The Black Billionaire Mascot for White Supremacy is Learning the Limitations of Half-Assed Membership
Kanye's stock is plummeting by the day as he is learning in real time that being anti-Semitic doesn't quite work the same as being anti-Black.
In 2013 Kanye (Ye) West released a song titled “Black Skinhead” from his Yeezus album, which at the time I thought was just another hypebeast, tongue-in-cheek stunt he was pulling as his career trajectory had begun heading in the direction of sensationalism for the sake of sensationalism. I never really listened to that song or that album for that matter as I had already started ignoring his musical offerings, and was becoming more and more disenchanted with what I saw him morphing into.
What I did not know at the time was that the song’s title was foreshadowing the devolution of Donda’s son we are all witnessing in real-time. Ye was not content with merely referencing himself as a “skinhead”, apparently, he was seeking some level of card-carrying membership with white nationalists/supremacists.
If it sounds hyperbolic at this point to call Kanye West a white supremacist in Black skin, it shouldn’t. He regularly spews white supremacist talking points in his rhetoric about the Black community, in his misinformation about Black abortion rates and in his repeated assertion that enslaved Africans were complicit in their bondage. But in true white supremacist fashion, his toxicity is not limited to Black people, it is spewed in an omnidirectional manner at anyone who is not a cishet, straight, white Christian male. He has literally said (and assuredly believes) that straight white men are currently the most oppressed group in America and regularly parrots the talking points of alt-right extremist leaders and of fellow Black white supremacists such as Candace Owens.
What he is learning, however, at the detriment of his personal wealth, is that he can’t aim white nationalist/supremacist jargon at every marginalized group, in the same manner, he wielded it against his own people. His most recent diatribes against the Jewish community initially garnered attention on a now-removed episode of the Drink Champs podcast, which also featured him spreading false information about the death of George Floyd. After the episode was removed Ye repeatedly doubled down on his sentiments regarding the Jewish community, and it is that rhetoric that is now costing him endorsement deals and partnerships daily. Most notably, Adidas recently decided to discontinue its partnership with him and his Yeezy brand which accounts for roughly seven percent of the company’s income.
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