Tag: anti-Semitic comments

  • Republicans oust Ilhan Omar off US foreign affairs panel over Israeli criticism

    Republicans oust Ilhan Omar off US foreign affairs panel over Israeli criticism

    In response to the progressive congresswoman Ilhan Omar’s prior criticism of Israel, American Republicans have ousted her from the House Foreign Affairs Committee, provoking criticism and charges of bigotry from Democrats.

    On a partisan party-line vote, the House approved a resolution on Thursday to revoke Omar’s committee assignment. Omar is one of two Muslim women serving in Congress and a former Somalian refugee.

    Republican legislators claimed Omar’s “anti-Semitic” and “anti-Israel” rhetoric rendered her ineligible for the foreign policy panel.

    But prior to the vote, Omar suggested that Republicans were targeting her because of her identity.

    “There is this idea that you are a suspect if you are an immigrant or if you are from certain parts of the world or a certain skin tone or a Muslim,” Omar said. “It is no accident that members of the Republican Party accused the first Black president, Barack Obama, of being a secret Muslim.”

    Omar added that she will be undeterred by the Republican move.

    “If I am not on this committee for one term, my voice will get louder and stronger and my leadership will be celebrated around the world as it has been,” the congresswoman said. “So take your votes or not. I am here to stay.”

    She vowed to continue to speak up for those suffering from “unjust wars, atrocities, ethnic cleansing, occupation or displacement”.

    The White House called the removal of Omar from the committee a “political stunt” and a “disservice to the American people”.

    “Congresswoman Omar is a highly respected member of Congress,” White House spokeswoman Karine Jean-Pierre told reporters on Thursday, noting that Omar had apologised for previous comments relating to Israel.

    In 2019, Omar faced bipartisan outrage when for suggesting that political donations from pro-Israel lobby groups — including the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) — drive support for Israel in Washington. She later disavowed that remark.

    In the past two years, AIPAC and other pro-Israel organisations spent millions of dollars in congressional elections to defeat progressives who support Palestinian human rights.

    While the Republican resolution accused Omar of anti-Semitism, it only invoked remarks relating to Israel, not the Jewish people.

    For example, the measure calls out the congresswoman for describing Israel as an “apartheid state”, although leading human rights groups — including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch — have also accused Israel of imposing a system of apartheid on Palestinians.

    Republican Tennessee Representative David Kustoff accused Omar on Thursday of spreading “hateful beliefs”.

    “As our nation’s leaders, we have the ability and the responsibility to help combat anti-Semitism and ensure that our children — tomorrow’s leaders — are taught that such rhetoric is unacceptable,” Kustoff said.

    But several Jewish Democrats defended Omar. Dean Phillips — who, like Omar, represents a congressional district in Minnesota — called the Republican push against the congresswoman a “weaponisation of anti-Semitism”, which he said he finds “repulsive” as a Jewish person.

    “The most dangerous acts by elected officials in a democracy are to silence voices of dissent, even those with which we fundamentally disagree,” Phillips said on the House floor.

    Republicans stressed that the resolution to remove Omar was about accountability, not payback. Democrats had previously removed Republican Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Greene from her assigned committees in 2021 over past conspiratorial, anti-Semitic and Islamophobic comments.

    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, a leading House progressive, said the targeting of Omar was an extension of the legacy of bigotry against Muslim Americans since the September 11, 2001, attacks.

    “There is nothing consistent with the Republican Party’s continued attack except for the racism and incitement of violence against women of colour in this body,” Ocasio-Cortez said.

    As Arab, Muslim and Palestinian rights groups rushed to defend Omar before the vote on Thursday, the congresswoman co-sponsored a resolution titled “recognizing Israel as America’s legitimate and democratic ally and condemning antisemitism”.

    The measure condemned anti-Semitic tropes of dual loyalty and describes Israel as a “Jewish and democratic state”.

    Omar’s office did not immediately respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment on how the congresswoman squared accusing Israel of apartheid while still recognising it as a “democratic” US ally.

    “My critique of our foreign policy, Israeli’s policy towards Palestinians or that of any foreign nation will not change,” Omar wrote on Twitter later on Thursday. “As a person who suffered the horrors of war and persecution, my advocacy will always be for those that suffer because of the actions of governments.”

    Congressman Brad Schneider, a staunchly pro-Israel Democrat, welcomed Omar’s support for the resolution.

    “I have no doubt we will continue to disagree, sometimes vehemently. I will continue to call out antisemitism from wherever it comes, whether my side of the aisle or the other,” Schneider said in a statement.

  • Kanye’s Donda Academy: Fate of school unclear as staffers reportedly quit over anti-Semitic comments (UPDATE)

    UPDATED 10/28, 9:20 a.m. ET: Following an initial report claiming the artist formerly known as Kanye West’s Donda Academy was closing for the remainder of the school year, only for a separate report to claim such talk had been walked back, yet another report (this time from TMZ) alleges the situation remains fluid.

    In short, it’s now being reported that the school could indeed be closing down following the recent exit of a number of staff members. According to TMZ, several staffers have left their positions with the school in response to comments from Ye that have been widely called out as anti-Semitic, as well as in protest of his remarks about the murder of George Floyd in a since-removed Drink Champs episode and the inclusion of a hate slogan in his YZY SZN 9 show.

    UPDATED 10/27, 12:50 p.m. ET: Nevermind. The artist formerly known as Kanye West’s Donda Academy has decided not to shutter its doors for the remainder of the school year.

    TMZ reports that the school will remain open. Parents and students were sent an email midnight on Wednesday, which is reported to have said, “Join us tomorrow morning in worship for the return of Donda Academy. With the help of our parents and community, we are back and returning with a vengeance!”

    See original story below.

    The artist formerly known as Kanye West’s Donda Academy is immediately closing for the remainder of the school year, according to a new report.

    The Times shared a piece on Thursday in which an email to parents was cited, with Donda Academy principal Jason Angell most notably informing them that the school “will close for the remainder of the 2022-2023 school year effective immediately.”

    The move comes amid ongoing criticism and fallout spurred by a number of remarks made by Ye, both in interview settings and on social media, that have been widely called out as anti-Semitic. Unlike past controversies involving the artist, some longtime fans have also been more openly critical of Ye’s actions (and their immediate impact) this time around, including the “Ye da [G.OA.T.] no [cap]” guy.

    Per the latest report, Angell’s email notes that the decision to close Donda Academy for the rest of the school year was made “at the discretion of our founder.” However, the current plan is for the school to “begin afresh” late next year.

    “Our leadership team will be working diligently to assist all families during this transition, ensuring that every scholar has what they need to succeed in their next community in a prompt and gracious manner,” Angell’s email is reported to have said.

    According to the school’s official site, the daily schedule for students included “full school worship,” core classes (i.e. math, science, and language arts), lunch, and recess. “Enrichment courses” are also listed as having been part of the curriculum, with offerings including classes on visual art and parkour.

    News of Donda Academy’s (seemingly temporary) closure follows a prior report from TMZ revealing that the school’s basketball team had been removed from the Scholastic Play-by-Play Classics schedule in response to Ye’s recent actions.

    Complex has reached out to Donda Academy for comment. This story may be updated.

    Source: Complex.com

  • Talent Agency CAA cuts ties with Kanye West following anti-Semitic remarks

    Hollywood talent agency CAA has dropped Kanye West following his recent string of anti-Semitic remarks.

    As reported by The Los Angeles Times, the renowned agency has quietly made the decision to no longer work with Ye. According to a person who has knowledge of the situation, CAA ended its relationship with him on account of his embrace of anti-Semitism on both social media and in various interviews. The news comes not long after Balenciaga pulled the plug on its partnership with Ye, who tweeted that he intended to go “DEATH CON 3 on Jewish people” earlier this month.

    On Monday, MRC studio executives Modi Wiczyk, Asif Satchu, and Scott Tenley also announced they have scrapped a completed documentary about Ye.

    “This morning, after discussion with our filmmakers and distribution partners, we made the decision not to proceed with any distribution for our recently completed documentary about Kanye West. We cannot support any content that amplifies his platform,” the three wrote. “Kanye is a producer and sampler of music. Last week he sampled and remixed a classic tune that has charted for over 3000 years—the lie that Jews are evil and conspire to control the world for their own gain.”

    United Talent Agency co-founder and CEO Jeremy Zimmer has also condemned the multi-hyphenate’s behavior, which emboldened a hate group to hang a “Kanye is right about the Jews” sign above the 405 in Los Angeles.

    “As a company we stand for a wide diversity of voices and ideas; But we can’t support hate speech, bigotry or anti-Semitism,” Zimmer wrote in a note sent to staff, per Variety. “Please support the boycott of Kanye West. Powerful voices spewing hatred have frequently driven people to do hateful things.” Ye was previously a client of UTA.

    Ari Emanuel, who heads entertainment and sports company Endeavor, made similar comments in a column for Financial Times last week. “Those who continue to do business with West are giving his misguided hate an audience,” Emanuel wrote. “There should be no tolerance anywhere for West’s anti-Semitism.”

    Source: Complex.com

  • Anti-Semitic group hangs banner over L.A. freeway in support of Kanye West

    As more and more people distance themselves from the artist formerly known as Kanye West, an anti-Semitic group unabashedly showed their support for Ye with a banner that hung over the 405 Freeway in Los Angeles on Saturday.

    Oren Segal, vice president of ADL Center on Extremism, shared a photo on Twitter showing seven people delivering a Nazi salute as they stand near a banner which reads, “Kanye is right about the Jews.” Another sign read, “Honk If You Know.”

    The Anti-Defamation League considers the white supremacist group, which shall remain nameless, to be aligned under a common goal to “cast aspersions on Jews and spread antisemitic myths and conspiracy theories.”

    West has come under fire following a series of appearances in which he delivered anti-Semitic remarks after vowing to go “death con 3 on JEWISH PEOPLE” on Twitter. In a baffling interview with Piers Morgan, Ye refused to apologize for his previous comments before expressing remorse towards “the people that I’ve hurt,” ascribing his behavior to being hurt and trying to do the same onto others.


    In light of his remarks, Vogue’s famed editor-in-chief Anna Wintour has decided to cut ties with West, and Balenciaga has reportedly done the same. George Floyd’s family has also filed a $250 million lawsuit against him for falsely claiming on the since-pulled Drink Champs podcast episode that Floyd didn’t die at the hands of the Minneapolis police officers, specifically Derek Chauvin.

    Source: Complex.com

  • Kanye West interview pulled over ‘more hate speech’

    An upcoming episode of the YouTube talk show The Shop: Uninterrupted has been scrapped after Kanye West allegedly used “hate speech and extremely dangerous stereotypes” in an interview.

    The move came as it emerged the star had shared a series of comments based on racist conspiracy theories in a separate interview with Fox News.

    Fox removed those segments before the broadcast, but the footage was leaked to the technology website Motherboard.

    West has not commented on either case.

    The BBC has asked both him and Fox News for a response.

    The star, who is legally known as Ye, was previously suspended from Instagram and Twitter for making anti-Semitic comments.

    Those posts came in response to a backlash against his show at Paris Fashion Week, where he wore a t-shirt carrying the slogan “White Lives Matter”.

    The Anti-Defamation League has called the phrase “hate speech” and attributed it to white supremacists, who began using it in 2015 in response to the Black Lives Matter movement.

     

    Amid the backlash, he appeared on Fox News, where he told host Tucker Carlson the t-shirt was “funny” and “the obvious thing to do”.

    In unaired clips from the same interview, which leaked on Tuesday, West detailed his belief in an unfounded anti-Semitic conspiracy theory that Planned Parenthood was founded “to control the Jew population” in conjunction with the Ku Klux Klan.

    “When I say Jew, I mean the 12 lost tribes of Judah… who the people know as the race Black really is,” he told host Tucker Carlson, referring to a claim, unsupported by historical evidence, that Black people are the “real” Jewish race, and that Jews are attempting to “steal” their birthright.

    West also complained that his children were attending a school where Kwanzaa – an annual celebration of African-American culture – is taught, saying he would rather they learned about the Jewish holiday Hanukkah because “at least it will come with some financial engineering”, yet another anti-Semitic trope.

    West appeared on Fox News last week
    IMAGE SOURCE, FOX NEWS

    In another clip, the rapper confirmed he had received the Covid-19 vaccine, despite previously claiming the shots were “the mark of the beast” and part of a plot to implant chips in people.

    He also claimed that “fake children” had been placed in his home to manipulate and “sexualize” his four children with former wife Kim Kardashian.

    Fox has not explained why it excluded these clips from its broadcast, although most television interviews are edited and condensed for clarity.

    Producers of The Shop: Uninterrupted, on the other hand, decided against airing their interview with West altogether, and said they would not share details of his comments.

    Maverick Carter, who produces the show with basketball legend LeBron James, told the Andscape website: “Kanye was booked weeks ago and, after talking to Kanye directly the day before we taped, I believed he was capable of a respectful discussion and he was ready to address all his recent comments.

    “Unfortunately, he used The Shop to reiterate more hate speech and extremely dangerous stereotypes.”

    The statement continued: “While The Shop embraces thoughtful discourse and differing opinions, we have zero tolerance for hate speech of any kind and will never allow our channels to be used to promote hate.

    “I take full responsibility for believing Kanye wanted a different conversation and apologise to our guests and crew. Hate speech should never have an audience.”

    It is believed that James was not present as the interview took place.

    West was diagnosed with bipolar disorder years ago and has publicly spoken about his challenges with his mental health.

    However, medical experts and people who share West’s condition have warned that mental health problems do not go hand-in-hand with anti-Semitism.

    “There are many people who don’t have mental health issues who are racist and bigoted. And there are people with mental health issues who are not racist or bigoted,” clinical psychologist Carla Manly told USA Today. “We want to see those as two very different issues.”

    “I think Kanye is honestly just an idiot,” Sam, who has bipolar disorder, told BBC World Service.

    “He rolls with his disorder and lets it harm whoever is around him, and I think that’s extremely irresponsible.

    “I don’t think he should be associated with bipolar disorder or the mental health movement, because he doesn’t speak for us.”

    Source: bbc.com