- Conservatives are flocking to social media to blame President Biden for supply-chain issues using the hashtag #BareShelvesBiden.
- In response, some users are debunking images of empty grocery stores as old, edited or from a different country.
As the supply chain crisis intensifies, some Americans are taking to social media to blame President
On Twitter, the hashtag #BareShelvesBiden has started trending, as users share photos and memes of empty shelves from
-Texas Midnight Rider2 (@Rider2Texas) October 15, 2021
-Jack Posobiec (@JackPosobiec) October 15, 2021
-Stephen Nazarek (@stephenanth0ny) October 15, 2021
#BareShelvesBiden first began picking up steam on Tuesday, following a viral Facebook meme that contrasts a fully stocked grocery store shelf with an empty one, along with the captions "Trump's America" and "Biden's America," respectively. According to the fact-checking site Snopes, the top image is actually a 2012 photo from a store in Melbourne, Australia, while the bottom photo was taken in South Carolina in 2018 during Hurricane Florence.
The meme was allegedly posted in response to continued delays at major ports, which have since prompted the Biden Administration to broker a deal to expand 24-hour operations at the Port of Los Angeles.
"With holidays coming up, you might be wondering if the gifts you plan to buy will arrive on time. Today we have some good
The #BareShelvesBiden movement continued to grow on Wednesday, after conservative commentator Kimberly Klacik shared a since-deleted photo of an empty grocery store with the caption "A Look at #BuildBackBetter." According to Politifact, the image - which depicts price tags in British pounds - is actually from a UK grocery store, taken at the beginning of the pandemic in March 2020.
The photo was featured on an editorial in The Guardian published on March 27, 2020, along with the caption "Empty shelves at a Tesco store in Worcester," Politifact reported.
The social media discourse reflects rising tension over pandemic-driven inflation and mounting supply chain snags, driven by factors including raw-material
The country's largest ports in Southern California reached new ship-backlog records every day last month, as
The discourse also comes amid contention over the Build Back Better plan, a $3.5 trillion reconciliation bill proposed by House Democrats that includes expanded social safety net programs and funding to combat climate change. The legislation is widely opposed by Republicans and some conservative Democrats, including Senators Krysten Simena and Joe Manchin, due to the high price tag.