| US Department of Homeland Security says it won't stop using  videogame memes to stoke anti-immigrant sentiment: 'We aren't slowing  down' News
 By  Andy Chalk   published 20 hours ago
 
 So far the agency has used Pokémon and Halo to promote immigrant crackdowns on social media, and there's likely more to come.
 
 Despite objections from  some game developers and much of the public at large, the US Department  of Homeland Security says it will continue to use videogame-related  materials to promote itself and its work, and it doesn't seem too  concerned about whether it has legal permission to do so.
 
 Earlier this week, DHS  posted an image from Microsoft's Halo game series,  emblazoned with the words "Fight the Flood," a reference to the ongoing  anti-immigration efforts being carried out by Immigration and Customs  Enforcement (ICE) across the US. Dehumanizing people by equating them to  a parasitic alien life form is overtly grotesque, yes, but the message  also invoked a more mundane question: Did DHS have Microsoft's  permission to use the image in its message?
 
 Microsoft—one of the many  corporate donors supporting the construction of the ballroom that will  replace the now-demolished White House East Wing—refused to comment on  the use of one of its most popular games in a dangerously racist  message.
 
 To their credit, Halo  veterans Marcus Lehto and Jaime Griesemer—neither of whom are now with  the company and are thus able to speak their minds—weren't afraid to  call it what it is: "Despicable," as Griesemer put it, and "absolutely abhorrent" in Lehto's words.
 
 DHS  doesn't seem to care. "We will reach people where they are with content  they can relate to and understand, whether that be Halo, Pokémon, Lord  of The Rings, or any other medium," a DHS spokesperson said in a  statement provided to independent journalist  Alyssa Mercante  and confirmed by PC Gamer. "DHS remains laser focused on bringing  awareness to the flood of crime that criminal illegal aliens have  inflicted on our country. We aren’t slowing down."
 
 The "Fight the  Flood" message—which came in the wake of a very silly White House post  featuring an AI-generated image of US president Donald Trump dressed as  Master Chief—isn't the first time US government agencies have used game  imagery to promote its activities on social media. In September, DHS  used Pokémon content and a "Gotta catch 'em all" message to promote  violent raids on people's homes, while Customs and Border Protection  posted an image of Pikachu as its "newest recruit."
 
 In that case, The Pokémon Company International at least confirmed that the US government  did not have permission to use the material,  although it took no action against it. DHS indicated a similar  disregard for intellectual property rights in that case, saying, "To  arrest them is our real test. To deport them is our cause," a play on  the lyrics to the Pokémon theme song.
 
 The  newer Halo post, a clear call for the dehumanization and destruction of  immigrants, is definitely an escalation over the insulting but  otherwise relatively innocuous Pokémon post, and at this point it seems  like US agencies are literally daring game companies to do something  about it. It sure doesn't seem like they will. Having now stared down  Nintendo and Microsoft, I imagine we'll be seeing more of this sort of  messaging from the DHS and ICE in the future.
 
 pcgamer.com
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