Photo: AP
Agencies

The United States Supreme Court extended trademark protection to words and names that may be offensive, ruling that the First Amendment right to free speech allows an Asian-American band to call itself The Slants.

The ruling is expected to benefit other organisations whose monikers have caused controversy, notably the Washington Redskins football team which has long faced protests by Native American activists who see the name as racist.

The Supreme Court decided unanimously that the US Patent and Trademark Office could not refuse the Portland, Oregon-based band the right to trademark the name The Slants, generally seen as a racial slur on Asians but which the group’s founder, Simon Tam, had said was an act of “reappropriation.”

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Tam likened the use of the word to African Americans using the highly charged racist term “nigger” in their music.

Ken Shima of the band The Slants. Photo: The Washington Post
Ken Shima of the band The Slants. Photo: The Washington Post
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“After an excruciating legal battle that has spanned nearly eight years, we’re beyond humbled and thrilled to have won this case at the Supreme Court,” Tam said in a statement.
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