Assembly representative attacks nonprofit children's museum with nazi analogy
Assembly representative attacks nonprofit children's museum with nazi analogy"
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An attack by a Republican Assembly representative that compared a nonprofit children’s museum to the Nazi Party has members of the community rallying to the museum’s defense. On Friday, Rep.
Shae Sortwell, of Two Rivers, shared a Facebook post by Stevens Point’s Central Wisconsin Children’s Museum about the museum’s mask policy. Like many national retail chains, the museum is
asking people older than age 5 who are not vaccinated against COVID-19 to continue to wear masks during their visits to the indoor space. The museum said masks would be optional for those
with vaccination cards. STAY CONNECTED TO WISCONSIN NEWS — YOUR WAY Get trustworthy reporting and unique local stories from WPR delivered directly to your inbox. Museum director Cory Rusch
said the policy was an attempt to protect the health and safety of the many vulnerable grandparents who visit the museum with their grandkids, and he stressed no one will be turned away from
the museum based on their vaccination status. But Sortwell’s Facebook post, made Friday morning on his verified Assembly social media account, shared the museum’s post with his own words
added: “The Gestapo wants to see your papers, please.” The Gestapo were a Nazi police force, directly responsible for torturing and killing political opponents of the regime and coordinating
the deportation of Jews to death camps. Sortwell did not respond to a request for comment from WPR on whether his use of the analogy trivializes the systematic murder of 6 million Jews and
millions of others in the Holocaust. Sortwell’s post was shared hundreds of times on Facebook, and as of Monday afternoon, the original post had more than 500 comments, many of which include
misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine or the false claim that a business requesting to see proof of vaccination is violating a health information privacy law.
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also led directly to a torrent of negative comments on the Children’s Museum’s social media sites. Rusch said he spent all of Friday, Saturday and Sunday responding to angry online comments,
phone calls and other harassment by people from all over the country who were joining the online pile-on in response to Sortwell’s post. Rusch said he and the museum’s two other staff
members were shaken by the experience. He said he hadn’t heard from Sortwell, though he acknowledged he hadn’t checked messages Monday. “I’m not afraid to say that that was really hard, and
I need to catch my breath before I go back to it,” Rusch said. In the meantime, though, members of the Stevens Point community have begun to rally support for the museum, which they say was
unfairly attacked by someone with no real connection to their community. Sortwell “doesn’t represent any place near Stevens Point,” said Stevens Point Mayor Mike Wiza. “To the best of my
knowledge, he’s never been to the children’s museum. … I’m wondering what personal beef he has with Stevens Point or the children’s museum in making a comment relating to the Gestapo.” Wiza
said he had written to Sortwell on Monday and had not received a response. “First of all, I said I think a public apology is in order,” Wiza said. “And secondly, I’d be curious as to what
your thought process was on posting something like this.” Stevens Point resident Nerissa Nelson also wrote a letter to Sortwell signed by 30 people, mostly from central Wisconsin, also
calling on the elected representative to apologize. “Our children’s museum in this town is an important part of community life here,” Nelson said. “And for a state representative to say
something like that … is a horrible thing to do. He needs to rectify that, with a public apology.” Rusch said the experience of being at the target of so much anger has been exhausting and
dispiriting. But he said the museum has also gotten some donations and new memberships from community members who were witnessing the online attacks. “People have shown us support in many
ways: private messages, donations, memberships, virtual hugs,” he said. “It’s really amazing. And all those people, every one of those messages counts for so much.” _Wisconsin Public Radio,
© Copyright 2025, Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System and Wisconsin Educational Communications Board._
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