There was a time not all that long ago where Kanye West's legacy was that of one of the greatest rap artists of all time. Sadly, in the decade or so
Kanye West’s X/Twitter account (which had 33 million followers) has been deleted and his shopping site has been de-platformed after a series of antisemitic social media posts 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.
Only now, after Kanye West sold a T-shirt with a swastika on it, is Ty Dolla $ign speaking out against his collaborator.
Experts in Jewish history and culture say we should be talking about Kanye West's antisemitism. That to be silent is to be complicit.
The e-commerce platform found itself in an unenviable position thanks to Kanye West. Did it put things right? Kind of.
Kanye West’s X/Twitter account (which had 33 million followers) has been deleted and his shopping site has been de-platformed after a series of antisemitic social media posts and Super Bowl
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,
Yeezy.com went dark this week after West attempted to sell racist merch, which Shopify flagged as a violation.
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.