Parkside Demolition Derby in car controversy
There’s controversy in the build-up to Saturday’s annual Parkside Community Club demolition derby.
There has been online criticism of the use of a confederate flag on the roof of the auction car. The club has rejected the criticism as ‘ridiculous’ and insists it had no intention of offending anyone. Social media reaction to a Twitter post from Premier Scott Moe prompted the Canadian Mental Health Association (CMHA) to distance itself from the use of the flag.
This year’s car – which like past years will be auctioned off to the highest bidder and then taken for a spin before the main demolition derby – is a copy of the “General Lee” of Dukes of Hazard TV and movie fame. The auction cars are deliberately provocative and over-the-top according to the organizers. When Premier Moe tweeted a picture of the car and promoted the highly successful annual event in his Rosthern-Shellbrook riding there was a backlash from some who criticized Moe’s support for the effort and branded the flag as racist and offensive.
The community club had decided to make the CMHA a beneficiary of this year’s fundraiser and wrote that on the car’s trunk. But the CMHA said they were never approached about the way the car would look and they were forced to respond to the Twitter concerns and denounce the use of the flag.