swastika, Kanye West and Super Bowl
Ye claims that swastika "had many different meanings and many different names" and concludes that, despite admiration for Hitler, he's not a Nazi.
In AI video, Jewish celebrities from Scarlett Johansson to Adam Sandler give Kanye the middle finger
The video, made by an Israeli entrepreneur, shows the celebrities wearing a shirt that echoes the swastika one Kanye West sold this week.
The e-commerce platform found itself in an unenviable position thanks to Kanye West. Did it put things right? Kind of.
I was drawn to the video, too. Seeing celebrities like Jerry Seinfeld and Mike Bloomberg channel my rage and give a middle finger to Kanye West after his most recent antisemitic spree, which included selling a swastika shirt the video riffed on,
Kanye West’s swastika shirt is no longer for sale, after the e-commerce platform Shopify said earlier this week, amid an outcry, that he had violated its terms of service. But a wide array of shirts responding to the musician’s antisemitic merchandise are now available — and being offered to Jews who want to wear a riff on West’s design as an act of defiance.
This sudden change of heart comes on the heels of a recent pattern of antisemitic behavior from West over the past month. The rapper sold a white T-shirt with a large swastika on the chest after buying a local Los Angeles ad on the night of the Super Bowl.
Kanye West's Yeezy website has been shut down after he was selling a swastika T-shirt, which Shopify says "violated our terms." The rapper landed a bizarre Super Bowl ad in several local markets, which sent people to his website.
Kanye West, 47, has vowed to perform at the Super Bowl in a swastika T-shirt days after his website Yeezy was taken down by Shopify for selling hateful merchandise
Kanye West Claims He Got Idea For Swastika Shirt '8 Years' Ago Amid Backlash For Antisemitic Comments Kanye West has revealed that his controversial Swastika t-shirt wasn't a spontaneous creation but a concept he had been planning for eight years.
The controversial rapper, who goes by Ye, bought local ads promoting his clothing website—then changed what the site sold after TV stations approved the ad.
Ye, who has a history of spewing antisemitic hate speech, ran a Super Bowl commercial promoting Yeezy.com, which was selling white t-shirts with a bold Nazi symbol in black.
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