BBC Homepage
  • Skip to content
  • Accessibility Help
  • Your account
  • Notifications
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • More menu
More menu
Search BBC
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
Close menu
BBC News
Menu
  • Home
  • InDepth
  • Israel-Gaza war
  • War in Ukraine
  • Climate
  • UK
  • World
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Culture
More
  • Tech
  • Science
  • Health
  • Family & Education
  • In Pictures
  • Newsbeat
  • BBC Verify
  • Disability
  • Trending

Getting racists sacked: #FreeSpeechStories

  • Published
    19 January 2015
  • comments
    592 Comments
Share page
About sharing
racists getting firedImage source, racists getting fired
ByBBC Trending
What's popular and why

Have you ever posted something you might regret, or found out with a sting just how public social media is?

Chris Rincon worked at a car wash in Houston, Texas, and he thought nothing of posting a link to a fake news article about President Obama's daughter being pregnant to Facebook. But while exchanging comments with his friends he used a highly offensive slur against black people - and it eventually cost him his job.

Rincon's post was shared to a Tumblr called "Racists Getting Fired (and Getting Racists Fired!), external".

Fans of the blog are encouraged to find and share incidents of racism online, expose those who've posted them, and then call and email the person's employer until they are sacked. According to the blog, over a dozen people have been fired or, in their words, "Gotten".

Rincon had been up most of the night playing video games when BBC Trending spoke to him. It's been a couple of weeks since he lost his job and he's still not back in work.

"I'm not going to sit here and deny that I didn't use the word," he said. "Because it's clear as day that I did use it."

"The fact that I was targeted specifically and individually really bothers me because I'm not the only person who has views in this aspect. It made me lose my job. I have a three-year-old kid that I'm trying to support … They're basing (their views of) a person off of one post instead of actually knowing the person," he said.

racists getting firedImage source, racists getting fired

Rincon owned up to making the comment but one woman exposed on the blog has claimed she was wrongly targeted - her lawyers told BBC Trending that she was set up by someone she knew, and that death threats had been made against her.

The person or people behind Racists Getting Fired did not respond to our requests for comment. However the blog does set out some rules. It states that the bloggers only use already publicly available information about the person, and only target people over 18. They also urge blog readers not to harass the individuals or their family members, and to only contact the employers of the alleged racists.

But when does this idea of online justice cross the line to harassment?

"The issue comes down to motivation," said Whitney Phillips, an expert in online behaviour at Humboldt State University in California. "What is the difference between a vigilante and a troll? The answer is what they think about what they're doing."

"The issue of anonymity really complicates our ability to wrap our heads around what we're seeing."

One vigilante who's not remaining anonymous is Logan Smith. He's 27, lives in North Carolina and runs the twitter handle @YesYoureRacist, external. The idea is pretty simple - Logan starts his day by searching on Twitter for the phrase "I'm not racist but..." and then retweets the comments that he deems offensive to his 55,000 followers.

He started the account to show that racism is alive online, but says it's become popular because of the often amusing juxtaposition of the phrase and a racist comment.

But is there something underhand about taking comments that were perhaps only meant for a handful of people to see, and repeating them to tens of thousands, even millions of people, across the world?

"I'm just a guy with a keyboard," Smith said, "but I think I've made some good calls and I'll just let it be up to other people on Twitter to decide. People need to understand that what they post on social media in a public forum, really is public."

Blog by India Rakusen

You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, external

All our stories are at bbc.com/trending

Top stories

  • Jenrick defends comment on not seeing 'another white face' in Handsworth

    • Published
      34 minutes ago
  • Live. 

    Israel marks 7 October attacks anniversary as Starmer tells students to avoid 'un-British' protests

    • 6390 viewing6.4k viewing
  • Jeremy Bowen: Two years on, will Israel and Hamas seize the chance to end the war?

    • Published
      4 hours ago

More to explore

  • I was fooled into paying £500 to be a model. Here's how to avoid my mistake

    Older woman with short blonde hair wearing a red top and white trousers posing for a photoshoot
  • Jeremy Bowen: Two years on, will Israel and Hamas seize the chance to end the war?

    Smoke rises after Israeli airstrikes targeted residential areas in the Gaza Strip, as seen from Israel near the border, on October 07, 2025
  • Rare October Harvest Moon rising Tuesday marks first supermoon of 2025

    • Attribution
      Weather
    A close up picture of a full moon on a black night sky
  • 'I deeply hurt people by moving to Saudi Arabia'

    • Attribution
      Sport
    Ashleigh Plumptre
  • Yet another French PM resigns, spelling yet more trouble for Macron

    A headshot of Macron looking serious
  • The footballer who cycles to work after being inspired by Wenger

    • Attribution
      Sport
    Arsene Wenger and Hector Bellerin
  • One iPhone led police to gang suspected of sending up to 40,000 stolen UK phones to China

    A CCTV image showing a black moped being driven along a pavement by two people wearing all black, snatching a mobile phone from a pedestrian walking along the pavement. One of the people on the moped can be seen holding the phone in their hand moments after snatching it, as the pedestrian recoils.
  • Asylum hotel provider makes £180m profit despite claims of inedible food and rationed loo paper

    Brightly coloured composite image featuring red, green and yellow. There are two young women, their backs to the camera, wheeling small suitcases on the left - and a photo of a plate of spaghetti with bright red tomato sauce on the right.
  • News Daily: Our flagship daily newsletter delivered to your inbox first thing, with all the latest headlines

    A promo promoting the News Daily newsletter - a graphic of an orange sphere with two concentric crescent shapes around it in a red-orange gradient, like a sound wave.
loading elsewhere stories

Most read

  1. 1

    Jenrick defends comment on not seeing 'another white face' in Handsworth

  2. 2

    Physics Nobel awarded to three scientists for work on quantum computing

  3. 3

    Man guilty of stalking TV presenter Myleene Klass

  4. 4

    One iPhone led police to gang suspected of sending up to 40,000 stolen UK phones to China

  5. 5

    Asylum hotel provider makes £180m profit despite claims of inedible food and rationed loo paper

  6. 6

    Pharmacies facing angry patients over Covid jab confusion

  7. 7

    Thieves snatch Bronze Age gold in four-minute museum heist

  8. 8

    Dwayne Johnson is philosophical over his film flop for The Smashing Machine

  9. 9

    Philpott accomplice who killed six in fire dies

  10. 10

    More holidaymakers using AI to plan trips

BBC News Services

  • On your mobile
  • On smart speakers
  • Get news alerts
  • Contact BBC News

Best of the BBC

  • The Bafta-winning Belfast police drama returns

    • Attribution
      iPlayer

    Added to Watchlist
    Blue Lights has been added to your iPlayer Watchlist.
    Blue Lights
  • Andy Zaltzman dissects the week's news

    • Attribution
      Sounds

    Added to My Sounds
    The News Quiz has been added to your My Sounds.
  • Exposing a disturbing scam targeting teenage boys

    • Attribution
      iPlayer

    Added to Watchlist
    Blackmailed: The Sextortion Killers has been added to your iPlayer Watchlist.
    Blackmailed: The Sextortion Killers
  • The foods that could help you live to 100

    • Attribution
      Sounds

    Added to My Sounds
    The Food Chain has been added to your My Sounds.
    The Food Chain
  • Home
  • News
  • Sport
  • Weather
  • iPlayer
  • Sounds
  • Bitesize
  • CBBC
  • CBeebies
  • Food
  • Terms of Use
  • About the BBC
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility Help
  • Parental Guidance
  • Contact the BBC
  • Make an editorial complaint
  • BBC emails for you

Copyright © 2025 BBC. The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites. Read about our approach to external linking.