Updated at 4:07 p.m.: Revised to include a new Facebook post from Sid Miller.

AUSTIN — Agriculture commissioner Sid Miller continued a tradition of controversial social media posts on Wednesday, when he shared a doctored photo of Whoopi Goldberg wearing a T-shirt depicting President Donald Trump in a violent image.

The Austin American-Statesman first reported on Miller's Facebook post, in which he called for The View to be canceled. Goldberg is one of the talk show's panelists. The post garnered over 17,000 Facebook reactions and more than 13,000 shares as of 3 p.m. Wednesday. Miller has since deleted the post.

"While I in no way condone the highly inappropriate tweet sent by comedian Roseanne Barr, I call on ABC Television to maintain the same standards that they used in cancelling the Roseanne show and also cancel The View," Miller wrote in the post. "It's [sic] hosts have made similarly outrageous comments about President Donald J. Trump, Vice President Mike Pence, and others in their administration. If proven true, Whoopi Goldberg's wearing of a shirt depicting our President being shot in the head is grounds for immediate termination. At present, all I see is hypocrisy and double standards from ABC. As we say in the country 'what's good for the goose is good for the gander.'"

Miller put up a new post with similar text, but a different photo Wednesday afternoon. He omitted reference to Goldberg.

Barr, whose namesake show was canceled following a racist tweet about a former President Barack Obama aide, had shared the image on Tuesday. She also tweeted that she would be leaving Twitter but remains active on the site.

Barr took down her tweet with the photoshopped picture of Goldberg, but not before Huffington Post reporter Yashar Ali took a screenshot of the post.

The original photo was taken during the Women's March in New York last January, Goldberg explained during Wednesday's episode of The View. Her T-shirt actually said, "And you thought I was a nasty woman before? Buckle up, buttercup." The photoshopped image has been circulating for a while, and Goldberg addressed it on The View in April 2017 as well.

Todd Smith, the commissioner's campaign spokesman, told the Statesman that neither he nor Miller knew if the photo had been altered when Miller posted it on Facebook.

"We post hundreds of things a week. We put stuff out there. We're like Fox News. We report, we let people decide," Smith said.

Smith did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Miller's past incendiary social media posts include a photo of Auschwitz that urged people to leave memorials standing, a cartoon of a Florida congresswoman dancing on a soldier's coffin, comparing Syrian refugees to rattlesnakes and hinting about bombing "the Muslim world."

More recently, he posted a widely shared and liked photo on Facebook on Monday that accused the Obama administration of wiretapping President Donald Trump. That claim has been debunked. He told Austin NPR-affiliate KUT in 2016 that he's not a news source, and that "everyone needs to realize that Facebook is not always a reliable source if you're wanting the factual news."