This kind of political correctness is insincere as are most micro triggers. The problem is there is no substantive or meaningful change in how society operates, it's more like stampede lip service, which has about as much value as junior high school petty gossip. Changing the name will not stop the behavior. There will always be people who either love or are addicted to buying gear, and you can't stop the men and women from behaving like sluts if they want to no matter what you do. I thought the name had comedic value, or is comedy the new evil too now?
People need to do something with their lives as this strikes me as what can someone complain about next when they are bored by their life and have way too much time on their hands or perhaps someone feels a lack of fulfillment or power in their own life and wants to project their anger towards some micro trigger cause, like that will change anything...It won't.
On a similar note, imagine if none of the sports teams ever had Native American Indian names and Native American Indians protested sports teams that they were being ignored, excommunicated, left out and neglected by main stream entertainment and demanded that major sports teams honor Native Americans by recognizing their heritage in the new Native American Indians Lives Matter movement that sweeps the country. The Green Bay Packers becomes the Green Bay Redskins, the Denver Broncos becomes the Denver Braves, the Las Vegas Raiders become the Las Vegas Indians. You can turn these micro triggers upside down and inside out so that whoever wants to be offended can somehow justify their indignation. In the end this is all wordplay. I am not saying words don't matter, but it's not like there is substantive improvement in the lives of Native American Indians if we as a culture remove or add the nicknames of our sports teams to gain the approval of people who are upset in the moment of now. Changing a sports teams moniker does not bring back the 55 million Native American Indians who died from smallpox, measles and the flu when European colonists arrived in America.