Trolls, Scammers, and Verified Facebook Pages Made This Combat-Wounded Vet an Anti-Kneeling Meme. [View all]

Earl Granville remembers someone from Outside Magazine taking the picture after hed finished a 60-hour, 70-plus mile Spartan Race. Theres Earl, his prosthetic leg in frame, decked in a black-and-white shirt that reads Agoge.
Thats the name of the grueling, two-and-a-half-day endurance test hed just finished. Its a race so rigorous, even for those without a prosthesis to worry about, that Every man dies, but not every man lives is its tagline.
Granville lived, and hes been in the news plenty since that race. This past April, he made national headlines when he slung his race guide, Andi Piscopo, over his shoulder and carried her across the finish line of the Boston Marathon. ABC News even wrote it up: Veteran Who Lost Leg in Afghanistan Carries Friend Across Boston Marathon Finish Line.
But this past month, Granville started getting messages from friends and fans on Facebook about that year-old Agoge picture. Somebody with an explosive political opinion was clearly making a bunch of money using Earls face to hawk some shirts, and they werent sure he was in on it.
They screenshotted and sent it to me in a Facebook post, said Granville. They saw someone selling that shirt.
Someone had scraped off the Agoge logo from the front of his shirt with Photoshop. Granvilles face and pose and prosthetic leg remain, but now the shirt reads, I dont kneel, below an American flag.
Granville doesnt know who did it, but hes doing whatever he can to get it taken down.
If somebody asked for my permission, I wouldve said no. But I didnt hear anything from any of them, said Granville.
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