Internet Culture

High schoolers give Hitler salute during Nazi-themed drinking game, sparking outrage

Leaked group messages reveal antisemitic messages and jokes.

Photo of Ana Valens

Ana Valens

swastika red cups

California’s Newport Beach High School and Costa Mesa High School are the latest schools with a Nazi problem. A series of viral photos from this past weekend shows students gathered around a table giving Hitler salutes to a “German rage cage,” a drinking game that featured a swastika made from red solo cups.

Featured Video

Images from the students’ party went viral after YouTuber Ava Rose turned to Twitter, posting multiple Snapchat images over the weekend depicting high schoolers building and saluting the swastika solo cups. The thread’s main post has over 9,900 retweets and 26,000 likes, and subsequent replies show Snapchat users joking about “German engeneraing [sic]” and building a “German rage cage.”

Two photos also depict Snapchat messages from students seemingly associated with or condoning the party. One user says “this shit I respect,” continuing “Those are my boys / Fuck Jews / Such pieces of shits.” A second post features a Snapchat group called “master race,” where a user jokes about Jewish victims dying in the Holocaust.

“Phones gonna die / Just like the jews,” that user posted, according to Rose’s thread.

Advertisement

An Instagram user who attended the party even wrote a fake apology, only to claim “last night was awesome” and “I have absolutely no sympathy for anyone offended by this.”

“I’m a Jew and was there with some of my closest friends and we played a sick ass game of rage cage,” the poster wrote. “All the motherfuckers tryna censor this shit are nazis if anything. Quit tryna gather up soft boy points and piss of [sic] pusssyyyyysssss [sic].”

The Daily Dot reached out to Rose for comment.

https://twitter.com/itsavarose_/status/1102069076803768320

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/itsavarose_/status/1102089685612953600

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/itsavarose_/status/1102324625994702848

Advertisement

Rose’s post quickly went viral, and the condemnations were swift. Many were angry, upset, and glad that someone was speaking out about the situation.

https://twitter.com/angelaa_to/status/1102327493112094720

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/elenawats/status/1102263328536055808

https://twitter.com/denisesolis_/status/1102274160795934725

Advertisement

https://twitter.com/delongingforyou/status/1102390768617041921

Advertisement

The Newport-Mesa Unified School District is reportedly working with police to investigate the situation, and the district’s president has condemned the party’s antisemitic events and underage drinking, according to the Washington Post.

“We have a concern both for the physical health of students who are underage drinking as well as the mental health of our students or their friends that thought this was an OK thing to do,” Newport-Mesa Unified School District President Charlene Metoyer said, according to CBS Los Angeles. “More should’ve been done to make sure the students recognize the severity of the symbols they were using. It is not something funny. It’s a very, very serious situation.”

Advertisement

The Anti-Defamation League’s Orange County chapter, meanwhile, penned a tweet condemning the photos, noting “Swastikas and Nazi salutes are never funny.”

“When such actions are considered jokes, hate and bigotry become normalized,” the ADL chapter tweeted. “And then we open the door for escalating acts of bias, bigotry & bullying. ADL takes this very seriously. #noplaceforhate”

https://twitter.com/ADLOrangeCounty/status/1102298927796121600

This isn’t the first time high school students have gone viral for celebrating Nazi imagery—and it probably won’t be the last. One Wisconsin high school’s junior class was universally condemned after an image surfaced showing students posing for a photo with Nazi salutes, and a Minnesota student was harshly criticized for penning a Nazi-themed school dance invitation. Clearly, American teens need a lot more education on Nazi Germany’s atrocities.

Advertisement
 
The Daily Dot