American rapper Kanye West praises Hitler in antisemitic interview
Friday, 2 December 2022 (14:04 IST)
Controversial American musician Kanye West proceeded with further antisemitic comments in a Thursday livestream on a far-right platform.
West, who currently goes by the name Ye, gave an interview to conspiracy theorist Alex Jones on the far-right blog "Infowars," with his face completely covered with a balaclava.
He also tweeted a picture of a swastika merged with the Star of David before Twitter suspended his account on Friday.
His account's suspension was confirmed by Twitter CEO, Elon Musk as he replied to a distasteful picture of himself that was posted by Ye.
Musk in a tweet said, ''I tried my best. Despite that, he again violated our rule against incitement to violence. Account will be suspended.''
What did West say?
Jones questioned the rapper's support for Hitler and Nazism, to which West gave a long-winded answer about what he called the Nazi leader's "good" qualities and concluded with "I like Hitler."
"Every human being has value to bring to the table, especially Hitler," the Spanish EFE news agency quoted West as saying.
The rapper also at another point in the interview denied that Hitler's Nazi Germany killed 6 million Jews, describing it as "factually incorrect." In Germany, such statements denying the Holocaust are illegal.
West's continued antisemitism
West's latest statements come on the heels of similarly antisemitic comments which have cost him some of his most lucrative deals with large companies, such as Balenciaga, the Gap and Adidas.
The remarks triggered widespread outrage and resulted in his accounts on Twitter and Instagram being restricted.
The Republican Jewish Coalition strongly condemned West's latest statements as "a horrific cesspool of dangerous, bigoted Jew hatred."
"Given his praise of Hitler, it can't be overstated that Kanye West is a vile, repellent bigot who has targeted the Jewish community with threats and Nazi-style defamation," the coalition said in a Thursday statement on its website.
It called on conservatives who had previously embraced West to treat him as a "pariah."
A controversial past
The Thursday interview comes a week after West had dinner with former US President Donald Trump and white supremacist Nick Fuentes at the latter's Florida estate. The gathering provoked outrage.
The artist has courted controversy and promoted conspiracy theories, having previously called slavery a choice and said that the COVID-19 vaccine was "the mark of the beast."
The rapper-turned-mogul has been open about having a bipolar disorder. A recent Netflix documentary, "Jeen-Yuhs," laid bare his ongoing mental health problems.