Racist product branding was not just an American problem. One example is Darkie toothpaste, launched in Shanghai in 1933. The product used a blackface-style logo and a name widely recognized as an offensive slur for Black people. After backlash, the English name was changed to Darlie in 1989, but controversy around the brand continued for decades. This matters because racism does not only live in laws. Sometimes it lives on store shelves, in advertisements, in cartoons, in jokes, and in everyday products people grow up seeing as normal. That is how prejudice becomes part of culture before many people even stop to question it.